Day 2 Prompt: Festival
Title: sparks will fly, they ignite our bones
title lyric from: Firestone - Kygo
Tags: AU - Modern; First Dates; Wooing


Lips burning against his, mouthing soft words in the detonation din.

.

.

.

"It'sa real date this time." Each word's punctuated by Naruto's fist punching his opposite palm, driving home the importance of this. This being: Street stall smells rich and piquant, a smoky-savory blend; lights flickering in kaleidoscopic, neurotic brilliance; children wild as free foals escaping their parents, weaving in and out of adults' legs clutching cheap prizes and sparklers —

and him, Sasuke, on an actual fucking date with a woman with cotton-candy-colored locks who has been besting him every game and measure of skill imaginable, and his dumb plus-one buffer, the best friend, now droning on about how he needs to win her something.

"Anything!" Naruto throws his arms up, dramatic and exasperated, the only gearsetting he seems to have. "Teddy bear, ugly fish, keychain — literally any shitty prize to show her yer not a complete waste of time."

"Sasuke!" Both men snap to, pretending to have been watching the whole time as Sakura jumps up and down, pumping a fist in the air. "I won again!"

With shiny, wide eyes, she places both her palms out in giddy anticipation to receive a stuffed bear donning a baseball cap of the local (terrible) team from a surly booth operator with a permanent frown.

"She's comin' this way!"

"I can see that," Sasuke hisses. "You useless idiot."

"Did I hear 'charming wingman?' 'Kay, I'm gonna find some food. Give you two some time—"

"Don't say it—"

"Alone." Some strange tone aiming for sensual manifests as choking pigeon, and Naruto skips away as Sakura bounds up to Sasuke, smiling so wide he can see every perfect tooth.

"Did you see?" So proud of herself, arms laden with prizes. Some she's already given away to cute children passing by, perhaps the sole supplier of noisemakers and soft bears. For a doctor in pediatrics, the urge to make smiles comes second nature. "Where's he going?"

"Food, or something," Sasuke murmurs, trying not to look as constipated and irritated as he had ten minutes prior — another gem from Naruto's unasked-for criticism. "He's left us alone."

"Finally." Definitely slipped out by accident, and Sakura grumbles over her mistake, red prickling her cheeks and chest. "Not that I dislike him, of course—"

"I do," Sasuke says, absolutely deadpan. It takes her a moment.

"Uchiha Sasuke, did you just make your first joke?"

Ears burning in the cool night air, it's his turn to smother his embarrassment. In lieu of further slip ups, he awkwardly gathers the items in her arms, a mishmash of unidentified thingamajigs and whatnots that you only find in curio shops or carnivals, and gallantly takes on their burden.

"Walk with me?"

So sure his voicebox just sustained a hairline crack; he hates himself for being nervous.

Eyes, hers, brighter than all the psychedelic frenzy swirling around them both, caught up in the haze; she has the uncanny ability to fade the rest to black, toss the entirety of the world's existence aside.

Seeking to link her arm with his amid the mess of wares won, she succeeds and presses closer.

"I thought I'd die waiting," she whispers into his sleeve. "I've been wanting you to notice me properly all night."

Meandering, conjoined, down the main road; carved out for the celebration, buffeted by snack scents and other couples, groups of friends, and plenty of pairs pretending they're still just and only that. Along the way she unloads her many winnings, surreptitious, in part kindly trying to relieve his burden but also calculating the space in her single occupancy apartment.

She watches people and lights, and he watches her.

Sakura's gaze snags on a particular booth, more specifically a particular prize. Of the stuffed variety.

"Did . . . something catch your eye?" he asks. Immediately thinks he sounds like an idiot. You know how to woo 'em, and why does his inner voice sound like Naruto's on his date, goddamn it —

Burying her cheek into his shoulder, she giggles and it threads beautiful, stringed tension in his throat and spine, symphonic, testing its own flex to see if she can orchestrate the rest of him. He wishes he could spin her around, lift her high in some filmesque climax, kiss her in the closing credits.

"Don't laugh," she says, "but I love slugs. Adore them, really. Gross, I know!" She raises her free hand and points directly at a giant stuffed slug on a high shelf behind the booth's counter. "And honestly, I'd likely keep it in my office; the kids would love it."

Sasuke knows, from what she's disclosed, that these are sick kids, too. This ancient, gendered mating ritual is unavoidable and he'll have to rise to the challenge. He must provide. Stupid, because she outstrips his earnings and likely will the rest of their life.

Says it like a throwaway, like no big deal: "I'll have to win it for you, then."

The game? Aim. Darts. Doable if he's sober and with equally (un)talented friends; ranging from Shino the sharpshooter to drunk and stumbling Suigetsu, he's decidedly somewhere in the middle, but it should be enough raw talent to beat a festival game.

Sakura's eyes are on him, excited. She dances a little from foot to foot, ready to cheer him on.

Dropping the rest of the prizes on the ground and shoving a fistful of coins at the booth operator, he smirks. Born ready, all those forced childhood sports camps and instrument lessons finessing his hand-eye coordination finally stepping up to the plate.

Imagine failing miserably three rounds in a row, the last one bouncing off the dartboard so violently it narrowly misses the sleepy booth operator. Sasuke grinds his teeth, jaw tight, wishing it'd met its mark.

To Sakura's credit, she's completely unperturbed. Almost makes it worse.

She pecks him on the cheek, scoring him through hot and fevered where her lips touch.

"Performance anxiety," she quips, but her smile isn't unkind. "Let me give it a try."

Each dart that lands in the board does so with gusto, embeds itself deep into the sisal cork. As each one hits, Sasuke reflects they might as well be piercing him. The most painful blow is watching her indicate the bluebacked slug, winning it outright without his help, and squeezing it half to death in her arms.

They're walking again, sans the rest of her prizes — left them for the booth operator, and whatever kids wander his way wanting toys with which to annoy their parents.

"You've been so quiet," she says, shifting her slug under one arm and linking up with him again.

Sasuke shrugs against her. "I'm not sure what's next with us." He stops, figures it's better to rip that bandaid off now, give her an out so he can save some face. Of course they've stopped on some coquettishly romantic bridge, arched over the still summer pond, a popular viewing spot for the night's end fireworks.

She watches him expectantly, searching him with her sharp green eyes.

"What do you mean?" Her question is slow, puzzled.

What he means to say is something gentile. Instead he says, "You're great at darts."

She seems to sway, a physical manifestation of being caught off guard. Laughs. "Surprised me too! But you gave my arms a rest, so they were ready to win." Curls her arm to indicate muscle, grinning.

Steps closer, melting through an unseen veil of personal space. Cherry scent; smoke.

"Could be all the shots you administer."

"I guess we can call jabbing kids with needles a calling." Mirroring him, she steps in too, and there's not so much space between them anymore. "Good practice. You could come around sometime, see my work."

Another tiny shuffle.

It's time to break this. Sasuke inhales deeply, letting it out in measured beats. "Sakura—"

"If you're mad you couldn't win this for me," she interrupts, "you're being silly. I don't care about that, you know."

He tilts his head, and in spite of himself his hand wanders, brushing a stray strand of pink out of her face. "Hm?"

"I don't," she repeats, and sets her slug down on the wooden bridge. Breathes deeply before saying in a low, threaded voice, "What I care about is all the waiting."

Sasuke feels it all fall into place. Oh. Oh.

"So come on, Sasuke."

And before she's even finished saying his name he's kissing her, the last vibrations of his name caught on their lips, locked, and though the timing is perfect and picturesque, film archetype material as the fireworks charge the air around them, each one set off drawing ripple designs in the water beneath them, this thrill is unmatched, the way she wraps her arm around his neck to taste him deeper, the way he lifts her up to rest him on his hips and there's nothing, has never been anything, quite like this.

Real fireworks pale in comparison.

Lips burning against his, mouthing soft words in the detonation din.

"The perfect end," she whispers, "to a festival."