Solaris-
Another day, another dream, perhaps.
- Local Time
- 9:37 PM
- Joined
- Sep 21, 2025
- Messages
- 144
- Age
- 31

There were subtle changes in Rowan that Dmitri had taken note of over the course of their three interactions. Of course they still had their anxious tendencies, but today, there was something more steady about them, more open to the idea of following through with their plans they’d made. He was glad for it. It made him feel less like he was intruding on someone else’s life and space and more like they could exist as equals in each other’s space for a short amount of time. He chuckled quietly. “I feel better today. Lighter somehow. Like the world is pressing down on me less and it doesn’t feel like the sky is falling for once.” It was only a matter of time before that started again, but he would gladly sit in the calm and enjoy his peace for now. “Talking with you last night about everything helped. Sleep never really comes easily these days, but without so much weighing on my mind, I was able to rest.” At least a little for the short amount of time he had let himself sleep. Though he wouldn’t have traded the time they spent together for more sleep even if he got a second chance.
“You seem more relaxed today than I’ve seen you, Ptichka. Steadier somehow. It’s nice to see you like this.” Maybe relaxed hadn’t exactly been the right word, but Rowan seemed to fidget less and pulled away less from Dmitri’s presence.
They were walking now, and it was easy to keep Rowan’s pace. He still held both boxes carefully in his hands. “Yes, we were still dressed up in what we would wear in our respective host clubs, but since it was just the hosts and our bosses today, it was more or less just corporate bullshit and exchanging social media.” A gentle roll of his shoulders in a gentle shrug. “There was a big scandal involving a host club in Denver that allowed its hosts to sell more than just dates for money, and peddling sex is generally looked down upon in the community unless your club is specifically in a red light district. A lot of the meeting was making sure we understood that doing this outside of those districts could get us shut down.” So could dating patrons outside of the club or living with them, but they’d let that slide when it’d happened with Dmitri despite their reservations about it. He had worked hard to regain his status and reputation, so they looked the other way without another thought. “They’re finally getting more lax on their opinions about tattoos and other things of that nature, so that does bring me some hope that I can stop wearing long sleeves all the time.”
The place where Rowan was leading them was never a place he would have found on his own. If Rowan were a different person and not who he was, Dmitri might have assumed that they were trying to mug him or kill him by taking him out this way. But the quiet and still of the world around them felt pleasant. “I can’t wait to see them. I’m sure they turned out well. From what I’ve seen so far, I enjoy the shots you take.” Even if one of them was too real for his liking, he would still keep it. Perhaps it was too honest to post it online, but he wanted it for himself to look back on this window in time for the next time he needed a reminder that he actually mattered.
He’d almost commented, but as Rowan was still speaking, Dmitri allowed them to finish their thought. “Taking slow steps may not look like progress to you, but I can definitely notice it.” Most people wouldn’t; most people wouldn’t even care to take a second look. To most, Rowan might have seemed easy to get lost in a crowd and become just another blur among the faces. But Dmitri had noticed them even when the room was crowded. A familiar stranger who looked at him with kind, tired eyes.
“I’m glad I don’t make you want to run away from me.” The joke came at his own expense, and he knew that Rowan hadn’t meant it that way, but he had just wanted to lighten the mood a bit. “Thanks for staying even when it’s hard. I enjoy you being here.”
Dmitri stopped too and looked up at the wall covered in paint and graffiti. The artist behind the tag couldn’t have known the symbolism of what looking at it might entail to someone else, but the dark haired man felt it resonate with him in that moment. It was definitely a sign. That superstitious part of his mother that had rubbed off on him in some way reared its head again. He seated himself down next to Rowan and set one of the boxes closer to them and the other in his own lap.
“Today has been weird. I feel better about today, but there’s part of me that is a little uncertain.” He thought about how to explain this mixed emotion between small bites of sandwich. “It’s mostly because Marnie felt so… normal this morning. Not in the way she normally does, but the normal that someone might expect to wake up to. Breakfast, a smiling face. No anger or bitter words.” She had done normal girlfriend things for the first time in months and it was too weird for him to think about. It felt like a weird fever dream or an episode of a TV show that wasn’t real life. “Sorry. I didn’t mean to bring it up. I was really looking forward to speaking with you again today. I’d rather not think about something that makes my head hurt right now.” No, he’d rather focus on the here and now and be present.
“Ptichka, what’s your favorite color?”




























