“Uncle?” His nephew tugs at the leg of his pants. “Who is that man?”

Yuuri looks down. He pushes his glasses up a little, tries a smile. “Which one,” he asks. It doesn’t matter that he knows what the boy means.

His nephew points to the other room. “The one on your nightstand.”

A slow breath. The smile isn’t working for him. “Someone who used to love me.”

“…used to?” It takes a moment. Then, his nephew claps a hand over his small mouth. “Did he break up with you?”

Yuuri closes his eyes. “No. I broke up with him.”

A tentative hand slides over his own. “Why?” His wonderful, perfect little nephew asks. He says it like Yuuri could break any moment.

He doesn’t bother to uphold the smile anymore.

“Because I’m the guilty one now.”

“Mr Plisetsky,” the journalist yells, “one last question, please. Would you ever date a fan? And, indulge us a bit, are you the romantic kind of man?”

Yuri stills.

“Come on,” Yakov urges. He’s holding the car door open, motioning for Yuri to get inside. “Let’s go.”

He really shouldn’t. “One second,” Yuri tells him in Russian. Yakov lifts a brow.

Yuri turns to the journalist and takes a slow breath. Notepads come out of pockets, the crowd pushing closer. A microphone almost touches his cheek.

“What do you mean by romantic?”

The journalist from before seems to be vibrating in his place. “Well, love at first sight, the one and only love, staying together forever. That sort of thing!”

Oh. Well. “Absolutely. Good night.”

It is silent for barely a heart beat. Then, the crowd bursts into a myriad of questions, only a few of which reach Yuri’s ear: “How come? Would you date a fan? Why does the ice tiger of Russia believe in true love?”

Annoying, Yuri thinks. His cheeks feel hot when he juts his chin forward and stares back at them.

“I don’t believe in it, you idiots. I’ve seen it. And,” he whirls around, letting Yakov guide him into the car, grinning a little bit to himself when his phone chimes with another skype call from one of those two accounts. 

“If something seems impossible, and still happens with all of the world against it, then there’s definitely some truth to it.”

“Mama,” Viktor whispers, tugging at her soft skirt. “Why is that man kissing her hand?” He points at the television, an old movie with a prince and a girl that has ash on her face and glittering shoes on her feet.

His mother pulls him closer. As she tucks the blanket around him, she says, with eyes soft and bright in memory: “It’s what you do when someone is precious to you.”

“I thought that’s what kisses on the mouth are for.”

“That’s different.” His mother runs a hand through his hair until he’s all warm and the snow outside fades. “You only do that when you really mean something, when you want to be with them forever. When they’re worth more to you than all the gold that there is in the world.”

Twenty-four years later, a bouquet of white daffodils rests on a gravestone. In its centre, defying a thin layer of snow just so, lays a red camellia. It takes four days until the gardener removes the flower, and finds the card.

Mama, it says, I understand now. You don’t have to worry about me. He didn’t kiss my hand back, but he put the only gold I ever wanted on my finger, so that’s fine with me. 

First of All or The Definition of Beginnings (by Yuuri Katsuki)

“Congratulations or whatever,” Yuri growls. He sounds a bit like a lion cub with an upset stomach, but Yuuri is wise enough to keep that to himself.

“Thank you.”

“God, you’re so polite, it’s annoying.”

“Uh. I’m s-”

“Shut up. Listen to me. Did you honestly plan that ending?”

Yuuri bites back a smile. He’s glad that Yuri didn’t call via video chat. “Not really. It was a bit spontaneous, but I’d practiced it anyways, so why not use it.”

“Not the skating! The – the fucking kiss!”

“Oh. Well.”

“Didn’t think you were that greedy for fame that you’d sacrifice your first kiss for it.”

“Hah, first kiss. Sure. …I mean, of course. Yes.”

“Are you fucking kidding me.”

“Yuri, it’s very late, and Viktor’s waiting for me.”

“Fine. Fine. Still, your first kiss with Viktor was in public, so I have every right to call you a slut for fame.”

“Please don’t.”

“…I do have the right, don’t I? Hey. Yuuri, hey.”

“Uhm. Well, before I went on the ice, Viktor and I were in that parking lot. We talked. He uh, kind of made me cry. Said he’d leave if I failed. But I think he just tried to make me pull myself together. It sure worked.”

“And then he – he, he just?”

“Nah. I kissed him first. Thought more people would notice, uhm, I think my face was redder than his when we walked back in.”

“Oh my God.”

“I really have to go now. It was lovely talking to you!”

“You two are disgusting. Good night. Kick his ass from me.”

“What do I have to do,” the little boy asks, “to go down in history?”

We love you, they say. We will always love you. Our precious one. So tiny, so fragile. You’ll be strong one day, his father says. Successful too. You’ll be everything to be proud of. Grow strong, my son. I love you forever, his mother says.

Be careful, they say. Don’t hurt yourself. Do you want to cuddle? Here, have another bite. Your sister is home, why don’t you say hello? Ah, you fell. Shh, be brave, they whispers, I’ll put a band aid on it. There, all better. You’re so strong, we’re proud of you. Love you, little one.

You can be anything you want, they say. No, not that. That’s not a sport for boys. That’s – we don’t, I mean, your father wants you to turn out the right way.

The skating hall again? they sigh, smiling. Of course. Your father has made a sandwich. Yes, and your mother’s going to pick you up later. Be careful.

Stop this, they demand. Or I’m going to – yeah, you better flinch. A son should listen to his father. Don’t you dare cry.

Next time, they say with their arms around him, you’ll be better. Nobody’s born a master in anything. Get some sleep.

Please, she sobs into his shirt. Don’t go. He didn’t mean it. He even said you can keep skating. Just try, try to find a girlfriend? A girl? Please, a girl.

Well, she laughs, sighs then. We expected that. We’ll get used to it. Will you be happy? …okay. Okay then.

Congratulations, the letter says. Her writing has gotten smaller. Come home sometime. Below, his letters are harsh, scrawled. Not my son.

Where are you two? the text message accuses. Dinner is getting cold. Ask Viktor if he still needs his room or if he’ll stay in yours from now on?

“There are two ways,” his grandmother says. “You can be an emperor or you can be a lover.”

It’s dark outside when they’re finally alone, in front of the skating hall, no reporters or friends or anything else but the moon and the wind whispering through their clothes.

“Can I kiss you a second time?” Viktor says.

“Yes,” Yuuri says.

who is yuuri katsuki

feet on the ice, wind in his hair, hot spring steam coiling in his veins from birth on, warm fingertips hiding on thin fingers stuck in black gloves. bubbling water on burning muscles, green tea in the morning and at night. a mother’s kiss. a father’s kiss. a sister’s, friend’s, tutor’s hugs, over and over. love. love. love. being utterly average in school, wanting to go home. blades of a skate on pale skin. the stone steps in front of the rink. standing on a mirror-smooth surface.

the first touch of metal to ice. flying, screams stuck in throat, knowing.

long shirts. long pants. frost biting at open skin, steam melting the pain away. soft-cooked noodles. spring onions, broth that breathes hope back into cells. the golden inside of an egg melting in a mouth. sitting on a bed at night and looking at the moon. praying to nobody. nails so bitten that they bleed. feet cramping. shivering. fear. wishing it to be over. hoping for everything. being so loved that failing feels like betrayal.

failing anyways. leaving home. failing more. foreign countries, travelling. too much coffee. books. the polish that smoothes the metal that carries him over the mirror to heaven.

miracles. sunlight. bone-deep thrumming panic. disbelief. crying to sleep, crying in front of everyone. feeling stupid, untalented. new glasses. dark hair. eyes so warm nobody believes they would ever run out of love to give. watching others conquer the ice, trying the same, losing.

meeting people. standing up. a new scarf. curly dog fur. a mother’s hug. ballet shoes. pink ribbons. cracked lips. foreign languages. cold wind and new scents. disbelief until reality settles in. deep, deep breaths until lungs feel like bursting. body changes. running. stretching until muscles yawn awake.

the ice’s screech turning into a whisper turning into the whistle of a flute, the hum of a violin. an orchestra. a symphony. mastery blooming in the empty grave of insecurity. 

dancing. ears red from cold and open for criticism. learning. remembering. falling and bruises that hurt until tears come.

a kiss. losing adoration. finding something deeper.

another pair of hands. glitter. diamonds. slicked-back hair. eyes wide open, warm still, calm too. 

flying, again. being the centre of a crowd’s attention. kindness. smiling more. lipbalm. dark lashes fluttering shut. confessions. blushing against pale skin.

fighting. winning. peppermint. moonlight. understanding words in a language he just began to learn. soft sheets. not sleeping alone. tearing down an altar to paint the tarot card of lovers into the dirt. 

waking at night. not alone. fingers tangling with even paler ones. ink stains from a pen. diaries. hope. lullabies. 

tomorrow.

the end of history.

He dances himself into history on a cold Friday of December. 

His costume is blue as the sky, marine-dark patches spreading over his spine and shoulders like dark wings, and he wins with a score that goes down as a record in numbers and graceful, stunning beauty perfectly equally.

They kiss the same night.

A month later, it happens.

The newspapers tumble over each other in attempts of being creative. A fallen star, they say, the end of an era, they say, the unbelievable truth and all of them demand an interview with Viktor. He has no manager, he doesn’t know what to tell them, he doesn’t pick up the phone.

The internet is buzzing with anger and sadness and – he throws up after his mother reads him a few of the forum posts – conspiracy theories. Just a media stunt, they say, what is the truth, they say, it can’t be real and how he’ll be back on day anyways, too young to quit, impossible. A trick, surely. Former fans become critics, enemies soften into defenders of one of the greatest artists that figure skating has ever seen and don’t you dare talk about him like that, have a little respect.

The world demands to know. Their filthy little mouths screams for information like birds for a worm, and when Viktor holds a press conference, they only shut up after he sits there in silence for half an hour and lets them yell.

“It’s true.”

He gets up, then, turns and walks off the stage. His steps echo into the quiet, still room. Nobody holds him back.

“Can you tell us what happened?” The reporter that speaks up, finally, when Viktor is almost out the door, is young. His eyes are brown. Viktor looks at him for two, three beats of his own heart. Someone calls his name from outside; Yuri. His voice is soaked from tears.

Viktor closes his eyes. He thinks about waking with icy cold in his arms where a body had glowed with warmth just the night before. ‘Love you,’ Yuuri had whispered when another wave of the disease had shaken his body, forcing his weak limbs to shudder against the white hospital sheets. ‘Love you till I die.’

Viktor opens his eyes. The audience roars into motion when he slams the door shut behind himself.

The room is cold when he gets there. Nothing has been touched. It’s only been a week. He sits down carefully, lies down on his back, breathes in until Yuuri’s scent drowns out his thoughts.

Viktor thinks about the doctor’s diagnosis, his gently spoken “a month, at most”, and then he opens his mouth that couldn’t kiss the mutating cells out of Yuuri’s skin to the ceiling.

“Please.”

Crying isn’t a decision. The tears come with his breath, sob by sob, words curling out of his lungs with every little one until they swell to a wail.

“Give him back. Please. Please. I need, I need him. Oh God.” 

The ceiling is black. A dog howls in the garden.

All is empty. “Give me back my history.”