Hi! đ I really like your SMAU stories/scenarios, i think they're so funny and I love reading through them. So with that, can you do another dadzawa one? I loved that one, I love dadzawa. Make it anything as long as it includes dadzawa and brainrot lol. And maaaybe also another part where they say 'I love you'? Just out of nowhere? Please? đ
being aizawa's daughter means sharing the house with a sleep-deprived cryptid and 3 cats (part ii to 'parental guidance')
âš midoriya agrees to tutor UAâs least interested student for extra credit.
hanta sero
re-up | smau ‷ sero was supposed to pick up and leave, but somehow, he keeps finding new reasons to stay tell my mom we're in love | smau + fic ‷ fake dating wasn't on your holiday to-do listâuntil sero invited you home for tamales and chaos low dose | smau ‷ in which you didn't expect to like your dealer, but he keeps replying to your overly enthuiastic texts like it's normal.
aizawa with a pro hero that always get paired up together (did i mention they hate eachother to the point they cant stand eachother)
you and aizawa constantly get partnered for fieldwork. the job is clean. the dynamic, not so much.
meeting a new plug for the first time everyone pray i donât fucking die
but first i gotta get thru this fuck ass shift!!!
i ripped my cart in the bathroom TOO hard and iâm tweaking at work omfg help
gonna get violently high and fulfill requests tonight im so excited
oh my days this newest sero piece brooooooo i lovedddddd itttttt so soooo sooooo gooddddd
AHHH THANK YOU
i had a devious smile on my face the whole time i was writing it
Hihi!!! I hope youâre having a good day ! I was wondering if you could please do friends to lovers texts with Bakugou and a weird, energetic reader? i really hope im doing this the right way lol and if im not im really sorry!! TvT
you're the weirdest part of his routine, and lately, his favorite.
More little brother Izuku please!! It was so funny
midoriya is a hero, a strategist, a prodigyâand a little brother who steals your leftovers and pisses you off. (part ii of 'ts pmo ong')
Jade in my head weâre besties I love ur smau I canât imagine how hard they are to make girl
omfg lets be besties pleaseeee
i love makung the smaus i crack myself up icl im so glad other people enjoy them
a short, slow-burn library romance, ft. one blueberry muffin, exactly zero jokes, and a boy who takes flashcards way too seriously. (4597 words)
you meet tenya iida under circumstances that can only be described as tragically collegiate: a peer-led study group in the furthest, quietest corner of the campus library, surrounded by half-dead fluorescent bulbs and the palpable despair of students on the brink of burnout.
it's the third week of the semester, and you're already floundering.
you hadn't intended to be. in theory, you were going to stay on top of thingsâread the chapters early, color-code your notes, maybe even start a study group of your own. but somewhere between sleep deprivation, an avalanche of discussion posts, and the mysterious black hole that is the university's online portal, you fell behind. hard.
introduction to public policy has been your academic nemesis from the start. the textbook reads like legal jargon swallowed a thesaurus. the professor talks in dense, circular metaphors. every quiz is a minefield of trick questions and ambiguous phrasing. you are, in every sense of the word, academically drowning.
so when a brightly colored flyer promising a "collaborative review session" caught your eye on the bulletin board outside the lecture hall, you didn't think twice. you showed up. desperate. caffeinated. terminally underprepared.
and now you regret everything.
the room smells like dry-erase markers and nervous sweat. a whiteboard at the front is covered in illegible graphs. someone has already spilled a latte on the floor. the guy leading the group talks fast and loud, his explanations full of buzzwords and gestures but lacking anything remotely useful. you suspect he's just regurgitating the study guide at a slightly faster pace.
the other students seem to agree.
one by one, they start to trickle out. a girl leaves with the excuse of "office hours." a guy mutters something about dinner. another just quietly packs up and disappears, not even bothering with a pretense.
by the end of the hour, only two people remain: you, clinging to a futile hope of salvaging your gpa... and him.
he sits across from you with the kind of posture that makes your back ache just looking at him. tall, composed, and absurdly polishedâlike someone who writes essays three days early and carries a spare pen in case someone forgets theirs. his navy-blue sweater is wrinkle-free. his glasses catch the dim library light. his notes are not just color-codedâthey're thematically organized, annotated with footnotes and marginalia in tiny, immaculate handwriting.
he hasn't spoken once. he hasn't needed to.
he radiates competence like it's a moral obligation.
"you're still here?" you ask, more surprise than judgment.
the boy looks up, blinking as if surfacing from a well of deep concentration. he adjusts his glasses with a practiced motion.
"yes," he says, voice clipped and oddly formal. "you are as well."
you arch an eyebrow. "no offense, but... are you actually getting something out of this?"
his expression doesn't change, but he tilts his head slightlyâalmost like he's assessing you.
"of course," he replies. "engaging in structured group review enhances cognitive retention and contextual understanding. it's an effective method for consolidating knowledge prior to a high-stakes assessment."
you blink. "so... yes?"
he doesn't hesitate. "yes."
you snortâaudibly. it escapes before you can stop it. and to your surprise, a faint smile flickers across his mouth.
"i'm tenya iida," he says, extending a hand across the table with the kind of precision reserved for formal introductions at university mixers.
you stare at his hand for a moment, then take it. his grip is warm. steady. confident in a way that makes you sit up a little straighter.
"y/n," you say.
his smile grows just slightly. "it's a pleasure to meet you, y/n."
he releases your hand and immediately pulls out a second set of flashcards from his folder. of course he has a second set.
"would you like to quiz each other?" he asks, dead serious. "alternating questions could be a mutually beneficial method of review."
you stare at him.
he stares back.
something about himâthe earnestness, the posture, the complete and utter lack of sarcasmâdisarms you. it's like he's the living embodiment of academic sincerity. you're not sure whether to laugh or agree.
you do both.
"...sure."
you don't know it yet, but that's the beginning.
âËâżË°
you don't plan on seeing him again.
it's not personal. it's just that study groups are the social equivalent of jury dutyâtemporary, miserable, and best forgotten. you assume tenya iida is one of those hyper-dedicated overachievers who only exist within the academic ecosystem. he probably recedes into a cloud of flashcards and moral fiber as soon as the library closes.
you are, however, proven categorically wrong the following wednesday at exactly 8:03 a.m.
you enter the campus café half-awake, mildly hostile, and fully dependent on the idea of caffeine as a substitute for sleep. the plan is simple: grab something with enough espresso to make your eye twitch, stare blankly at your phone for fifteen minutes, and pretend the crushing weight of institutional learning isn't slowly hollowing you out from the inside.
but fateâor perhaps syllabus-based divine interventionâhas other plans.
because when you step inside, there he is.
same posture. same glasses. same stupidly crisp button-down like it didn't just come out of someone's laundry but graduated magna cum laude from it. he's seated at a table by the window, surrounded by highlighters arranged like soldiers, reading the textbook that has been your personal tormentor since week one.
and next to his coffee?
a single blueberry muffin.
you hesitate, caught in that weird space where it's too late to pretend you didn't see him, but also too awkward to walk past without acknowledging him.
before you can make a decision, he looks upâand smiles.
not just a polite, "ah yes, i recognize you" smile.
a real smile. brief, but sincere. like he's actually glad you're here.
he waves you over.
you hate how quickly your legs respond.
"didn't expect to see you here," you say as you slide into the seat across from him, instantly aware of how tired you look in comparison to his perfectly combed hair and terrifying punctuality.
"i study here most mornings," he replies. "the ambient noise level is consistent, and the natural lighting is optimal for focus."
you blink. "that is... alarmingly specific."
he inclines his head. "i find that consistency breeds productivity."
you want to tease him, but the truth is, it's kind of admirable. alarming. but admirable.
he gestures to the pastry between you.
"would you like half?" he asks. "it's fresh. and i believe we have, at this point, established a cordial enough rapport to justify the sharing of breakfast items."
you stare at him.
"do you always offer muffins to people you've only studied with once?"
he doesn't even flinch. "only when they look tired enough to deserve one."
your mouth twitches.
"you've been saving that line, haven't you."
he looks mildly offended. "no. though i could annotate it in my planner if you'd like."
you laughâgenuinely this timeâand accept the muffin. it's warm, sweet, and annoyingly perfect. just like him.
you don't pull out your flashcards. not immediately. you sit there in companionable silence, splitting the muffin and sipping your drinks like it's something you've always done. like this is normal.
you tell yourself this isn't a date. obviously.
it's too early in the day for romance. you're both clutching textbooks like weapons. he hasn't even made a single joke. (you're not sure he knows how.)
and yetâ
when he leans in to show you a section he highlightedâcarefully annotated with footnotes and marginal notes that are somehow neater than your typed essaysâyour shoulders brush. you don't pull away.
he doesn't, either.
later, you realize that you don't even remember what chapter you reviewed.
but you remember the sound of his voice as he quietly explained it. the way he passed you the last bite of muffin without saying anything. the way his fingers curled ever so slightly when he set his pen down between you.
you remember thinking, with a strange flutter in your chest: this could be something.
not yet.
but maybe.
âËâżË°
you tell yourself this is still just about school.
you repeat it like a mantra as you meet him at the library every tuesday and thursday without fail, settling into your now-permanent seats by the windows like assigned partners in some ongoing group project that no one else remembers being assigned to. his bag always lands on the table first, followed by a reusable water bottle the size of your emotional baggage. he brings extra highlighters nowâpluralâand starts leaving a green one near your elbow like heâs not even thinking about it.
you, in turn, stop pretending to study anywhere else.
because the truth is, you donât concentrate better when heâs aroundânot even a little. heâs distracting in the worst possible way: tall and tidy and terminally composed, with a voice like a podcast host and a smile that you pretend not to notice every time he glances over at you with something like pride in his eyes.
and the worst part?
itâs working.
your grades are going up. you understand policy terminology now. you caught yourself referencing a case study unprompted in another class, and the look your professor gave you made it feel like youâd just been knighted.
youâd thank him for itâsincerelyâif he didnât look so smug every time you nailed a quiz.
âyouâve clearly been applying yourself,â he says one evening, looking over your annotated notes like theyâre some kind of sacred text.
âiâve been applying your study methods,â you reply, then instantly regret it, because the smile he gives you in return is devastating.
and that would be fineâannoying, but fineâif it werenât for the fact that heâs started sitting closer.
not drastically. not inappropriately. just... close.
close enough that when you both lean in to look at something on the same page, your shoulders brush. your knees knock. his hand lingers near yours when he passes you a pen, and he doesnât move away quickly. sometimesâand this is particularly evilâhis thigh rests against yours under the table for minutes at a time, and youâre too proud (and too panicked) to say anything.
youâre not flirting. not really.
youâre both too stubborn for that.
but something is happening. you just donât know what to call it.
one thursday afternoon, the sky is gray and heavy with the threat of rain. the windows in the library fog up slightly, making the whole room feel smaller, softer, somehow more intimate. your shoes are damp. your brain is fried. youâre barely holding onto your focus.
but heâs already there, sitting at your usual table with a mug from the downstairs cafĂ© and a folder labeled âlegislation review: week 5.â thereâs a muffin. of course thereâs a muffin.
he looks up as you approach. smiles. âyouâre early.â
you blink. âso are you.â
he shrugs. âanticipation is efficient.â
âwhat does that even mean?â
he hesitates, like heâs genuinely considering it. âit means i enjoy this.â
your heart does something stupid.
you take your seat before your face can give you away.
thirty minutes in, your brain stops processing information entirely.
youâre trying to focus. really, you are. but his leg is pressed against yours and you swear itâs getting closer every time he shifts. itâs not even the contact itself thatâs distractingâitâs the fact that he doesnât seem to notice. like itâs just normal. like this is how he always studies with people.
(does he?)
(no. he canât.)
ây/n?â he says, and you jolt like youâve been electrocuted.
âhm?â
âi asked if youâd like to walk through the case brief again. you seem... distant.â
you clear your throat and try not to sound like someone whose brain has just been wiped by a thigh. âyeah, no, iâm fine. just tired.â
he nods solemnly. âunderstandable. your coursework has been particularly intensive.â
he says it like he knows your schedule better than you doâwhich he might. youâve seen his planner. youâre pretty sure heâs memorized the entire academic calendar, national holidays included.
you try to return to your notes.
you fail.
eventually, you lean back in your chair and exhale.
âokay,â you say. âi need to ask you something.â
he looks up, immediately attentive. âyes?â
you glance aroundâno oneâs within earshotâ and lean in slightly.
âthis thing we do.â
he blinks. âstudying?â
âno. i mean yes, but no.â you gesture vaguely between the two of you. âthis. the muffins. the flashcards. the... sitting so close i can smell your laundry detergent.â
he goes still.
âiâm just trying to understand if weâre, like...â you hesitate. âis this just a really intense academic friendship or are we... flirting?â
he doesnât speak for a long moment.
then, carefully: âi hadnât realized my proximity was making you uncomfortable.â
âitâs not!â you say, too quickly. âitâs just... confusing.â
âconfusing how?â
you fidget with the cap of your pen. âbecause we do things that feel... date-adjacent. and i donât know if thatâs just how you are with people or if iâmââ you stop yourself before you can say not imagining it.
his brows draw together, faintly perplexed. âi apologize. i didnât mean to cause confusion.â
you blink. âso you are flirting?â
his ears go pink. just slightly. âi wouldnât define it as flirting. but i do enjoy spending time with you.â
you squint at him. âthatâs not a no.â
he hesitates. then, quieter: âitâs not.â
oh.
you stare at him. he stares back.
and thenâlike the universe canât stand unresolved tensionâyour knees bump again.
but this time, he doesnât shift away.
and neither do you.
âËâżË°
you donât call it a date.
not out loud.
not even in your head, reallyânot technically. because youâre not dating. you havenât kissed. thereâs been no confession. thereâs been no moment of clarity where either of you has stood dramatically in the rain and said i think about you all the time, which, honestly, is a bit disappointing.
but you still change your outfit three times before meeting him for coffee on saturday.
you still hesitate in front of the mirror, adjusting your sleeves and second-guessing your hair, muttering get a grip under your breath like itâs a prayer.
you still pause at the door to the cafĂ©, one hand on the handle, and remind yourselfâagainâthat this isnât a date.
youâre just meeting up. casually. like friends.
friends who sometimes sit with their knees touching under library tables. friends who share muffins and steal glances and somehow always find reasons to linger a little too long in doorways.
friends who, if they werenât so emotionally constipated, mightâve figured this out already.
but you push the door open anyway, and the little bell overhead chimes bright and familiar.
heâs already there.
of course he is.
tenya iida is punctual to the point of pathology. if you told him to meet you in the afterlife at 3:00 p.m. sharp, heâd be there early, holding a clipboard and a fully prepared powerpoint.
heâs sitting near the window, back straight, hands folded politely in his lap. his hair is a little messy from the wind outside. his sweater is navyâclean, simple, a little oversized in a way that makes you stare longer than you should.
he sees you and stands immediately, which is both adorable and completely unnecessary.
âyouâre early,â he says, voice warm.
âso are you.â
he doesnât reply, but the smile he gives you is soft around the edges.
you order something with too much caffeine and not enough nutritional value. he offers to pay, like he always does. you decline, like you always do. itâs a silent tradition now, a ritual of stubbornness. he lets it go with a quiet nod, but not without giving you that lookâthe one that says i was raised right and this physically pains me.
you find a booth in the corner, a little more secluded than the rest. the sun spills in through the window in soft golden streaks, and for a moment, it feels like youâre somewhere outside of time.
âiâve never seen you wear that color,â he says as you sit down.
you glance at your shirt. âyeah? too much?â
he shakes his head immediately. âno. it suits you.â
your mouth goes a little dry.
you recover quickly, leaning back and sipping your drink like it doesnât mean anything. like the warmth crawling up your neck is from the coffee and not the compliment.
âso,â you say, clearing your throat. âwhatâs on the agenda for today? rigorous academic analysis? philosophical debates about economic ethics? impromptu pop quizzes?â
he tilts his head. âi thought we might take the day off.â
you blink. âfrom... studying?â
âfrom everything.â he shrugs, a little sheepishly. âi realized weâve never spent time together without a textbook between us.â
your heart does something strange.
âyou mean like... just hang out?â
âyes.â
âlike friends.â
he hesitates. just barely. âyes. like friends.â
the words hang in the air between youâawkward, uncertain, but not unkind.
you nod, slowly. âokay. yeah. we can do that.â
and you do.
you talk. not about school, not about deadlines or group projects or the upcoming midterm. you talk about dumb childhood stories and weird food preferences and the fact that he once tried to start a recycling initiative in his middle school and was very upset when no one followed the sorting chart correctly.
you tell him about your obsession with terrible reality TV. he listens with the seriousness of a man taking notes for a thesis.
he tells you about his older brother, and how much he looks up to him. you tell him about the stray cat that used to follow you home in high school, even though you never fed it.
he laughsâreally laughsâwhen you tell him about the time you broke your nose in gym class trying to dodge a volleyball and ran straight into a bleacher.
âiâm sorry,â he says between gasps. âi donât mean to laugh at your pain.â
âno, you do,â you say, grinning. âand itâs okay. i would too.â
at one point, your knees bump under the table again. this time, neither of you pulls away.
itâs later than you mean it to be when you finally leave the cafĂ©. the sun is dipping low, the sky tinged with lavender and orange. the street is quiet, and the wind bites just enough to make you zip your jacket up.
you walk together. not toward the library, not toward another classâjust aimlessly. like people who have nowhere else to be.
itâs peaceful.
and weirdly... intimate.
youâre not talking. not really. the silence between you is comfortable now, lived-in. every so often your hands brush, and you wonderâwildly, stupidly âwhat would happen if you just reached out.
but you donât.
because this isnât a date.
itâs not.
except maybe... it is.
âthis was nice,â you say, when you finally reach the crosswalk where youâll part ways.
he nods. âi enjoyed it.â
thereâs a beat of silence.
âwe should do it again,â you say. casually. like it doesnât mean anything.
but he looks at you like it does.
âiâd like that,â he says. and thenââyouâre very easy to be around.â
your breath catches.
you want to say something. youâre easy to be around too. i think about you when weâre not together. i donât know if iâm imagining this but i hope iâm not.
instead, you say, âyouâre weirdly charming, you know that?â
he blinks. âiâthank you?â
you grin. âitâs a compliment. mostly.â
he laughs. soft. pleased. âiâll take it.â
he takes a small step back, like heâs about to leave âbut then pauses.
ây/n?â
âyeah?â
âif this had been a date...â he clears his throat. âwould that have been... agreeable to you?â
you stare at him.
then, slowlyâcarefullyâyou nod.
âyeah,â you say. âi think it wouldâve been.â
he smiles. itâs small. tentative. but it lights up his whole face.
âthen maybe next time, we wonât pretend.â
you feel like youâre floating.
âdeal.â
he nods once. then, with a strange, lingering sort of hesitationâlike heâs not ready to go yetâhe turns to leave.
you watch him go.
and for the first time in a long time, you feel... hopeful.
âËâżË°
you don't know what you're expecting.
when he texts you the next morningâsame time tuesday? not for studying this time. if you're free.âyou stare at it for a good ten minutes before responding. not because youâre unsure of your answer (youâre not), but because the implication hits like a freight train.
not for studying.
not as friends.
just you. just him. again.
this time, itâs a little different.
this time, heâs calling it what it is.
you donât overthink your reply (for once). you just type yeah. iâm free and throw your phone face-down before your heart can beat out of your chest.
and when tuesday rolls around, you are twenty minutes early.
you tell yourself itâs because the weatherâs nice and the walk was shorter than usual and you didnât want to cut it close. but the truth is, youâve been ready since noon.
youâre wearing the sweater he said he liked once, months ago, after a study session where he handed you a highlighter and your fingers brushed and you both paused like the world might end. itâs not even your warmest or your nicest sweater. itâs just... the one he looked at a little too long.
you donât want to admit what that means.
you sit in your usual seat by the window. a small table, worn edges. your coffee in hand. no textbooks. no flashcards. just the sound of the café around you and the low simmer of anticipation in your chest.
he walks in three minutes early, which is basically scandalous by iida standards.
you glance up, and the second your eyes meet, he smiles.
itâs not his usual polite, committee-appropriate smile.
itâs something else.
something softer.
he sits down across from you like heâs been doing it his whole life.
you stare at him for a second too long.
âyouâre early,â he says, like itâs a fact worth noting. his voice is gentler than usual.
âso are you.â
âa rare occurrence.â
âshould i be concerned?â
he laughsâquietly, warmly. âi thought you might say that.â
you both go quiet.
not awkward quiet. just... full.
full of everything youâre not saying.
you sip your drink and hope your heart doesnât explode.
twenty minutes in, you realize youâve forgotten what time it is.
again.
youâre talking about something stupidâa professor you both silently hate but never speak ill of in classâand heâs mimicking their voice in a whisper, hand shielding his mouth, and youâre laughing.
like genuinely, honestly laughing.
like you donât have a hundred things weighing you down.
he always does that. makes everything feel easier. lighter.
itâs dangerous, how much you like it.
how much you like him.
you havenât said it. not out loud. not even to yourself.
but the truth is: youâre in trouble.
deep trouble.
because tenya iida has the power to wreck you in a way no one else ever has.
not because heâs dramatic. not because heâs charming (though he is, in that annoying, understated, golden-retriever-with-a-perfect-credit-score kind of way).
but because heâs steady.
because he means things.
because when he looks at you, itâs like youâre someone worth understanding.
and youâve never been loved gently before.
not like this.
you walk out together.
neither of you mentions how long you stayed. itâs dark out, but neither of you cares.
you walk close, side by side. your hands brush once, then again. his fingers twitch toward yours, and you pretend not to noticeânot because you donât want it, but because youâre not sure what happens if you reach back.
you talk about nothing. and everything.
he tells you about the time his older brother accidentally dyed his hair blue with a shampoo prank and how no one in their house was allowed to mention it for an entire year.
you tell him about the time you accidentally set off a fire alarm trying to microwave leftover curry in a dorm that very explicitly prohibited strong-smelling food.
âyouâre a menace,â he says, laughing.
you bump your shoulder into his. âyou say that like itâs a bad thing.â
he glances at you. âi didnât say that.â
you both stop at the crosswalkâthe same one where you stood days ago.
the same one where he asked if this had been a date...
youâre not pretending anymore.
and yet.
you donât know what to say.
you just look at him, the wind brushing through your sleeves, your fingers cold where theyâre shoved into your pockets.
he looks at you.
longer than before.
long enough that your heart stumbles.
and thenâquietlyâhe says, âcan i ask you something?â
you nod. âof course.â
his voice is softer than youâve ever heard it. careful.
âwhy me?â
you blink. âwhat?â
âwhy... this?â he gestures gently between you. âi know iâm not the most exciting person. iâm not particularly funny or... spontaneous.â
you frown. âiida.â
âiâm just trying to understand,â he says. âwhy you keep showing up.â
you want to say because i like the way you talk when youâre tired, or because your laugh makes me want to listen to every dumb story youâve ever told.
you want to say because iâve never felt so calm next to another person in my entire life.
instead, you say, âbecause when iâm with you, i donât feel like i have to be anyone else.â
his expression shifts.
his jaw tightens. his eyes soften.
he takes a step closer.
âi donât want to mess this up,â he says.
âyouâre not.â
âi donât want to misread it.â
you exhale, a laugh escaping despite yourself. âyouâre not.â
his hand lifts, hesitatesâthen lands gently against your cheek.
you stop breathing.
âmay i kiss you?â he asks.
you nod before your brain catches up.
âyeah,â you whisper. âyou may.â
and he does.
itâs not rushed.
itâs not fiery or desperate.
itâs patient. reverent. like heâs memorizing the feeling. like heâs been waiting for the right moment and this, finally, is it.
his lips press softly against yours, and your hands lift automatically to his jacket, holding on, grounding yourself.
when you part, he leans his forehead against yours.
youâre both quiet for a moment.
then he says, âiâve wanted to do that for a long time.â
you smile. âi could tell.â
âwas i too obvious?â
âpainfully.â
he laughs, arms sliding around your waist like itâs the most natural thing in the world.
âthis is still new,â he says. âi know that.â
you nod.
âbut iâm willing to take it slow.â
âokay.â
âiâll be patient.â
âokay.â
he pauses. âand iâd like to take you to dinner. an actual dinner. with reservations and menus and probably overpriced appetizers.â
you grin. âare you asking me on a real date?â
he lifts your hand and presses a kiss to your knuckles.
âyes,â he says. âiâm asking.â
âthen yes,â you reply. âiâm saying yes.â
you walk home hand-in-hand.
you donât have to say anything.
itâs not pretending anymore.
and for onceâfinallyâthat feels like enough.