Font Size
15px

The cool night air wrapped around them as they stepped out of the gym, a soft sigh of wind pushing at the stray hairs on Ayaka's forehead and cooling the sweat still clinging to Yuuto's arms. The big double doors swung shut behind them with a hollow clang, sealing in the sll of varnish and rubber and leaving only the scent of damp asphalt and autumn leaves. Streetlamps threw long gold bars across the pavent, turning their shadows into thin, stretched silhouettes. Their footsteps echoed in ti.

For a few strides neither of them spoke. Yuuto kept his eyes on the sidewalk, gym bag slung across his back, heart still hamring from the marathon shooting session. He wasn't used to anyone seeing him like that exhausted, grinding, vulnerable. The glow of the system notification still burned in his mind like neon: Your strength is your weakness now. Make your weakness your strength.

Ayaka broke the silence first.

"You know," she said, tilting her head at him, "most people don't look like they've just gone through a rainstorm when they leave practice."

Yuuto gave a small, self-conscious laugh. "Guess I overdid it."

"That's not overdoing it." She eyed him with mock incredulity. "That's borderline insane." She bumped her shoulder lightly into his. "One hundred shots?"

He tried to shrug it off. "It's a system thing. Kind of like a personal goal. I have to make up for lost ti."

Her brows knit a little. "Lost ti?"

He slowed for a beat. "When you're off the court as long as I was… you start to feel like the ga's moving without you. Like you're watching through glass. So I'm trying to break it."

She nodded slowly, eyes soft. "I get it. In my squad, if you're out for a month you're practically a stranger when you co back. Multiply that by a year…" She gave a small whistle. "That's heavy."

Yuuto chuckled without humor. "Yeah. Heavy."

They reached an intersection; the red glow of the crossing signal painted their faces. Ayaka glanced at him again. "But you're back. I saw it tonight. You were tired but you kept your form. You didn't cheat the reps. That's rare."

Yuuto rubbed the back of his neck, embarrassed. "Thanks… I guess."

"Don't be so shy." She grinned. "I wouldn't have stayed if it was boring."

He blinked. "Wait, you stayed the whole ti?"

"Until I fell asleep." She laughed at herself. "I must've looked ridiculous."

"You didn't." The words ca out before he could stop them. "It was… nice, actually. Made the gym feel less empty."

Ayaka looked at him from the corner of her eye. "So I was moral support?"

"Maybe," he admitted, smiling faintly. This update is available on n͟o͟v͟e͟l͟f͟i͟r͟e͟

"Even though you didn't know I was there?" she teased.

"Yes."

They turned down a narrower street lined with trees. The night slled of damp leaves and distant cooking oil from so late-night kitchen. Their houses weren't far now. Yuuto could feel his legs aching, but walking next to her made the ache fade a little.

"You know," Ayaka said, voice playful, "even though we live walking distance from each other we never once go ho together. Isn't that weird?"

Yuuto laughed quietly. "Not really."

"Mm." She pretended to think. "Well, since we live so close, does that an you'll walk ho after late practices?"

He glanced at her, startled by how easily she'd said it. "If you want to."

"I do." She flashed him a grin. "Can't have the future ace letting get jumped by stray cats."

He snorted. "Stray cats?"

"Hey, they're vicious around here." She bumped him again, and this ti he bumped back, the playful gesture loosening sothing in his chest. For the first ti all day, the sting of Shun's victory felt less sharp.

A few houses later they reached her street. She slowed, turning toward a small gate lit by a porch light. The glow turned her hair into threads of bronze.

"This is ," she said, pausing. "Thanks for walking . Even after killing yourself in the gym."

"No problem," Yuuto said, voice a little rough. "It was… nice."

Ayaka smiled at him, softer now. "Get so rest, okay? You'll need it. School starts early."

He nodded. "Yeah. Night, Ayaka."

"Night, Yuuto." She hesitated a mont, then added, "And… don't let anyone make you feel invisible. Not when you work like that."

Before he could answer she slipped through the gate, the latch clicking behind her. Yuuto stood there a second longer, the echo of her words lingering in the cool air.

Then he turned toward his own street, exhaustion weighing on his muscles but sothing new flickering in his chest—a quiet, steady fire, and the mory of a girl who had stayed to watch him shoot.

He exhaled, a long breath that let so of the day leak out of his body. The street was quiet now just the hum of a distant scooter and the flicker of a moth circling a lamp. He shifted his bag on his shoulder and headed toward his own street, muscles heavy but chest strangely light.

The closer he got to his house the darker it beca. Porch lights here were dim, and the only sound was the crunch of gravel under his sneakers. He fished his key from his pocket, the tal cool against his still-warm palm, and unlocked the door quietly so as not to wake his parents.

Inside, the house slled faintly of fabric softener and the curry his mother must have made earlier. He set his bag down by the entryway and toed off his shoes. The hallway was dim, moonlight spilling through the curtains.

In his room Yuuto dropped onto his bed without turning on the light. His muscles scread; his hands ached from the endless repetitions. He stared at the ceiling fan turning lazily above him, replaying the day: Shun's smirk after every made basket, the coach's speech about the tournant, Ayaka's smile under the streetlight.

The system notification blinked faintly in his mind's eye, the words burned there like a challenge: Your strength is your weakness now. Make your weakness your strength.

A soft noise from the kitchen his father moving around, probably making tea reminded him how late it had gotten. He rolled to his side, pulling a towel over his head, and allowed his eyes to close.

For the first ti since the injury, his exhaustion wasn't just pain; it was progress. Outside, the wind rattled the leaves, carrying away the last of the gym's echoes. Tomorrow would be school. Tomorrow Shun would still be the ace. But tonight, under his own roof, Yuuto felt the spark of a coback.

You are reading Ace of the Bench Chapter 31: Walk Home on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.