"That doesn't even make sense, byon," Ken replies, but he sounds pleased. The tug to his hair is something he liked, and physical sensations are quickly overtaking the argument for him.
Ken decides to let Chikusa handle Ken's own uniform for the moment, instead moving his hands to impatiently unfasten Chikusa's pants - pants are harder to rip than a shirt, at least without claws, so he's not really going to try - and then yank them down those skinny hips. Chikusa's always so pale and fragile-looking, especially compared to Ken; maybe that's why Ken's always rough with him, marking him up.
Ken couldn't consciously put words to why he's rough with someone he considers delicate, when - despite all their constant bickering - Chikusa's one of the most important people to him in his whole world, second only to Mukuro himself. Even if he could articulate it, there might not be only one explanation, and Ken might not be sure which one it is at any given moment. It could be that Chikusa always looks too pure and untouched for someone as filthy as Ken, and dragging him down to Ken's level reassures Ken that Chikusa's not too far above him for him to touch. It could be, at the same time, reassurance that Chikusa is tough enough to take all the punishment Ken dishes out, that he can take any punishment their enemies dish out, that he only looks fragile and Ken doesn't have to worry about him actually breaking anytime soon. Maybe that pale skin looks like an open canvas for Ken's nails and teeth to lay claim to, to territorially mark as his. Or maybe his physical domination of Chikusa - because even when Chikusa tops, Ken is rough and leaves his marks and more or less dictates the situation; when Chikusa tops, Ken is begging him to do it - is his own form of revenge for Chikusa's intellectual superiority in other situations.
Ken couldn't explain any of that. He runs on instinct. But base instinct often stems from more complexity than the impulses it sends.
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Ken decides to let Chikusa handle Ken's own uniform for the moment, instead moving his hands to impatiently unfasten Chikusa's pants - pants are harder to rip than a shirt, at least without claws, so he's not really going to try - and then yank them down those skinny hips. Chikusa's always so pale and fragile-looking, especially compared to Ken; maybe that's why Ken's always rough with him, marking him up.
Ken couldn't consciously put words to why he's rough with someone he considers delicate, when - despite all their constant bickering - Chikusa's one of the most important people to him in his whole world, second only to Mukuro himself. Even if he could articulate it, there might not be only one explanation, and Ken might not be sure which one it is at any given moment. It could be that Chikusa always looks too pure and untouched for someone as filthy as Ken, and dragging him down to Ken's level reassures Ken that Chikusa's not too far above him for him to touch. It could be, at the same time, reassurance that Chikusa is tough enough to take all the punishment Ken dishes out, that he can take any punishment their enemies dish out, that he only looks fragile and Ken doesn't have to worry about him actually breaking anytime soon. Maybe that pale skin looks like an open canvas for Ken's nails and teeth to lay claim to, to territorially mark as his. Or maybe his physical domination of Chikusa - because even when Chikusa tops, Ken is rough and leaves his marks and more or less dictates the situation; when Chikusa tops, Ken is begging him to do it - is his own form of revenge for Chikusa's intellectual superiority in other situations.
Ken couldn't explain any of that. He runs on instinct. But base instinct often stems from more complexity than the impulses it sends.