A poignant exploration of grief, family dynamics, and the hidden depths of love amidst sudden tragedy. Follow Akihito as he navigates the cold reality of a funeral while reflecting on the intense, passionate connection with his partner, Asami, that was interrupted by life-changing news. This story captures the fragile balance between sorrow and the strength found in those who hold us up.
Akihito stands at the graveside clutching a black umbrella against the driving rain, his expression hollow and grief-stricken as he stares down at the wet earth, his wool coat dark and heavy against the misty cold.
The funeral crowd, including his parents and siblings, stands in a somber, detached line, while his grandmother Kate stands trembling nearby, looking fragile and small in her mourning clothes.
A sudden shift to the past reveals Akihito and Asami in the penthouse, the tension of their recent reconciliation palpable as they embrace, the room dimly lit by the golden glow of city lights through the window.
A close-up of Asami's golden eyes watching Akihito with an intense, possessive gaze, the atmosphere thick with unspoken electricity and the remnants of their heated argument now replaced by intimacy.
The phone lies on the bedroom floor, its screen glowing in the darkness, as Akihito freezes, his hand still outstretched, the sudden shock of the tragic news washing over his face.
Asami shifts from his position on the bed, his expression softening from passion into one of immediate, grounding concern as he reaches out to steady Akihito's shoulder.
Back to the present, the priest speaks at the graveside, the grey, oppressive sky hanging low over the cemetery, casting long, somber shadows over the mourners.
Akihito stands tall amidst his family, his eyes clear and determined, as he offers his arms to his grieving grandmother and Aunt Eddie, shielding them from the biting cold.
A sharp contrast as Akihito’s parents are shown in the background, their faces obscured by umbrellas, whispering intently about inheritance and assets, completely oblivious to the emotional weight of the moment.
Akihito leads his grandmother and aunt away from the graveside toward the parking lot, his silhouette framed against the misty, rain-slicked landscape, embodying a newfound sense of duty and strength.
Prompt di generazione(Accedi per vedere il prompt completo)
Using anime style art The morning of the burial was the kind of misty cold that felt like an insult — thick, unseasonable cold air pressing against every mourner like a hand that refused to lift. Akihito stood at the graveside in his heavy wool coat and black suit, the large umbrella doing little to improve his mood. He stared at the tips of his shoes where the grass had gone soft and dark with rain. Around him, his family arranged themselves in a quiet, grieving orbit: his parents, his older brother with his wife tucked under his arm, his sister and her husband standing close, his grandmother Kate barely upright beside him, and his aunt Edwina — Eddie — just a step away, her eyes red but her spine straight. The friends and colleagues of a man well-lived came in a slow procession, pressing hands, murmuring condolences that Akihito received with a nod and empty eyes. Because his eyes kept drifting back to the grave. He couldn't make himself believe it. A sudden heart attack. His grandfather — loud, stubborn, warm, infuriating — simply *gone*. --- He remembered exactly what he was doing the night his world ended. He had been wrapped in Asami's strong possessive arms, being kissed breathless, and walked backward toward the bedroom leaving a trail of shedding clothes — a jacket and shoes near the front door, shirt in the living room, pants somewhere in the hallway, underwear abandoned in the urgent geography of reconciliation. They had spent a week apart after one of Asami's explosive arguments: the kind that started over nothing and detonated into something ugly, full of sharp words and slammed doors. Akihito had run — he always ran when the anger became too big to hold — straight to Joey’s apartment, where he spent seven days being furious, embarrassed, and secretly terrified to go home. Asami had given him time. He always did — the infuriating patience of a man who knew the other would come back. But after a week, Asami’s patience had apparently expired. Asami had appeared at Joey’s door like a weather system: inevitable, undeniable. Thank God Joey wasn't home to witness it. Aki was physically escorted from the building with all the ceremony of a hostage negotiation, and by the time they reached the car, neither of them could remember why they'd been fighting at all. The drive home was an exercise in wandering hands and interrupted kisses. How they survived the ride home without a collision remained one of life's small miracles. Back in the penthouse, the argument was entirely forgotten but had morphed into something else entirely — Asami's hands mapping the heat of Akihito's skin, clothing surrendered in pieces to the floor, the weight of the older man's attention pressing into him like sunlight through glass. Asami had lifted him as if he weighed nothing and tossed him onto the bed with an ease that never stopped being startling. He bounced against the linens, breath catching. He'd watched Asami watch him — those gold eyes tracing him with the slow deliberateness of a man who owned the room, owned the moment, owned him — and he'd tried to protest. *"Look, Asami, I —"* Aki let out a high pitched squeak. *"I'm looking,"*the corners Asami’s lips had curved into a deep smile and the words had landed like a heavy hand pressed flat unto Akihito's sternum. His heart had drummed. Asami crossed to the bed with the measured ease of a man who had never once in his life been uncertain about what he wanted, and Akihito had done what he always did — backed up against the headboard like a fool, as though distance meant anything. Asami had laughed, low and amused, and then pounced, landing over him with predatory grace — And that was when the phone erupted. Akihito scrambled for it. *"Hello?"* *"Akihito."* His mother's voice. Wrong. The pitch of it was all wrong. *"Mom — what happened? Why are you crying?"* Across the bed, Asami went still. He rolled slowly to his side, watching, reaching out to touch the younger man's shoulder without a word. *"Your grandfather..."* she said. *"He had a heart attack."* *"Are you at the hospital? I'll come right away —"* *"Akihito."* A pause that swallowed everything. *"He didn't make it."* The phone slipped from his hand and hit the floor. The priest's voice pulled him back to the present. He opened his eyes to grey sky and the heavy perfume of rain-soaked earth. Beside him, his grandmother was weeping quietly, her small frame shaking. His aunt moved to her, sadness carved deep into the lines of her face. *"It's time to go,"* *"Don't worry about it, grandma."* Akihito kept his voice steady. *"I've got it covered."* Two sets of eyes turned on him. Eddie's eyebrow arched. His grandmother shook her head slowly, unconvinced. He offered no further explanation — just offered his arms to the women he loved most and walked them toward the parking lot. He knew his parents would make no such offer. They were already calculating the inheritance. The family moved in