The sun hung lazily in the cloud-speckled sky, the warmth of its rays bathing the Midoriya household in a golden hue. It was a day like any other, but one that carried a quiet weight in its simplicity. Four-year-old Izuku Midoriya sat cross-legged on the floor of her room, her small hands meticulously arranging a line of action figures. All Might stood in the center, flanked by various heroes she admired, though she didn't emulate their smiles. Her emerald eyes, large and curious, lingered on the setup, yet her face betrayed none of the enthusiasm a child her age should have shown.
"Izuku," her mother's voice called gently from the hallway. "It's time to get ready to go to the doctor."
Izuku tilted her head, her expression unchanging. She picked up All Might, holding him delicately as if he might shatter in her grasp. "Okay, Mama," she replied, her voice soft but even, devoid of the bouncy energy that other children might display.
Inko Midoriya peeked through the doorway, her face lined with an emotion that could only be described as understanding. She offered her daughter a smile, though it was thin and hesitant, as if afraid the gesture might crumble under the weight of unspoken truths. "Let's get your shoes, sweetheart."
Izuku nodded, standing up and shuffling toward her mother with deliberate slowness. She wasn't reluctant—she simply moved like a clock, ticking forward because it was the only direction available.
Inko led her to the front door, where her father, Hisashi, stood waiting. Hisashi, tall and stoic, regarded his daughter with a gaze that many would misinterpret as indifference. But behind those sharp features lay a deep well of contemplation.
"You ready, Izuku?" His voice was low and steady, carrying the weight of someone who had made peace with what others would find inexplicable.
Izuku tilted her head again, as though the question itself was curious. "I think so."
Inko's hands worked deftly to tie Izuku's shoes, and as she knelt before her daughter, she glanced up. "You don't have to be scared, Izuku. No matter what the doctor says today, you're still our little girl."
Hisashi's eyes flicked to Inko for a fraction of a second before returning to Izuku. The words weren't a promise—they were a declaration.
Izuku blinked slowly. "I'm not scared, Mama."
And she wasn't. Fear, like joy, seemed to elude her in a way that confounded her parents and doctors alike. She existed in a state of being that defied categorization, much like everything about her.
The car ride to the quirk assessment clinic was quiet. Inko drove, her knuckles tight on the steering wheel, though her expression remained composed. Hisashi sat in the passenger seat, gazing out the window as buildings blurred by. In the backseat, Izuku stared at her reflection in the glass. Her fingers brushed against it, as if testing whether the image staring back was real.
"Do you think..." she started, her voice breaking the silence. "Do you think they'll tell me what I can do today?"
Inko's eyes met Hisashi's in the rearview mirror, a silent conversation passing between them.
"They might," Hisashi said, his tone measured. "But whatever they say, it doesn't change who you are."
Izuku's small hand dropped to her lap. "But what am I?"
The question lingered in the air, heavy and impossible.
The clinic was a sterile space, brightly lit and bustling with activity. Children of all shapes and sizes flitted about, their quirks manifesting in sparks of flame, bursts of light, and the occasional puff of smoke. Izuku observed them with mild curiosity, though her expression remained placid.
"Midoriya Izuku," a nurse called, her tone cheerful as she glanced at the clipboard in her hand.
The Midoriyas rose in unison, Inko's hand instinctively finding Izuku's. The nurse led them down a hallway, the walls adorned with posters of prominent heroes and cheerful slogans about quirk development. Izuku's gaze lingered on one that read: "Everyone has a special gift!"
The nurse ushered them into an examination room and gestured for Izuku to take a seat on the examination table. She did so without hesitation, her small legs dangling as her parents stood behind her.
"Dr. Takano will be in shortly," the nurse said before disappearing out the door.
Moments later, a man in a white coat entered, his face kind but professional. "Good afternoon, Midoriya family." He glanced at his clipboard, then at Izuku. "And you must be Izuku. Are you excited to find out about your quirk today?"
Izuku blinked at him, her head tilting slightly. "I think so."
The doctor chuckled, though it was tinged with uncertainty. He set his clipboard down and began his examination, asking Izuku to perform simple tasks—extend her arms, touch her toes, focus on a point in the distance. She complied without hesitation, her movements precise and deliberate.
After what felt like an eternity, Dr. Takano sat down and folded his hands. He hesitated, glancing between Inko and Hisashi before finally speaking.
"Well, the initial results are... inconclusive," he began, his words careful. "Izuku doesn't seem to exhibit any clear signs of a quirk at this stage."
Inko's expression didn't change, though her hands gripped the strap of her purse tightly. Hisashi's face remained unreadable, though his jaw tightened ever so slightly.
"But she's only four," Dr. Takano continued, attempting a reassuring tone. "Sometimes quirks manifest later. Or they can be subtle and hard to detect. It doesn't mean she's quirkless—it just means we need more time to understand."
Izuku stared at the doctor, her green eyes unblinking. "So I don't have a quirk?"
The doctor hesitated, searching for the right words. "It's not that you don't have one, Izuku. It's just that... we can't see it yet."
Izuku's head tilted again, and she smiled—small and faint, like a whisper of emotion. "Okay."
Her reaction—or lack thereof—seemed to unsettle the doctor. He cleared his throat and stood, offering a polite nod. "We'll follow up in a year or so. Sometimes these things take time."
The ride home was quieter than the ride there, though the silence felt heavier. Inko glanced at Izuku in the rearview mirror, watching as her daughter stared out the window, her small hands folded neatly in her lap.
"Izuku," Hisashi said, breaking the silence. "How do you feel?"
Izuku turned her gaze to him, her face as serene as ever. "I feel... the same."
Inko's hands tightened on the steering wheel, her mind a whirlwind of thoughts she couldn't articulate.
That night, as they tucked Izuku into bed, Inko sat on the edge of her daughter's mattress. "Izuku," she said softly, brushing a strand of green hair from her face. "Do you know how special you are?"
Izuku blinked up at her mother, her eyes filled with a calm that bordered on unsettling. "You say that a lot, Mama."
"That's because it's true," Inko said, her voice trembling slightly. "No matter what anyone says, no matter what the tests show, you're special."
Hisashi stood in the doorway, his arms crossed as he watched the exchange. "You're more than what people can measure," he added, his voice steady.
Izuku nodded, her small hand reaching out to grasp her mother's. "Okay."
And as her parents left the room, closing the door softly behind them, Izuku lay in the dark, staring at the ceiling. She didn't feel special, nor did she feel ordinary. She simply... existed.
But deep within her, beneath the surface of what could be seen or explained, something stirred. Something vast and unknowable, waiting patiently to reveal itself.
YOU ARE READING
The Force Of Nature
HorrorThe symbol of peace is fire that every human take hold of to make sure it never goes out but in the end someone will put it out with a mere thought