The Weight of a Hero
After a training exercise goes wrong, R.J. Ackerman struggles with feelings of inadequacy and failure. His classmates in Class 1-A rally to support him, helping him realize that heroism isn't about never falling, but about getting back up with the help of friends.
The dust hadn’t settled yet. R.J. Ackerman knelt in the rubble, his hands trembling as he tried to dig through the concrete slab. The training exercise had gone wrong—a collapsed building, a trapped civilian dummy, and his quirk—a kinetic energy absorption that let him store and release force—had been useless. He’d tried to cushion the fall, but his timing was off. The slab had crushed the dummy, and now Aizawa-sensei was yelling at him to stand down.
“Ackerman! That’s enough. The simulation is over.”
But he couldn’t stop. His fingers scraped against stone until they bled. “I can still save it. I can—”
“You can’t.” A hand gripped his shoulder—Uraraka, her voice soft but firm. “R.J., it’s just a dummy. You did your best.”
Did he? His best had gotten the dummy crushed. His best had let everyone down.
Later, in the locker room, he sat on a bench, staring at his palms. The scrapes were superficial, but the shame cut deeper than any wound. He’d always been the quiet one, the one who trained twice as hard because his quirk wasn’t flashy. But today, even that hadn’t been enough.
The door creaked open. Midoriya walked in, still in his gym uniform, his eyes soft with concern. “Hey, everyone’s back at the dorms. You okay?”
“Fine.”
“You’re not.” Midoriya sat beside him. “I saw what happened. You were trying to use your quirk to absorb the impact, but the slab was too heavy. It’s not your fault.”
“Then whose fault is it?” R.J.’s voice cracked. “I trained for this. I knew the weight limit of my absorption. I just… I hesitated. I thought I could handle it, and I failed.”
Midoriya was quiet for a moment. “Do you know how many times I’ve failed? How many times I’ve broken my bones because I didn’t control my power? Failure isn’t the end. It’s how we learn.”
“I don’t want to learn. I want to be better.”
Midoriya smiled—that infuriatingly kind smile. “Then tomorrow, we train together. I’ll help you push your limit.”
The next morning, R.J. woke to find his phone buzzing. A group chat: Class 1-A. Messages from Kirishima: “Hey, we’re all getting breakfast before class. Don’t skip, buddy.” From Ashido: “I heard you had a rough day! We’re making pancakes! 🥞” From Todoroki: “I’ll save you a seat.”
His chest tightened. They were trying to help, but he didn’t deserve it. He almost typed a polite decline, but then a knock came at his door.
It was Yaoyorozu, carrying a tray of homemade soup. “I heard you didn’t eat dinner. This should help.”
“I’m not hungry.”
“Eat anyway.” She set the tray on his desk. “You’re part of this class, R.J. We look out for each other.”
Over the next week, the attention only grew. Uraraka dragged him to study sessions, Bakugo—surprisingly—grunted offers to spar, and even Mineta (reluctantly) shared his snacks. But R.J. kept his distance, burying himself in solo training until his muscles screamed.
One evening, he found himself on the roof of the dorms, staring at the city lights. He hadn’t cried since the accident. He wanted to, but the tears wouldn’t come.
“Oi, Ackerman.”
He turned. Todoroki stood by the door, a cup of tea in each hand. “You’ve been avoiding everyone.”
“I’ve been training.”
“Same thing.” Todoroki handed him a cup. “I know what it’s like to feel like you’re not good enough. My old man drilled that into me. But you’re wrong.”
“About what?”
“That you failed. You didn’t. You tried. And that’s more than most people do.”
R.J. stared into the tea. “My quirk—it’s all about absorbing and releasing. If I can’t time it right, I’m useless. I’m a liability.”
“Then you learn to time it better. But you don’t get to give up on us.” Todoroki’s mismatched eyes met his. “We’re your classmates. Your friends. Let us help.”
The words hit harder than any punch. R.J.’s vision blurred. “I don’t know how.”
“Start by coming down. They’re all waiting.”
When they walked into the common room, the class erupted. Kirishima clapped his back, Ashido cheered, and Midoriya gave him a thumbs up. A cake sat on the table, decorated with the words “You’ve Got This!” in frosting.
“It’s not your birthday,” Kaminari said, grinning. “But we figured you needed a pick-me-up.”
R.J. laughed—a broken, wet sound. “You guys are ridiculous.”
“Maybe,” Uraraka said, “but you’re stuck with us.”
He took a slice of cake. The weight in his chest didn’t disappear, but it lessened. He wasn’t alone. He never had been.
The next training session, he stood before the same rubble pile. His classmates watched from the sidelines. Aizawa gave the signal. R.J. activated his quirk, felt the kinetic energy build, and released it at the perfect moment—shattering the slab into dust.
He didn’t save a dummy. He didn’t need to. He saved himself.
And that was enough.
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