Life with Nanami Kento
Marriage with Kento Nanami wasn’t loud. It wasn’t filled with grand declarations or dramatic surprises. It was quiet—the kind of love that settled into your bones and made every ordinary day feel precious.
Your mornings often began in little cafés, where he always ordered black coffee and silently slid the flakier croissant onto your plate before taking the smaller one for himself. His hand would find yours beneath the table, his thumb tracing absentminded circles while the city slowly woke around you.
He rarely came home empty-handed. Some evenings it was a bouquet of white lilies, other times a carefully wrapped gift he’d stumbled upon during his day.
“I saw it and thought of you,” he’d say, as though bringing something home for his wife was the most natural thing in the world.
His love lived in the smallest gestures. A hand resting protectively over yours during long drives. Fingers laced together while crossing busy streets. His wedding band brushing against your skin whenever he reached for you, as if he needed the quiet reassurance that you were still there.
Travel became your favorite escape. Window seats on airplanes, evenings spent playing chess in matching silk pajamas, slow dinners where he’d insist on paying despite your playful protests.
“You know I can pay for my own dessert,” you’d tease.
“I know,” he’d answer with the faintest smile. “But I like taking care of my wife.”
There was never any need for extravagant displays of affection. Home was peaceful. Weekends were slow. Love was found in shared breakfasts, fresh flowers on the kitchen table, books read in comfortable silence, and hands that instinctively reached for one another.
Because loving Nanami Kento was never about the extraordinary.
It was about building a life where every ordinary moment felt safe, cherished, and deeply loved. And to Milo, there was no greater luxury than coming home to the man who chose her—quietly, faithfully, and wholeheartedly—every single day.
Kento always calls his wife by sweet nicknames
