Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (#73—'Stripping')

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brythain
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Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (11—Up) (20150113)

Post by brythain »

I wrote the first draft of this very short piece after reading the famous Suzu pseudo-route (or pseudo-pseudo-route) by Scissorlips.
In that tale, Suzu's opponent is as much a player of games as another character we know quite well.
This is where that character takes over from Suzu.



Up

She sat dangling her legs off the roof. A cold wind blew up her legs, but that was fine, because she didn’t expect warmth any more. She looked briefly down at the sharp pleats in her green skirt. She was proud of those pleats; getting the ironing board into her room had been a bitch, but over the years, it had been worth it, just to feel the control, to know that you could make things sharper if you wanted.

But the last few months? Disaster. He had been such a promising young man. Very bright in his own way, but so uncaring about his good health and prospects. Wasting his future, even if he might not have much of it. With a little tidying-up, he would have been a good prospect.

Idly, she wondered if kicking off a shoe and having it land on someone’s head would knock them out. She did the calculations. Unlikely, especially if that someone had a helmet of very thick and bouncy pink hair. She pursed her lips, both sad and angry at herself. Such thoughts were unworthy of a Student Council President, even if she would not be one for much longer.

She looked down again. She was sitting in a gap in the fence, where part of it had given way. Some pathetic excuse for a workman had sandpapered off the rust and touched up the steel gauge with silver paint, and over time, the weakened part must have fatigued and broken. It was too late to pin the blame on anyone, but it didn’t make her feel any happier.

She had this strange and unruly vision of a sudden gust of wind hurling her off the roof, her neatly pleated skirt acting as a parasail while she glided into the trees trying to maintain the little dignity she would have left. Silly, silly. Why think such thoughts?

Her brain was in turmoil. Her universe was in part the arc of vision in front of her. This was balanced against the sensation of the solid rooftop, vibrating faintly as the warm sun and cool breeze acted to expand and contract the reinforced concrete on which she sat. Warmth, coolness, light, shadow, vibration, stillness.

She smoothed her skirt down a little, touched the smoothness of her stockings and the grit of freshly-set cement beside her just to reassure herself that her sense of touch remained. Of course, it did. It would remain as long as she lived, which might not be much longer.

What a failure she was. She’d not been able to reform him much, but the exercise had been educational. She had learnt that she was doing everything wrong. You couldn’t play the game if you were following the wrong rules. Being a friend, having a relationship, it turned out that these weren’t competitive sports you could score points in and win. It galled that the boy had had to teach her that.

It hurt that he’d been right. She thought she might have loved him. She had taken something from him, she had sacrificed something of herself to gain that, and then… and then, she’d learnt that this was a cooperative game, not a competitive one. She knew she’d lost. She had already lost much earlier perhaps, because her wingman hadn’t wanted to hurt her by telling her the truth: that she was using the wrong rules when she played the game of people.

So, there she was, up on the roof. She looked down again. The fence and its providential hole. The height of the building, on a hill, where she could see the sun, feel the breeze. The place of power, where the old hero of folklore had commanded the area and bent warriors to his will.

Why was there a hole again? Because someone had fallen asleep. Sleep was the mind-killer. She wasn’t sure she remembered that line correctly. She had never been one for higher literature, especially in translation.

She sat on the roof and thought of silly girls with cyan-blue hair who took unnecessary risks. Such a waste. She hadn’t disliked the girl. She had worked hard for Suzu, as she would have had for any other student. The anger boiled beneath her skin. Her temples throbbed.

If today were to be the first day of the rest of her life? Well, she would fight to make it a good day. She would set up an advantage that she could at least carry into the middle game. It was like choosing the right territories, or placing the first few stones. But first, she had to repay a debt.

Today, she would not feast on despair. And if today were to be the last day? So be it.

Carefully, she shifted her mass and stood up on the raised roof-edge, turning away from the sun. She thought that perhaps, from below, someone with messy brown hair, or perhaps someone with well-styled pink hair, might see her white blouse flaring in the sunlight. In the shadows, she thought she saw the skeletal face of her deadly opponent.

[Battleships?] she signed scornfully. It was always dangerous to deal thus with Powers like that. But if you were going to do so, best to present one’s strongest position. Besides, she had on good authority that this one always opened with E7.

[YES. ARE YOU READY, PLAYER TWO?]

It was funny how her opponent could even make signing look intimidating. But she wasn't bad herself.

[I’m up], Shizune of the Hakamichi clan replied.

=====
alt index
Last edited by brythain on Sat Feb 07, 2015 12:47 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
"Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
YZQ
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Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (09—Silent Knights) (20141224)

Post by YZQ »

Oscar Wildecat wrote:
Mr Nakai and Miss Ibarazaki were holding hands. They weren’t talking at all.
Aww. After all the kids hard work, those two still aren't speaking. :wink: What a shame. :wink:

Thanks for the d'awwwesome Christmas gift, brythain.

EDIT: I realized I missed a n't in my aren't. Oh well, I'll let it go for a good Christmas night to one and all.
Some things don't need to be said. Here's one for rekindling a teenage romance with maturity and forgiveness.
"Nothing is beneath man. Everything is permitted."

"...since love and fear can hardly exist together, if we must choose between them, it is far safer to be feared than loved. However, it is important above all to avoid being hated."
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Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (09—Silent Knights) (20141224)

Post by brythain »

YZQ wrote:
Oscar Wildecat wrote:
Mr Nakai and Miss Ibarazaki were holding hands. They weren’t talking at all.
Aww. After all the kids hard work, those two still aren't speaking. :wink: What a shame. :wink:

Thanks for the d'awwwesome Christmas gift, brythain.

EDIT: I realized I missed a n't in my aren't. Oh well, I'll let it go for a good Christmas night to one and all.
Some things don't need to be said. Here's one for rekindling a teenage romance with maturity and forgiveness.
Thanks for the encouragement! I did it because I needed closure. :)
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
"Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
YZQ
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Joined: Wed Jan 23, 2013 2:21 am

Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (11—Up) (20150113)

Post by YZQ »

Don't sweat it. I see you did a post Lily Bad End fic.
"Nothing is beneath man. Everything is permitted."

"...since love and fear can hardly exist together, if we must choose between them, it is far safer to be feared than loved. However, it is important above all to avoid being hated."
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Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (11—Up) (20150113)

Post by brythain »

YZQ wrote:Don't sweat it. I see you did a post Lily Bad End fic.
I did a very long one in which they never got back together, and a much shorter one in which they did. Eventually, and over the same span of time.
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
"Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
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Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (12—Slightly Different) (20150119)

Post by brythain »

In an early sidetrack from 'After The Dream', I considered starting with the good ending in Lilly's route.
But as those of you who bother reading my stuff know, I just can't leave good things alone...

Note: some of these lines are taken directly from the VN in order to heighten the idea of 'slight differences'.



Slightly Different

“Ah, I see you’re awake, Mr Nakai?” the dry, unfamiliar, sterile voice says to me. I blink, and as the strained features of a middle-aged man become less blurred in my view, he continues, “I must admit this is a bit unfortunate; your parents visited just earlier while you were asleep. I could notify them you’re awake now, if you’d like.”

It’s the same old story again, and I’m defeated and crushed by being a useless excuse for a human being. Not totally crushed; I survive the boring conversation with this doctor, another in a faceless line of medical personnel.

I remember thinking to myself, hours later, when I am slightly more lucid, “In the end, I’m alone again… Lilly’s gone. Akira’s gone. Hanako would be traveling, and even my parents have already left the hospital.”

Four blue and cream walls, one white ceiling; a single open window to look out towards the world outside. It’s hard to think of any future when nothing has changed, nothing is better.

With nothing to do or think, I content myself with sleeping the time away as if this were all just another dream, as Yamaku was. It’s easy. I am lulled by the dull ache of the tubes that keep me alive, the rubbery and sharp smells of antiseptic and bleach and… white curtains around me, like a universe that has no real redeeming features.

*****

My eyes open, and I simply stare at the ceiling for some time. It’s about as interesting at the television would be, mounted in its metal rack hanging off the ceiling ahead of the bed. Indeed, the television saw its entire use during the time my parents were here. Left on quietly as they waited for me to wake, it was about as banal as it had been the first time I’d ended up in the hospital.

Looking at the white nothing above me, I recall that my parents looked slightly concerned, but unable to develop their responses further than that. After all, I was still alive. Nothing had changed, to them. They said they had brought a friend to visit me, but I had been asleep earlier, and she would visit later. I was too anaesthetized to reply. Had so much time passed that Hanako was back from her trip? I had no desire to find out.

I vaguely remember an attending nurse offering to turn off the EKG’s speakers. I refused simply because the sound was so entirely normal to me— almost comforting, in a way. Right now, the metronome-like regularity gives at least some feeling that time is moving, even in a place such as this.

Now. Something… after some time of listening to the beeping while I fully awaken, I realize there’s another sound in the room. Concentrating all my efforts on listening, a task made rather easy by the lack of distractions, a tiny tinny melody can be heard. Light and quiet, the music sounds almost fragile, dwarfed by the EKG’s pulses.

Tilting my head just slightly to the side in an effort to see the source of the melody without dislodging any of the sensors and pipes that cluster on and in my flesh, I notice a little wooden box sitting on the nightstand next to the bed. My mouth opens just slightly while I silently watch the tiny brazen metal drum slowly rotate inside, the little bumps on its surface gradually moving in and out of sight.

This music box… it’s the one I gave…

I suddenly realize that there’s someone else in the room, someone trying hard to be quiet. With careful effort, I turn my head a bit more.

“I’m sorry… did the music disturb you?”

It’s a familiar voice, careful, exact. I can make no sense of it. It isn’t a voice that belongs here, after the ending of my second life.

“I found the box and opened it.”

That voice is unmistakable now. I have to look. Risking disconnection from life support, or at the very least, vital signs monitoring, I shift so that my eyes can bridge the distance.

Long black hair. A graceful, slightly worried posture. A fair, delicate hand closes the music box gently. Another hand tentatively reaches out for my own.

“What are you doing here?” I hiss/croak in wonder.

“I came up with your parents. When I actually received a reply from you, I was touched. Then I heard the news, and I knew I couldn’t lose you a second time. I, I still have… some affection for you, Hisao.”

That last part, it has an undercurrent of steely determination in it. I look at her, and my eyes tell me that it is true: the girl who started my nightmare has returned to save me from it. She is a young woman now, beautiful and brave, and perhaps she is all I might have left.

“I don’t know what to say,” I say, closing my hand over hers. “Thank you for coming.” In the background, I hear a ghostly sob, as if some disappointed agent of death has been cheated of her prey.

*****

Lilly never returned to Japan. How could she, after my parents had unfairly blamed her for causing my second heart attack? I kept the music box. She had left it for me, I suspect, as a token of what we’d shared before. She never mentioned it, except to say, “Some things that are closed should never be opened again.” I wondered what she meant by that. I wrote to her by email, and she wrote back, but our messages became stale over time. Hanako kept in touch with her, but not with me; I could only wish my scarred friend all the best, deep down in my heart.

After I completed my studies, I returned to Yokohama on Mutou’s advice and entered university there with my girlfriend. When I married her after graduation, the circle of our childhood story was complete. There seemed to be a kind of poetic justice in all that had happened.

For years, I would catch myself wondering: if things had been slightly different, if I had not gone to Yamaku, would it have been better? Certainly, I would not have the small, sad, tired memory of a tea room and a tall blind girl with lovely golden hair and a cultivated voice.

Iwanako and I have three children now, an unusual blessing in a greying country. There is always laughter in the house, and even in winter, the beds are warm. We are happy, and perhaps that is all that should have been, and is.

=====
alt index
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
"Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
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Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (13—72 Hours/Saki) (20150124)

Post by brythain »

If you were suddenly transported to Yamaku Academy for 72 hours, what would you do?
What would you try to do? And what could possibly stop you?
(Also, is it possible to write a self-insert fic that isn’t creepy and/or cringeducing?)



Seventy-Two Hours

Reddit is a funny place. It lures you in, through devious chains of links and bridges with trolls under them. And so it was that I dozed off while on that most eclectic of websites and… [YOU HAVE SEVENTY-TWO HOURS] says a mighty but soundless voice, just before I wake up.


** DAY ONE **

I’m in a classroom. It’s warm, the ventilation is lousy, and I’m cramped up (or just crammed) in a corner space near a sunlit window. Clearly I’ve been here for some time as I can hardly feel one of my arms. I think I’ve been using it as a pillow, and… eeuuww, gross… I’ve been drooling on it a bit.

The poorly-shaven, scruffy man at the board (chalkboard, really?) is droning on in what sounds like an Okinawan accent. I’m barely able to make out that I’m in a chemistry class, and this has something to do with the electrophilic substitution mechanism used to modify the aromatic ring. Joy, something I understand and to which I need pay no attention at all.

But where am I? That suddenly becomes a much more pressing question. It’s been years since I’ve had a basic wooden schooldesk and been stuck in a room with such poor ventilation. I can smell my classmates, although I am relieved that they don’t smell that bad.

In fact… as my eyes finally learn to focus at any distance but the far range, I seem to have only girls sitting in front of me. Directly in front is a head of shoulder-length hair that’s clearly been dyed a shade of faded honey. And to the right of that is a mass of bright, electric-pink hair, with long tresses corkscrewing liberally…

I don’t normally use ellipses in my thinking or writing. But the tentative nature of my immediate perceptions, and the understanding of those perceptions, makes it necessary. Right now, I have to invent a mental punctuation mark to indicate silent consternation. That’s because I now know where I am, and when. I’ve even figured out whose body I’m occupying and why my right arm feels so out of sorts. It’s not the body I would have chosen. In fact, I’m not sure which one I would have chosen, given that choice.

“So, Taro, would you be so kind as to state the rule for substituent position given a pre-existing electron-donating group?”

I can feel my body’s reflexes kicking in. The temptation is very strong to just let my jaw hang and produce some temporary inanity that will buy me time. I have to fight to overcome that before I reply, “Ah, sir, substitution occurs preferentially at relative positions 2 and 4.”

The teacher’s face lights up, as if he has found love in a place of despair. All around me, I can sense sudden alertness, the response of a stable group that has found unexpected strangeness in its midst, on an otherwise boring occasion. Backsides shift on old chairs. A desk scrapes slightly. I feel gazes swivel and lock on, and a great sense of discomfort crawls into my ribs.

The pink hair in front of me shakes as if a bird is about to take flight from a tree. On her right, a girl with short dark hair (oh yes, I know who you are now) and spectacles looks round with swift, brief, darting movements. Then Shizune (who else?) gesticulates furiously at Misha (nobody else could have that kind of pink hair).

At the very front of the class, my ‘body non-double’ with long black hair and sultry eyes has turned to look at me over her shoulder. That’s Miki Miura, as I’ve always imagined her. Her long legs are crossed, right over left. The only one who doesn’t turn is her neighbour, whose hair is dyed aqua and who seems slumped tiredly in her seat.

I look back at the teacher. “Ha. Very good, Arai-san,” he says, with only a bit of irony in his voice. “That’s a much more precise use of technical language than I have ever heard you use in class. Clearly you are sleepy from studying too hard, and not for the usual reasons. Well done. Please get up and go and wash your face.”

I stand up and bow. He nods and I make my way through the back of the class, trying hard not to stare at each of my fellow classmates. I desperately want to remember each detail of their faces, every mark, even the traces of different fragrances that some of them are wearing. Muttering multiple apologies for the disruption I’m causing, I go past each of the people in the last row.

My current body supplies data: Ritsu with the frozen hand, Akio with the brittle bones (I take great care not to trip over his cane or, worse, over him)… the girl I’m passing by has a strange combination of scents that reminds me of woodsmoke and flowers. Her face is half-hidden by long hair, and I know what she’s hiding; I want to tell her everything will be all right, but I know that’s not something I should do, Hanako. It’s with great difficulty that I keep moving past her, because there’s so much I want to say.

The moment passes. I carefully move behind Naomi, who looks at me absent-mindedly. One more. As I let myself out by the rear classroom door, I am pinned momentarily by the fierce, hawklike gaze of the scruffy girl whom I know as Natsume. It’s as if she’s saying, “I know something’s up with you and I want to know what it is.”

I murmur one last apology and flee into the corridor. Now to find the washroom. Not for the life of me can I remember where it is, but my body navigates fairly automatically, and I go past 3-2, resisting the urge to knock on the door just to see the blonde who must be there, and 3-1—the great unknown, to me—before I come to the tired-looking but clean portal leading to sanctuary.

*****

In my own experience, and it seems, also in the experience of Taro Arai, a toilet cubicle is a great place to collect oneself and reflect on a swirling rush of mad events. The last few minutes, my own (or at least, that’s what I think) consciousness tells me that I am in what seems to be the somewhat depressed mind of a person who would like to be the class joker but isn’t quite confident enough to pull it off. And all this is an imperfect construct I’m building from the memory traces in the head I’m occupying which I’m sure are not mine. I can’t think straight because somehow my own memories and thoughts are sharing the network with someone else. I wonder where he is, and also whether I’m really him, having a delusional attack—like a phantom limb, except that this is a phantom mind.

At the back of that mind, I hear a faint whisper. It’s a young man’s voice.

“I get that too, whoever you are. I have right arm that doesn’t work—but I feel that it does sometimes, and it does things. Yet I can see it isn’t doing anything at all.” There’s a short pause. Then: “You’re making me sound strange. I hope it works.”

He doesn’t sound petulant. He sounds sad. And shortly after, I realize that’s all he’s going to say. Unless he too is merely a figment of my mind.

With a vague sense of uneasiness, I try to arrange events in order. Reddit. Katawa Shoujo, that odd little game with disproportionately great emotional force. A sudden tiredness. A voice giving me seventy-two hours—to do what? And another voice, resigned and mature beyond its apparent years, hoping that something will work.

I know much of what he knows. I get the feeling he allows that access. With a bit of effort, I can remember his breakfast, his silent musings, the forced raucous laughter he uses to disguise melancholy and demonstrate that he doesn’t give a shit about life. And under it all, the deepest sadness: something directed not at himself, but at someone else. It’s not that he has no friends; it’s that he would very much like to develop one friendship, and it’s killing him that he just can’t bring himself to do it. He’s locked up in his head.

*****

As I (we?) leave our sanctuary and head back to class, I find myself consciously making adjustments and getting my bearings. I am taller than he, thinner, with a higher centre of gravity; he is adept at handling things with only one hand, but so am I. He knows the geography of this place better than I do, and he knows most of the people so much better that it makes my heart ache. It’s April 2007, in this odd dream or alternate universe that I’m in. Hisao Nakai, the protagonist of the visual novel I was working my way through, he isn’t here yet—he’s in some hospital far away.

I knock politely at the door, and Mutou-sensei (‘Mr Mutou’? ‘Teacher Mutou’? my/our brain tries to work out) nods me in. My cultural experience isn’t quite up to automatically normal behaviour for a Japanese high school; it’s been years since I had any such exposure. “You’ll have to handle all that,” I subvocalize at Taro Arai, but I receive no response at all, except a sensation of uneasy humour.

As the lesson draws on to its conclusion, I find myself staring at my classmates. Seeing them in the flesh is an experience that is strange and terrible. They don’t have the over-large eyes you see in Japanese pop culture. They do dye their hair, though, and that’s uncanny. The details get to me. Misha has a cute little mole on the back of the left side of her neck. Shizune’s hair is very glossy, as if she uses some special conditioner on it. And in front of me, the girl sitting in Hisao’s place, whom I… I can’t identify. It’s as if I’m being blocked from knowing who she is.

It’s half past twelve, and the sun has risen so high that direct sunlight no longer reaches most of my desk. Mutou turns round. “Ah, so that is all we will be covering today. But before I release you to wreak havoc on the rest of the school, I have an announcement to make.”

My mixed memories tell me that this isn’t normal. Announcements are normally made at the beginning, and occasionally at the end, of a school day. Somewhere inside, I feel a sensation of dread. I don’t know why.

“Miss Enomoto will be leaving us for the roster of the reserve supplementary class. She has special scheduling requirements, and it is with very deep regret that I have to allow her detachment from this class. As you know, she has been one of our best students, and also has performed the duties of class representative excellently well in your junior years. A teacher never likes to see a student leave the group before everyone graduates together. I trust she will manage her schedule well, and visit us whenever she can. She will remain with us till the end of the week.”

All I feel is pain, a deep, sad clawing at my guts. It’s all I can do to not double over in anguish. But Mutou is still speaking.

“Saki, would you like to address your class?”

‘Your class’, he’d said. The memories are leaking out now, unsuppressed. Saki has been class representative of this class for two years. Shizune will be taking over from her, we knew this would happen, but watching it happen is hard. Taro remembers kindness mixed with bitterness, ambition mixed with despair. She’d been nice to him, but in the second year, he’d forgotten she was a dead girl walking, and he’d… the wall of memory slams down against me.

Gingerly, the girl in front of us (I have to acknowledge that we’re stuck with this) stands up and moves gracefully but stiffly (how does that work?) to the front of the class.

“Good afternoon,” she says, bowing, and we all respond automatically. “Thank you for allowing me to serve you as class representative for two years, and for being patient with my deficiencies.”

She smiles, half in self-mockery, but half with the kind of bittersweet pleasure one might have from enjoying an experience that is almost over. It is the most beautiful smile in the world, Taro thinks. Don’t you think so?

I can’t not think so, since part of our shared mind is certainly thinking that. And Saki is pretty, with regular features, a smooth complexion, lips that are perfectly shaped… it’s hard to tell how much of this is me, and how much is Taro. In front of us, Misha is interpreting for Shizune. The latter is looking at Saki while occasionally glancing at Misha’s hands.

“As you all know, I have a rare kind of spinocerebellar ataxia. It is no excuse for all the times I may have been impolite to you, or unwilling to help, of course. However, the medical specialists have told me that this problem is best handled by some treatments that will take me away from school a lot. That means I will possibly only be able to spend half the day in school. I will try to handle my Art Club duties every afternoon, but I cannot be a class representative when I am not around all day.”

She pauses, a faint grimace visible under her bright smile. Clearly, she’s in some kind of pain—her left hand has risen to rest just below her ribcage. A gastric problem? I don’t know, but I’m willing to bet Taro does. The moment is brief, as she continues: “I would like to… thank Miss Hakamichi for agreeing to cover my class representative duties as well as her own heavy responsibilities as Student Council president. I am sure that Shizune will handle the matters of this class effectively, and certainly in a more efficient way than I.”

Shizune nods. From what I can see of the left side of her face, she is in a somber mood. She doesn’t seem to think of this as a contest that she has won.

Nooooo… don’t go, please don’t go… I hear myself thinking, pleading. You can fight this, you can do this…

“Thank you for being such a great class. It has been a pleasure to have been able to do what little I could for all of you.”

She bows again, and steps to one side. Mutou holds up a hand, indicating that she should wait a while, and then he nods to Shizune. Shizune comes to the front of the class, and raises her hands, almost like a conductor.

We all stand, and bow. Mutou begins clapping, and we all join in. It’s at that moment that I feel a wrenching sensation. Taro’s sadness has launched into the sky. If he could scream, he would. But tradition, culture, self-awareness, and his own nature prevent him from doing that.

I observe Saki through Taro’s agony. She is smiling still, but her smile is personal. She is smiling at Natsume. I look at Natsume, and realize that Natsume looks as miserable as Taro feels. And then Saki turns her smile on us.

*****

What am I supposed to do with 72 hours? It’s evening now, and I’ve been thinking about sad, defiant, beautiful Saki Enomoto for quite a few of those hours. In the world beyond this, delusional or not, I would have given anything to be able to interact so directly with Shizune and Misha, Miki and Suzu, Natsume and Naomi, and some of the other people in the other classes. In this world, everything revolves around Saki.

She will be my classmate until Friday 13th April. It is Wednesday 11th April today.

As darkness closes around the little circle of my bed, my desk, my homework left undone, I feel tears leak across my eyelids and trickle down my face. They are not my tears, but I can understand how they might be.

*****

BANG. My eyes open, strangely unfamiliar and almost gummed shut by sticky eyelids. BANG. Someone is thumping the flimsy door of… my room. I’m Taro Arai, joker, misfit, loner. I reach out for the doorknob on my right, and miss; this almost sends me crashing to the floor as I get out of my… chair? I could’ve sworn I was sitting on the bed.

I had felt my muscles and tendons shift, but my arm hadn’t moved. Is this what Taro experiences all the time? There is no reply in my head, either because it is obvious, or because he is leaving all the heavy lifting to me.

“Hey, Taro! We’re having a pizza break. We have unagi pizza with wasabi mayo, that stuff you like so much! With extra spring onions!”

It sounds like… Isamu. Isamu Takagi, the guy we call ‘Brave Lizard’ or ‘Big Sam’ as a joke. Again, the memories that aren’t my own give me information I shouldn’t have.

“Coming!” my stomach replies through my mouth, before I can even wonder about whether I like a pizza with what amounts to spicy creamed eel on it. The body I occupy seizes the doorknob with its much more useful left and yanks the door open. The guys are outside with a stack of pizza boxes. I can smell savoury vapours, and for a moment, I almost feel as if I’m where I belong.

A couple of our other classmates are here too. Professorial, soft-spoken Akio, namesake to our class teacher, seats himself comfortably in the old lounge armchair, taking good care of his brittle bones as always. “So…” he begins conversationally, a slice of garlic pizza in his off-hand, “how have you been coping in this little matter of our much-beloved class representative?”

Suddenly, the appetizing aroma of eel in sweet sauce is no longer attractive. “W-what do you mean?” is all I can say. I have no idea which personality in this body is responding now.

Takashi, who has severe problems with his hearing, barks laughter in my direction. “Har! I’m the one with the bad ears, not you! Come on, of all the guys in the class, Saki mostly talks to you, sometimes to Isamu, and treats the rest of us like dirt!”

Once-tasty pizza in my mouth is now turning to sticky fish and hard bread. Part of me still finds it delicious, but the original mind is not convinced. “N-no, she’s not like that. She’s shy, she doesn’t talk much.”

“When she talks to me, it’s all about ‘Isamu, pass the test papers back here, please’ and not much else. But she’s not my type anyway.”

My shared memory takes the opportunity to inform me that Isamu is probably going out with either Suzu or Moriko (well, ‘Molly’ is on her doorplate), or perhaps both. He’s likely to be telling the truth.

“Yeah, see? She talks to you. All these years, she talks to you. I mean, she’s been a good bitch for us, always getting stuff done on time, a bit like the Satou girl next door. But still, cold, damn cold. Except to you. Har har har!”

That isn’t true. She’s cold to me too. Or so I think. My memory palace has closed doors in it, whole hallways sealed from my thoughts. As if from a great distance, I hear Akio drone on, probing at my weaknesses delicately, the evil thing he does so well with everyone.

“It’s an interesting little problem. She is rather pretty, and some of us have had past crushes on her before, only to be crushed ourselves. But you, if memory serves us well, are the only one to have gone down to the Shanghai with her, just the two of you.”

A door in my mind crashes open, as if a strong wind has flung it aside. I blink and shake my head, desperately trying to remember what’s in that room in my skull. The lurking memory roars, and then turns into a little movie in my head.

*

Two crippled children walk down the road, the afternoon light dry and unseasonably warm upon them. We’re in the second year, and third trimester exams are done. Somehow, my dream has come true. I am going out with Saki Enomoto. She is slim, perhaps taller than I am. I am out of shape, a little pudgy. People like to caricature me. I don’t care. Her hand rests gently on my right shoulder. Between us, we probably have enough missing and malfunctioning nerves to make a baby… I throw out that thought, but it keeps bouncing back.

“You’ve never really talked too much, Taro,” she whispers. It’s the breathless, raspy voice she uses when she’s tired.

“I haven’t? Me, the class clown?” My voice sounds like a joke. It’s uneven, broken, like some sort of parrot.

“Hey…” she murmurs, “All that stuff you say in class, those jokes you crack? I know what they are.”

“What?” I squeak manfully.

“You’re afraid.” I try to interrupt, but she goes on relentlessly, “Afraid that people will think of you as a sensitive fat kid like the one in that ‘Lord of the Flies’ text that we were forced to read in English. So you act crude, and everyone laughs. But that’s Takashi, not you; difference is, he’s crude and nobody laughs except him.”

“Saki, why are we going out?”

She turns to me slowly and deliberately. She has her bitch face on, the sharp planes of her delicate face converging in the cold warmth of the winter sun.

“Because it’s my way of controlling things. I’m dying, you all know that. But you’re the only one who actually tells me you want me not to die. Who knows? This is my last opportunity to tell you: forget it—you can’t have miracles. Friendship isn’t forever, and love doesn’t endure.”

I’m hurt by this. But I’m a bit like Big Sam Takagi, I need to get things straight. I take a deep breath into my underperforming lungs.

“So it’s not because I told you I loved you, Miss Enomoto?” I grin, making a joke of it despite the complete lack of humour in my heart.

“No. My reply is that it isn’t possible. When I’m gone, nobody will love me. Some might say they did. It won’t be true. Better to save you that trouble.”

“Then why not just tell me in school?”

“I’m not totally a bitch, Taro. Two things are gained here. You get points from everybody because you’re the only one who ever dated Ice Lady Enomoto. And I get to be me with a friend who likes me and doesn’t mind that I’m mostly a bitch.”

She sounds horribly sad. Maybe her words are shields and disguises, just like mine. And maybe that’s one way we’re alike.

I think, much later, that we both enjoyed the time we spent together. It was just once. It was a simple date, just a sandwich and a sundae each. She enjoyed her food, savouring every bit. I said I would cook for her, that I’d never love another person. She laughed a little sourly and said, “Don’t say I’ve spoilt you for someone else. That wouldn’t be fair to anyone.”


*

I hear Akio’s voice again. “Hmm. I thought ‘monoplegia’ referred to limbs only, excluding the head. Mr Arai, are you alive in there?”

“Yes. I’m alive. I’m okay. It’s not like she’s going away for good. Takashi will still get to drool over her in Art Club, right?”

He swallows the remains of his slice of pizza and flicks a ball of grilled squid at me. I fail to catch it, my nervous system again playing me false, and it lands on my fresh white T-shirt.

Later, after we’ve washed up the blood and food bits, we go to get a little assistance. The night nursing staff wearily remind us not to walk around in dark places and fall over each other so violently.

I’m disgusted at my responses. Clearly I’m not the violent one in this body. Yet there was a lot of pleasure in pasting my fat left fist in Takashi’s face. I shudder. I wonder how much control Taro has, and how much I have.

>>

** DAY TWO**

The second day doesn’t take me with as much surprise as the first day. I’m woken by the alarm clock at dawn, around six. Getting dressed with one arm is by now a natural thing; if I take my mind off it, my body does the rest.

I let the body go through its motions while I look around. The reality of Yamaku Academy is slightly different from the stylized version I’ve seen in simply rendered computer graphics. There’s a lot more wood and light than I expected, but also a lot more glass and steel. The architecture is a peculiar blend of post-war utilitarian, traditional, and modern technological.

I have just a bit more than 48 hours left, if I’m not hallucinating too badly. I get to class early, then find myself looking out of the window.

“Don’t be sad, Taro-chan!~” says the chirpy, well-rounded voice of the Misha I am coming to know. She has a chesty voice, as one might have guessed. How anyone can chirp while having such sultry undertones is a wonder to me. “Shizune says you seem to be handling things well, it is good that you’re paying attention in class. Washing your feet before a religious conversion… wait! What does that even… oh yes. Turning over a new leaf, sorry, Misha is slow today, hold on, I’m Misha!~”

It is exhausting, but rather fun, to be listening to her. She’s very cheerful. But after what I spent the night thinking about, I wonder if she too hides an inner demon.

“Thanks, Shizune,” I reply, nodding in my new class representative’s direction. “Thanks also, Misha, for being so cheerful.”

Shizune raises an eyebrow, perhaps not at the words she can’t hear, but at my demeanour. Misha stands dumbfounded, one hand involuntarily waving towards herself as if to say, “Me?”

It has suddenly occurred to me that Taro has many things to be thankful for. He just doesn’t realize what they are. He isn’t disliked. He’s the good joker, not the bad one. The girls enjoy his cooking, a random memory tells me. He masterminds the food menu whenever the class is running a stall for a festival. He is meticulous about such things, is considered trustworthy with class funds.

He hasn’t known Shizune or Misha well because they weren’t in his class for the last two years. That’s probably why they can still be surprised by him. And when I look at Shizune’s hair, her pointed chin and the way her right jaw muscle twitches when she thinks; or when I see Misha absentmindedly twirl a coil of pink hair back and forth between the second and third fingers of her left hand; these are things I see that he too is seeing for the first time.

Misha catches herself, quickly interprets what was just said. Shizune smiles and nods. It’s a very gracious smile, but also genuine, marking a young lady’s appreciation. For a moment, I would love to stay and watch, because I’ve always been intrigued by the girl as she appears in the visual novel. And yes, she has a nice figure; how does she keep herself so trim on a diet of fried food?

But then Saki walks into the room, and my focus immediately shifts to her. It’s almost as if I don’t want to look at anyone else.

Deliberately, almost gliding, she makes her way to her seat in front of mine. She takes time to nod at various classmates, she exchanges some words with Misha-and-Shizune. Then she turns to me. “Good morning, Taro. I trust you slept well?”

I have no idea how to answer that. By reflex (but whose, I wonder), I reply, “Good morning, Saki. Well enough, thank you.”

My class representative smiles, adjusts her skirt, and sits down. I notice that there are signs of strain in the skin around her eyes, and her shoulders seem stiff and unnaturally poised. But there’s no time for questions or overtures, because class is starting.

*****

“Psst. Saki!”

Her head tilts towards me, almost unnoticeably inclined. The first person to notice is of course Misha, whom some people think must be hearing-impaired but who is actually pretty observant.

I slip Saki my note, feeling horribly adolescent. Most of me is, anyway, in this surreal situation. She snags it between two artistic fingers, somehow at the same time managing to convey to her pink-haired neighbour that it would be far better for her health if Shizune were not to know about it.

Without moving much, she makes it disappear. Minutes later, as Iwata-sensei approaches the end of his punchy little lecture on ‘very small numbers and how they add up’, a little origami horse appears on the edge of my desk. I twitch, startled by the sudden sight.

With trembling fingers, I unfold the horse carefully, a difficult task at that scale, and even more difficult with only one hand. [Thanks for the invitation. It’s not love, don’t delude yourself. Meet me outside the Student Council room at 5 pm.]

So, no second date at the Shanghai. Maybe I should have suggested the park. The older me sees this as somebody else’s lost cause; Taro feels sad in a more well-defined way—he feels like a gambler who is watching his last chip disappear, knowing that he never really had a chance to win everything back.

But she folded a horse for us, I remind my other self. Maybe you have a chance. I suddenly feel invested in Taro’s success. I have fewer than 48 hours left. At some point, I find that I’ve decided to spend them on Taro, instead of walking around the school looking at people I’ve always wanted to see. What a fool I am.

*****

“So, you naughty fuck, when did you decide to move out of our little club of failures? Shit, you’ve actually been studying!”

She doesn’t sound angry. It’s just the way she is, my ‘body non-double’. Miki is everything Taro is not—tall (almost as tall as Lilly Satou, our shared memory tells me), dark, and handsome. I’m fat and out of shape, the legacy of too much cooking and eating, too little running and dancing. The only thing that has given us a bond is the fight for last place in the class.

My inert right arm twitches slightly, because one of those long, long legs has come into contact with it as Miki makes herself comfortable on my desk. My mind recalls that she doesn’t care who sees how much of her. Who wouldn’t want to see more? Who would like to get punched in the eye with a stump designed to fit right into a man’s eye-socket? An unwelcome and rather bloody memory makes itself known to me.

“Ah, it was a fluke. I’m not so smart. Just that Akio was studying out loud the other night and I was listening.”

“Hey, there’s no call to malign me like that. Even a stopped clock is right twice a day,” says a faint voice somewhere to my right.

Miki leans forward, her musky odour wafting into my nostrils. I press myself back into my chair, intimidated but aroused. A corner of my mind notes that she’s again been haphazard in securing her shirt buttons. A second corner says that purple lace doesn’t quite suit her. A third corner points out that pointing this out now will get us killed, so I stop thinking before I get to fourth base.

“You’re different,” she says, sniffing. With a very un-Miki-like concern, she asks, “Did you fall down and scramble your eggs again?”

I’m puzzled, until the appropriate chunk of memory surfaces. She’s referring to an incident some time ago when I was taking the stairs, swerved to the right to avoid Emi Ibarazaki (who has no legs but runs around recklessly on her prosthetics) and tried to hold on to the rails with my right hand. Result: instant visit to our head nurse, concussion diagnosed, bed rest under observation. That time, it was Miki who helped me out.

“No, Miki. I don’t think so. Thanks for asking.”

“Any time, lover-boy,” she says, a trace of puzzlement still evident in her smirk. “Seeya later at remedial class!” she adds, getting off my desk with a gravity-defying butt-swaying motion. I’m sure she knows what she’s doing.

There aren’t many of us left in class. The first one out after the last class was Hanako; in fact, she’d left quietly before I noticed. This is canon the me that is me (?) reminds me. At the right of the front row, Ikuno is finishing up an essay with her usual slow, precise penmanship. At the right of my end row, Natsume is glaring in my direction; she glares at everyone, so I’m not too concerned. The class seating plan seems almost as strange to Taro as it does to me, and I wonder why. I dig a little deeper. Hmmm. Apparently, Emi and her friend Rin Tezuka had moved to 3-4 to make way for Shizune and Misha, and some of my classmates had taken advantage of that change to book different seats.

I have conflicting memories. Part of me thinks this is a game, a fevered construct of my imagination. Part of me is sure this is reality. Both of me think the other half is bleeding through from too many late nights on the computer. I’m not sure who is right, but the learning curve is steep.

Remedial class? I ask myself belatedly, realizing the implications. Remedials begin at 5 pm. It’s 4.45 now. I’m supposed to meet Saki at the Council room. I’m probably going to be black-marked for this. Taro isn’t a bad student. He’s conscientious. He isn’t late for classes. This will not be good.

I grab my stuff and hustle out through the back door. On my way, Natsume puts out a hand as if to attract my attention, or perhaps stop me. I look at her, and I suppose my desperation is showing, because she withdraws her hand and nods, her amber eye catching the last glint of afternoon sun. I suspect she’s got questions. Her journalistic instincts are unnerving.

I hurry down the corridors, which I wish I could examine in greater detail, and head down the stairs to the Council room. There’s no time to be a tourist, worse luck. There’s a tea-room I’d like to visit, but Taro’s urgency is overriding everything.

As I reach the correct floor, I hear a door shut softly and turn towards the sound. “You’re early,” she says. In the off-white glow of energy-saving lamps, her hair is still honeyed, and her features are softened by shadow. Saki is indeed very pretty. She is like a Disney princess, like someone who belongs in Tokyo and not up here in Sendai.

“Sorry, Saki. I’ve got remedials in the library at 5 pm and I forgot.”

“Oh, that’s right. You and Miura.” She sighs, for no reason that I can imagine. “I’ll come with you. We can talk on the way.” She adjusts the pile of books in her arms and juggles a bit with her formal school jacket. I can’t help her with the books, so I content myself with offering a shoulder. She releases a small grin and drapes her jacket on me. It smells of something flowery, but light and not particularly sweet. It smells comfortable and warm.

We’re halfway there when she breaks the companionable silence. “Taro, I don’t have many friends, and I suppose I’ll technically have none when I’m gone. Thanks for trying. I’ve tried to be fair to you, but there isn’t any way to do that.”

“You’ll still be around, Saki. I’ll go bug Takashi and use him as an excuse to visit the Art Club.” I’m babbling. We’re babbling.

“You could do that. But one day, somebody else will be sitting in that seat in front of you. Someday, I won’t be able to return even for Art Club meetings. And you’ve got to understand that. You’re a nice person. If you think you’re ugly, at least you’re pleasantly ugly. You will feel pain. I don’t want to hurt you, so I have to condition you to the pain.”

She says all this softly, exactly, in low tones that make things very clear. I want to hold her, to hug her one last time before I have to learn to let go.

She looks at me. “I have to patch things up with Natsume, I have to learn not to be angry at Shizune. I have many things to do. Are you good to go?”

No!!! is what all parts of me want to say. But my body nods, voiceless.

Saki gives me that half-smile again. Suddenly I realize, illuminated, what that smile means. It’s the smile that says, “Yeah, I know it sucks, but we’ll make the best of it.”

As if echoing that thought, her lips part, and she says, “Taro, we all do what we can, with whatever we have left. Promise me you’ll remember that?”

We’ve come to the library, and I know I have never hated the idea of remedial lessons so much as in this one pinpoint moment in the history of the world.

“Yes,” I whisper.

“Why are we whispering?” she says, still smiling. She gestures around her, at the nodding hordes of junior students, mostly first years. “They should all know that you’re one of my few friends. Maybe they will remember that. I doubt anything will remain, but who knows?”

“See you tomorrow, Saki,” I nerve myself to say.

“Till tomorrow, big man.” I almost laugh at that, because that’s a Miki line, and not like Saki at all. She snags her jacket from me, patting my shoulder as if to say thanks, or perhaps for luck, and turns slowly on one heel.

I watch her slim, stiff back disappear into the crowd. I don’t know what to feel, as I lean against the library door.

>>

** DAY THREE **

She isn’t in class. That’s all wrong. This is supposed to be her last day in 3-3. We have all prepared little gifts. Instead, there is an empty seat in front of me. Nothing of her remains except perhaps the faint trace of a quiet floral scent. I am struck by Taro’s realization that he will hate whoever it is who ends up sitting there. Whatever there is of me knows who will end up there, at least in the game, and I can’t really hate that person myself.

At lunchtime, we abandon both the ‘bento-in-classroom’ clique and the ‘hunt-for-strange-food-in-cafeteria’ clique. We don’t have much time. We have to know if Saki is in school. I can feel my rising panic, and I know Taro and I are both feeling the same way. In a very abstract way, a very tiny part of me is laughing that now, more than two days after this began, I still don’t know how to describe the Taro/me or I/we situation in proper language.

I head into the administration block, towards the healthcare unit. I pause to catch my breath outside the Head Nurse’s office. My lack of fitness will kill me, but not today. I knock, and a sharp clinical voice commands, “Enter.”

“Nurse? Have you seen Miss Enomoto?”

“Saki? Yes, she was off to the hospital this morning, dropped by here on the way out.”

When he grins, I can hardly see his eyes. He somehow has always given me the impression of a man overacting his part. But I’m in no mood for games.

“Is she…”

He interrupts me. “She’s fine. I know that she’s supposed to have one last day in your class, Mr Arai, but she has a lot of things to do before she starts her new schedule next week.”

One of his eyes opens much wider than the other, like some caricature of a cartoon supervillain. “Is there anything specific I can help you with? How’s the phantom non-phantom limb sensation?”

“Ah… is Saki coming back to school today?”

“Very likely. It depends on whether there were further tests, but she should be back at the dorms by mid-afternoon at the latest. She could be back in her room by now, actually. Not that you should be visiting the girls’ dorm unescorted.”

He tilts his head and gazes at me with that odd one-eyed stare. “Possibly, it could be my duty to check on that. Especially since Miss Enomoto left her phone on my desk this morning in her hurry to escape my paperwork. Would you like to join me?”

My mouth is hanging open. A bit self-consciously, I shut it and swallow. “May I make a humble request for some time? I have something to pick up first.”

He laughs, both his eyes disappearing into his head again. “Oh, no problem. You might be late for afternoon classes, but I can give you a pass. Meet you at the entrance to the ladies’ block in ten minutes. No, fifteen. You’re not very fit, Mr Arai, you should take up some light aerobic exercise.”

“Thank you, thank you, sir,” I manage to say. I can’t get back to my own dorm fast enough. I’ve prepared the ingredients of a bento lunch for Saki, and it will need some quick warming up. And I have to slice the sashimi, which isn’t easy for a one-armed chef. Running is hard, when you can’t balance your body well.

In the end, I’m late, and it infuriates me. But Nurse Kaneshiro is patiently waiting, no trace of offence on his face. Rather, there’s what could be a lewd smirk spreading over it. “Ah, that looks like a boxed lunch. How considerate of you. I’m sure she’ll appreciate the gift.”

He does sound sincere, so I try not to think bad thoughts about him as we head into the mysterious domain of the feminine. There’s hardly anyone around. Women are social animals, and they prefer to gossip over lunch, where each group can watch the other groups warily, like animals at a waterhole. Some are zebras, and some are lionesses. I mentally smack Taro over the head, for that thought. I receive a sensation of mild confusion in return: What’s wrong with thinking that? It’s true!

Saki’s there. The lurching sensation in my chest seems to be one of relief. She’s fumbling with her keys as she attempts to get the door open. “Fuck!” she says, as she somehow fails to do so. It stops me short, because the Saki I know doesn’t use such crude language.

Nurse grins. “Hey, Miss Enomoto! Life is not so hard, surely?”

She looks up in surprise, her eyes narrowed a little in anger. Curiosity follows, and then a large and artificial smile.

“Nurse! You came to check on innocent little me? And who did you bring along?”

“Oh, Mr Arai was just passing along as innocently as you, and I dragged him over because he wanted to give his class representative a gift of appreciation.”

“Really? How kind of him!”

Her brittle and unconvincing tones are getting on my nerves. Why is she doing this? Clearly, Nurse is aware that something’s not right. The difference between us is that he’s nodding; he knows what it is. Absentmindedly, he places her cellphone on the bag she’s carrying. She doesn't even bother to look at it.

“The hospital emailed me the relevant results, and I’ve just had a chance to look at them.”

“Yes! I thought you would know.” She smiles even more brightly than before and finally gets her door open. “Thanks for all your trouble! It is much appreciated!”

The door slams in our faces.

*****

We’re back in Nurse’s office. My lovely bento is cooling on the table. Soon, it won’t be at its best, and my heart aches for that criminal waste of ingredients. But my heart is aching even more for other reasons.

“Well, patient confidentiality and all that. But you should be able to make some conclusions from Miss Enomoto’s behaviour.”

“It’s bad, isn’t it?” My uncontrollable hand is trembling by itself. I look at it curiously. I look at Nurse fearfully.

“Let’s just say that some things shouldn’t be discussed. Perhaps she’ll tell you when she’s ready.”

I stare silently at him. His lips are pursed tightly, and his usual smile is nowhere to be seen.

“Thank you, Nurse.” I stand, bow, take my sad bento, and walk towards his door dejectedly.

“She’ll need friends,” he says, just as I reach the door. I turn and nod once more, unable to add anything.

*****

“An infiltration op? Brilliant. Splendid. I never knew you had it in you, Arai.”

I sigh inwardly. Of all the helpers I could find, the first available one would have to be Kenji Setou, reclusive dweller on the split lowest residential level of the male dorms. As far as I can tell, the rooms around him are voluntarily unoccupied. But here he is, stained scarf and thick glasses and all.

“So, how do we ‘infiltrate’ the girls’ dorms at night, Setou?”

“Ah, trust me,” he says, tapping the side of his nose knowingly. “It’s Friday night, and the guardians of masculine freedom tend to be lax. You’ll have to watch out for female patrols, though. They carry stun-guns and will have no compunction about thrusting a cattle-prod into some sensitive orifice.”

He’s terrifying. Utterly insane. But he knows how to move unseen around the school. Somehow, he has smuggled in all kinds of contraband items, and he has raided every block in the school for ‘liberated technology’.

He maps out a plan for me, then wishes me good luck. He clenches a fist and thumps it over his chest. “For honour and glory!” he proclaims. I look at him disbelievingly, then return his salute with my left fist. “Good man!” he replies, shoving his papers towards me. “Do your best, and I will put your name up on my board to remind me of you even if you fall in battle.”

“Thanks, Setou.”

“After this is over, you can call me Kenji, and we can share manly drinks.”

“Okay.”

*****

In the end, I survive the climb, the drop, the entangled harness problem that Kenji had warned me about, and the bright lights of the intruder warning system. Carefully, I put my tools (actually, his) into the black canvas bag and huff-puff my way along the roof of the female dormitory block.

I’m about to test the locking mechanism on the roof access door when I hear the sound, and freeze. Someone’s just moved in the shadows to my right.

“Hello. It’s a clear night.”

It’s an unnatural voice. It’s clear, exact, sharp. It’s as if a bell is speaking. I try to understand what I’m hearing.

“Suzu once told me that Death plays games. Whether he or she, Death doesn’t want to have victory cheaply. Death wants a good job done by everyone, and that’s why I’m not jumping off this roof, in case you’re wondering.”

When I turn, I see Saki ghostly in the moonlight. She’s in a light grey tracksuit, hooded against the cold, night air. Her honeyed hair and bright face look very alive against the deathly background of shadow and chill, and the words she is speaking.

“So, are you here to make a statement? To jump off the roof for me? Please don’t. That’s foolish, and since I don’t have any affection for you, it would be futile.”

It’s a thrust to my heart, but I suspect she is using a blunted blade. I dig into my rucksack. “I brought you a bento. The earlier one wasn’t so good, so I ate it for dinner. This one’s for your supper.”

“You could just have met me at the courtyard.”

“It’s after curfew.”

“The guards don’t mind if you tell them you’re going to die and need a few moments.”

Even blunt blades hurt when applied with force.

“Will you eat with me?”

*****

Sunrise has come and gone, and the weight of her warm body on my dead arm has been the one constant in this changing night. We have heard the sounds of late-night revelers and gamers, the sounds of people going to bed and waking up.

I am a stranger in a body not my own, and I have had an experience we will never forget. “Saki?” I whisper, and I’m not sure which ‘I’ it is.

She stirs, like a cat about to wake up, blink, and lick its paws. “Mmmm?”

“We’re very late for class.”

She stiffens, then punches me in the side. “It’s Saturday, fool.”

I smile at her, and she smiles back. That smile is golden, almost as golden as the sunlight shining across the rooftop on this morning of the fourteenth day of April, 2007.

Without warning, [YOU HAVE FIVE MINUTES LEFT] booms in my head. I would stagger and fall, if not for the fact that I am already sitting on the ground. Dazed, I scrabble for words.

“Saki, goodbye!” I say, desperate. “Will you kiss me? Will you remember my bento?”

“What on earth are you talking about?”

I have no idea. Taro will soon be in control of my, no, his, body. I am losing everything, but I have four minutes left. I can’t just grab her. That would not be right at all. I have to do something.

“Saki, in three minutes’ time, things may change. But you have to tell me, in three minutes’ time, about our friendship, and how much it really means to you. You don’t have to use the word ‘love’. You only need to tell me what the rest of my life will mean to me, and you need to promise that you will follow your own rule about doing what you can with what you have.”

She is looking at me, bemused. She is beautiful in the morning sun. It must be almost half past eleven now. “Taro?”

“Do it. Two minutes.”

“Do I have to say what I want to say in only two minutes? I think I have more to say than that.”

“No, no, start in two minutes. I need to close my eyes. You’re too beautiful.”

Deliberately, I close my eyes. When these eyes next open, I won’t be here. I try to thank Taro for sharing his body with me, out-of-shape or not. He’s given me 72 hours that I can never repay him for, in any way.

[TIME] roars a mighty voice which makes no sound at all. And my eyelids spring open.

=====
alt index
Last edited by brythain on Mon Sep 18, 2017 12:44 pm, edited 7 times in total.
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
"Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
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Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (13—72 Hours/Saki) (20150124)

Post by Silentcook »

brythain wrote:(Also, is it possible to write a self-insert fic that isn’t creepy and/or cringeducing?)
Not if you disclose the fact. Fanfic authors really need to learn when to shut up. :p
Shattering your dreams since '94. I also fought COVID in '20 and '21, and all I got was this lousy forum sig.

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Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (13—72 Hours/Saki) (20150124)

Post by brythain »

Silentcook wrote:
brythain wrote:(Also, is it possible to write a self-insert fic that isn’t creepy and/or cringeducing?)
Not if you disclose the fact. Fanfic authors really need to learn when to shut up. :p
Thank the gods of KS fanfic that it wasn't myself that was the self inserted. :D
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
"Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
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Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (13—'72 Hours'/Saki) (20150124)

Post by Gamma »

Okay, I've only gotten around to reading the most recent one shot, 72 hours. I'll get around to my thoughts of the other two... eventually.

So this is absolutely brilliant. Coming in with no prior information about the fan fiction was a good idea. Having to uncover what in the bloody hell was actually going on was an enjoyable and fascinating experience. I must particularly praise the dichotomy between Taro's inner thoughts and characteristics to whichever character/person you made undergo these 72 hours, which was such a disjointed experience. Disjointed in the best way.

The fan fiction gave off this hugely surreal atmosphere to me, which is funny considering how simple the events of the story are. Now as I am in love with any type of good surrealism, this atmosphere made me enjoy it all the more.

There were a few other things that I also enjoyed about this work. Firstly, you fleshed out more details about the ATDverse. At this point in time, I have no idea of how you manage to juggle around so many different characters and manage a faultless continuity. Regardless, I always look forward to more details about this nuanced world. Secondly, there was the totally necessary and much loved (by me at least) Kenji inclusion.

In a few words, I loved this so, so much. There was no cringe, but a whole lot of grins.
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Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (13—'72 Hours'/Saki) (20150124)

Post by brythain »

Gamma wrote:<Interesting and heartwarming observations...>

In a few words, I loved this so, so much. There was no cringe, but a whole lot of grins.
Thank you very much! I don't want to fill this thread with spoilerised text, so I'll PM a reply to you on some of those points. I'm glad you enjoyed this experimental piece. :)
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
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Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (13—'72 Hours'/Saki) (20150124)

Post by forgetmenot »

Neat.

Personally I wouldn't take fanfic suggestions from Reddit, but this works pretty well. I suppose supernatural premises aren't entirely out of the purview of KS-dom, so this fits in well here. It's a nice story - heartwarming, and not altogether cheesy. I always have to take issue with the whole 'Saki-as-a-bitch' motif, but you added enough depth to her character that I can't really complain too much. Altogether, well done.
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Re: Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (13—'72 Hours'/Saki) (20150124)

Post by brythain »

forgetmenot wrote:Neat.

Personally I wouldn't take fanfic suggestions from Reddit, but this works pretty well. I suppose supernatural premises aren't entirely out of the purview of KS-dom, so this fits in well here. It's a nice story - heartwarming, and not altogether cheesy. I always have to take issue with the whole 'Saki-as-a-bitch' motif, but you added enough depth to her character that I can't really complain too much. Altogether, well done.
Thank you. This is of course my little one-shot dump, where I allow myself time travel and supernatural fantasy and ghosties and ghoulies and long-legged Mikis. :)

But I appreciate the encouragement. To me, Saki is not a bitch; she's really an anti-Emi in the sense that she doesn't want people to feel sadness by losing her. She just wants to get on with life, do stuff, leave a mark and go away. She's not beyond appreciating love, but she thinks its something she can't afford to allow. And writing Saki is very difficult for me because... in AtD I kill her off in 2009 and at that point, although we only know that her closest friend was once Natsume, we find out that many people went to her funeral, so she can't have been such a bitch. :)
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
"Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
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Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (14—Wrong Book) (20150207)

Post by brythain »

Sometimes, it's a blessing when things are lost in translation, confused by bad eyesight, or muddled by drugs and alcohol.
This is my contribution to the HPL canon. :)



Wrong Book

“No! What book is this? Damn feminists again! If not one, it’s the other!”

He slammed the book down. Dust rose from its binding as the spine flexed. He spat and cleaned his glasses with a corner of his scarf.

“Su-ti-vun-son, right? Not this Alhambra shit. Damn feminist librarians! It must be the old one, she cannot hear properly. Or the young one! She wants to get back at me! Argh! So frustrating!”

The younger one. Huh. She hated him. She studied all that medieval stuff. She’d probably mixed up the books. His books. This book. He picked it up, his nose quivering. He had no idea whether he wanted to sneeze, to snort, or to swear. But he had heard the stories about how people followed their noses, or were led by them.

Closer, closer, maybe it was a sequel to the book he wanted. “Damn!” he yelled. Then he calmed down a bit. He had never heard of this book, but he guessed it was in the same series because the title was almost the same. Something-nomicon. Like a convention, but with cryptographers, he had thought when he first placed an order for it. This one, it was some other thing. Maybe morticians. Or cat-lovers. Or dead cat lovers. Whatever.

He put the book down again, and took a swig from the bottle next to his cluttered desk. Stale pizza slices had been hung neatly from a long string mounted on the wall, and each one had been painstakingly wrapped in cling film, sealed and tagged with the date of purchase. There were also simple little puppets made from pieces of brightly-coloured felt and hanks of wool. A highly pixelated map of the school hung opposite the pizza collection, weighted at the bottom with what looked like a petrified baguette.

He got up and turned on several different lamps, testing them in different combinations for a while until he felt good about the lighting. He grunted in satisfaction and checked the locks on his door. Then he drew a third layer of curtains across his shielded windows, and settled down to read. Twice, his neighbour banged on the door, but he ignored the ‘Master of Romance’, who could probably settle his own shit anyway.

It got darker in the room. But he was in the zone, he could feel the numbers coming out right. Yes, this was the future of encryption. The feminists would never get his data. “You can take my life, but you can’t get my encrypted bits!” sounded a bit long for a war-cry, but he could work on that later.

Or maybe, it was the past of encryption. The book looked awfully old. Some English translation of a very old book. Algebra. Algorithm. He giggled a bit. All those words were making him feel high. Surely it wasn’t the whisky. Maybe it would make more sense if he read it out aloud. Or sacrificed a slice of pizza to the gods. The shadows moved in, made strange shapes around him, in peculiar geometries never discussed in the classrooms of Yamaku.

*****

The Head Nurse looked dubiously at his youngest colleague. “Your tooth? The wisdom tooth that we were supposed to extract today? It’s gone?”

“Yes!”

“Seems fishy to me.”

“Um… could I, ah, could I tell you about the dream?”

“Dream?”

“Yes!”

He sighed. Today would be a very long day. He had Ibarazaki and Nakai early in the morning, followed by Katayama and Enomoto; he had to confirm Miss Yumi’s availability for the afternoon session; he had to finish the transfer report that would confirm Satou’s fitness for travel and her unsighted status—the list went on. There were twenty-three appointments before the end of his day, and he knew that things could crop up in between. I’m sorry, Meiko, he said in his mind.

“Okay, tell me.”

“I dreamt there was this, ah… shadowy guy, yes, he looked familiar, but it was all dark and… and he was reading some old book and he was calling the aged kami, or something like that. It was all creepy, and at the end, he said something like, ‘Yuuko’s tooth knows the gate. Yuuko’s tooth is the gate. Yuuko’s tooth is the key and guardian of the gate. I summon Yuuko’s tooth!’ and my tooth vanished!”

He looked skeptically at her. This had to be the wildest thing he had ever heard, and he had heard a lot, especially from the students in the final year.

“I… I’m not lying!”

“I didn’t say you…”

“I wrote some of it down, look, here!”

She looked angry, which was rare. Shirakawa was shy, quiet, well-meaning. He would never have thought of her as a liar. But funny things could happen if you were under certain kinds of medication. He looked down. He looked again.

“Those are very strange-looking kanji,” he said. “They look a bit like… squid? Octopus?”

She snorted, shyness all forgotten in her outrage. “I’d just woken up… I wrote down whatever I could remember, something about ‘dreaded Catholic lies sleeping in his house near Australia’, I thought perhaps south of Okinawa, at least.”

There was a knock on the door. “Nurse!” said the high-pitched voice.

“Just a minute, Emi!” he said, raising his voice a bit. He rubbed his temples. This was going to be a longer day than he thought.

*****

Damn. Damn! Somehow, between the whisky and the pizza and the crooked letters… he had passed out, hadn’t he? He was sure he had pronounced the words right, he should at least be experiencing a CPU upgrade to his brain by now… what was it the book had said? “Higher wisdom of space and time.”

Well, it wasn’t happening. Snarling in disgust, he threw the book into a disposable plastic bag with the other books. Useless. Didn’t help him at all. He’d drop them off at his secret stash in the stairwell.

He stood up, stretched. For some reason, he’d developed a curious appetite. Perhaps he’d order a seafood pizza today, the one with the tako balls. Or just some nice hot takoyaki. He smacked his lips and unbolted his door.

Some day, he vowed, adjusting his garish scarf around his neck, he’d open up the knowledge that the feminists said man was not meant to know.

=====
alt index
Last edited by brythain on Thu Feb 12, 2015 12:04 am, edited 1 time in total.
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
"Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
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Alt Dreams [One-Shots] (15—'Takoyaki') (20150211)

Post by brythain »

Like many folk-tales, this one is weird and incoherent, and jumps around quite a bit.
Somewhat like a few Japanese macaques I have known, but that’s neither here nor there.
Just enjoy the ride, if you please.



Takoyaki

Once upon a time, there lived a poor fisherman of Aomori prefecture with the family name of Arai. (I am not telling you exactly where he lived, for reasons you will come to appreciate.) Arai was happy to live between the axe and the water, where the sunsets were sometimes glorious and sometimes masked by mist or the shadows of distant peninsulas. He was even happier because his wife, Arisa, was a very good cook, cheerful, and willing to learn new recipes from everyone who came by for a chat.

Nobody knows where Arisa came from, but it was universally agreed that the Arai family had been living in the Shimokita peninsula for centuries. Some said unkindly that they must be descended from the snow monkeys which lived there, but others thought this was true, and a blessing of the kami. Arai didn’t care, because he loved Arisa, Arisa loved him, and they lived in a beautiful place.

Soon after they married, Arisa’s moon failed to rise, and they prepared to welcome a child. In due course, they received from the gods a bouncing baby boy who was tough, loud, and had an enormous appetite. This was not a difficult situation for the Arais. After all, the fish were many (especially salmon), and the cooking was creative. They named him ‘Taro’, which means ‘big kid’, since he was the first, and they hoped for more.

Sadly, there were no more. And worse, on Taro’s twelfth birthday, while protecting a baby snow monkey from some woodcutters’ children who were tormenting it, he was hit on the head. He woke up feeling fine—but when he thought he’d moved his right arm and right leg to get out of the hospital bed, he came crashing to the ground. The signals were moving, but the limbs were not. He got the leg back within months; the arm, not at all.

On Taro’s fourteenth birthday, a strange and elderly man sauntered up to the Arai house. It was December 15, the day of the fishing festival, and at four in the morning, the household was already up and about.

“Hoy, Makoto!” came the voice from outside.

Surprised at this unruly interruption to his daily schedule, Makoto Arai stuck his head out to see what was going on. He saw a tall fellow in a jacket (a jacket!) with flowing grey hair, looking like a former Japanese prime minister. The man was waving a hand at him.

“Ah, respected sir, I have the honour to be named Makoto,” the fisherman said, stepping out and bowing.

“No, no respect needed,” said the man, nodding. “Although it is nice to be respected for once. But that is all nonsense. I have had a talk with some friends and we want to help that son of yours get what he’s supposed to get.”

“What?” said Makoto, genuinely surprised, a little afraid, and totally confused.

The man grinned, revealing well-maintained teeth with an unsavoury yellow look. “Let me get to the point. Yamaku. Up on Mount Aoba. Your son Taro, he’s useless with the fishing and great with the cooking, but with Arisa around, you don’t really need him. He should be getting a better education than he’s getting here, and that arm is getting in the way." As an afterthought, he added, "So much getting!”

“Yamaku?” repeated Makoto, now convinced he was dreaming although he’d been up an hour or two already.

“Yes, yes, the Sendai-Aoba Mountain District Academy or whatever they’re calling it these days. We want him to go there. It is a project of ours.”

“But he’s our son! And besides, it’s way too expensive.” And the man was really quite rude. True, the Arais weren’t rich, but there was no call to be screwing up the daily schedule and blatantly trying to take people’s sons away.

“Makoto Arai…” the man’s voice trailed away. “Ah, good morning Arisa-sama!”

Now Makoto’s confusion had hit epic heights. What the <multiple obscenities self-censored>! Now he’s addressing my wife as if she is some high-up kami or whatnot. Ridiculous! “See here, man,” he began, starting to get impolite himself, “You can’t just…”

“Oh, hello, Masaru. What brings you here?”

“Trying to convince your husband about Aobayama. It’s about time, you know.”

“It is? Arisa is sad,” she said, miming tears and the covering of her face in grief.

“What is this, Arisa? Who is this fellow?” asked the fisherman, his mind turning cartwheels in distress.

“Masaru is an old friend of my father. I think he means well. He always does. And he owes us something.”

“But Taro’s ours! And what do you mean ‘he owes us something’?”

“Yes, Taro is indeed ours, my husband. But he needs to go to Sendai and learn to cook takoyaki. And Masaru must pay off a large debt, for which this is only small payment.”

And that was how Taro found himself, suddenly and with little preparation, headed for life in a big city, at a special school. He didn’t like it much.

*****

The years passed very slowly, and then too quickly. At first, Taro expected to be mocked. After all, he was ‘Dead-Hand’ Taro Arai, who couldn’t help his father with salmon, or the tuna catch. But he found that at Yamaku, he had classmates who didn’t even have a hand, and sometimes had no arms at all. Everyone just learnt to do the best they could with what they had, and while some were still very unhappy, at least they could be unhappy together, which was a kind of happiness.

He still kept in touch with his parents, and went home faithfully every holiday. On the Day of the Sea, he always said special prayers, and his father was proud that the fish gave the Arais such a good living. His mother was always asking about what he’d learnt to cook, but she seemed disappointed when he confessed he hadn’t learnt to do a proper takoyaki.

“Why, son? It’s an important cultural dish in those parts.”

“There’s this girl who keeps bugging me to cook it for her. I think she became President of the Student Council just to have the power to make me do it. It is kind of demotivating, respected mother.”

She laughed, then. “Ah, boy, maybe she likes you. What’s her name?”

“I think of her as Kitsune, but that’s not her name.”

“Well, maybe that’s the wrong girl, then. You should bring some home to meet us.”

And then it was graduation time, and Taro felt in himself an actual sense of loss. It was as if his dead hand was taking over, like a renegade central government or something, and making the rest of him feel dead.

Sad, he climbed up to one of his favourite rocks on stumpy old Mount Aoba and sat on it, looking out over the distant reaches of the sea. Somewhere out there, the fish were biting, the squid were gliding, the abalone…

“Hey, Taro!”

It was a familiar voice, perhaps his second most favourite in the whole school. “Hi, Miki!” he replied, without looking down.

“Getting fit again, are you? First you start studying, then you lose the fat, what the hell, man, are you trying to make us all look bad?”

He turned towards her, noting that today it was a brown bra with a little pink bow in it. She loved leaving buttons undone, and he’d always wondered why. His classmate also had that grin on her face, the one that simultaneously challenged and questioned. It was like ‘truth or dare’ blended into a single sauciness.

“Nah, just growing up, I guess.”

She frowned at that. “So, you’re suddenly all mature and we’re not?”

“Miki,” he said seriously, “You know I don’t mean that. It’s just that after this, you’re all off to university and I’m back to being father’s fishing-boat navigator on the north coast. There wasn’t much point to me coming here, right?”

He saw her face change. A trick of the light? Clouds shifting over the mountain? He was surprised when she finally replied.

“Why don’t you invite me to see your hometown?”

“What? People will talk.”

“Crap. I’m just your friend, visiting for a day or two. How can it be that we’ve known each other for three years and only now do I know your father’s a fisherman?”

He winced. It sounded like such a low-class job. When he opened his eyes, she was buttoning her blouse up, systematically and absent-mindedly. She wasn’t looking at him at all, but at something inside her own head.

“I’m Miki Miura. My parents are dead cops and I’m an orphan. I grew up in Nagasaki, so I know fishing. You think I’m too high-class for you? It’s only that I’m beautiful, so I look classy. Or a slut, depending on which asshole you talk to. And after this year, if I do badly in my exams, I’m not going back to school and will probably end up being a whore in Tokyo.”

He realized his mouth was hanging open, so he closed it. Then he tried to say something. “I didn’t know. But it’s not that.”

“So, what’s it? You still pining for Saki Enomoto? Still pissed off at Hisao Nakai? What?”

He’d been in love with Saki. Still was, probably. But she was dying. And Hisao Nakai was the Yokohama kid who now sat in her place in their classroom. It was Taro who turned away this time.

“No. That’s all done, after we graduate, anyway.”

“If you need a friend, Miki’s available.” She sounded sad, but he couldn’t tell whether it was for him or for herself.

“Thanks, Miki.”

“No problem. By the way, Misa Kuranaga was looking for you.”

He heard her footsteps grow softer as she descended. Misa Kuranaga? Wasn’t she some famous ballet person? Oh, not that one. The funny girl from 3-4. He sighed and decided to stay on his rock for a short while more. But there wasn’t much left to do, and Mount Aoba would be here forever.

Misa was a really small girl, he realized. She couldn’t have been much over a metre and a half, or about five feet tall. She might’ve been taller, except that there was something wrong with her legs. The only reason he was talking to her at all was because Miki had sounded so sad.

“Hello, Arai!” she said. She sounded like a very powerful nightingale. “Shizune Hakamichi informed me that you were the best takoyaki chef in Yamaku.”

That was ridiculous. He hated cooking takoyaki, even if the class made him do it for almost every bloody festival. Octopuses were intelligent creatures—the bigger, the smarter. The small ones were stupid, of course. He didn’t feel so bad if he got them small, which wasn’t often the case. But small humans were stupid too.

“Not really,” he replied. He was already regretting his course of action. “Why would Madam Council ex-President tell you that?”

“Because I asked her! Would you make some with me?”

That was an eye-opener. You didn’t just go up to complete strangers and ask them to cook stuff for you. It wasn’t very polite. But one thing led to another, because this is that kind of story. Or lack of it, because Taro and Misa told me to cut it short here.

*****

In 2011, the Tohoku region was devastated by a massive earthquake and the tsunami that followed it. The fisheries took a few years to recover, and the Arai family never went back to full-time fishing again.

However, somewhere in the Shimokita peninsula, there is a little bistro. Perhaps you might think of it even as a tavern. There are many names for such places, and none of them quite fit. But it serves good seafood dishes and an excellent range of sake. There’s even an espresso machine, but the tea is better.

Behind the counter, if you are fortunate, you will meet Arisa Arai. She’s a pretty woman, even though middle-aged and not as lithe as she used to be. If you are astonishingly lucky, you will meet Makoto, her husband, who almost always seems to be somewhere else, obtaining the tasty materials that they use in their cuisine.

Most of the time, however, you will meet Taro, the big man with the ready smile who is the master chef. Wait long enough, visit frequently enough, and one day, he will tell you a story. And it’s quite a strange one.

Because Taro will tell you that he cuts pieces of his wife up to make takoyaki. At which point, his wife will appear, thump him affectionately on the head with a paddle, and warn him to stop wasting good sake. Which would be odd, since you will inevitably realize that Taro is as sober as a judge, and yet as merry as a dolphin.

“There’s something wrong with her legs!” he will chortle. You will, of course, note that she wears long, heavy skirts—a little odd on such a small lady, but not terribly unusual.

“Hi, I’m Misa!” she will say. “Excuse my husband, he grew up in this area and can only think about fish, even when it’s his wife he’s talking about.”

You will probably nod embarrassedly, not wanting to get into a domestic dispute with your very kind hosts. As you turn away, you might, however, see the old man with the flowing white hair sitting quietly over a steaming bowl of warm food in the corner.

This is when you should ask yourself if it’s worth it to stay and talk to unusual people, or to enjoy your food and walk away. Some people stay. They will ask, “Ah, excuse me for my curiosity, but who is that gentleman in the corner?”

Surprisingly, it will be Misa who answers. “That’s Masaru, my godfather! He helped us finance this place. Taro rescued his son many years ago, and the old… man never forgot.”

Such a sweet story! One of those backwoods tales that you can tell your friends back in metropolitan Tokyo, or wherever else you come from. As you finish your meal, even if you never come back again, you may notice the large number of snow monkeys allowed to roam freely around the place.

Occasionally, one of those monkeys will run up to Taro with a fish or something. He will smile, pat the little (okay, some are as big as fifteen kilos, and very strong) creature on the head, and bow his acceptance of the gift with profound thanks. You, however, will shake your head, because that is the only thing you can do, all full and happy with tea and sake.

Oh yes, when you get home, remember this: “… and they lived happily ever after.”

=====
alt index
Last edited by brythain on Fri Jun 19, 2015 3:16 am, edited 3 times in total.
Post-Yamaku, what happens? After The Dream is a mosaic that follows everyone to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Main Index (Complete)Shizune/Lilly/Emi/Hanako/Rin/Misha + Miki + Natsume
Secondary Arcs: Rika/Mutou/AkiraHideaki | Others (WIP): Straw—A Dream of SuzuSakura—The Kenji Saga.
"Much has been lost, and there is much left to lose." — Tim Powers, The Drawing of the Dark (1979)
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