Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Chapter 16 Now Up

WORDS WORDS WORDS


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DanjaDoom
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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Chapter 12 now up

Post by DanjaDoom »

Total Destruction wrote:
Mirage_GSM wrote:
Suddenly, enlightenment hits me in the form of a faraway neon sign. The one thing that’ll get Suzu’s attention. The one universal symbol of joy that no woman can ever turn away from.
Shoes.
Really? Buying shoes as a present?
I thought the same thing initially, but my head decided to interject those stupid "I'mma give that bitch X, bitches love X" memes in my head and made the whole thing humorous.

A good chapter regardless. I'm probably really gay, because I thought about a ferret named Banana and audibly squealed in glee. The fuck wrong wit me.
B-But bitches do love shoes!

Don't worry Total, It's not gay if it's a ferret, especially one named Banana.
My fine literary endeavors: Real, M&M, Rat Race, and Hideaki: A Tale of Manliness. Feel free to stroke my ego and read them.

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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Chapter 12 now up

Post by Mirage_GSM »

I thought what I meant was obvious, but now I'm not so sure anymore...
It's not that she mightn't like shoes or that buying shoes is "gay" or anything. It's just - how do you buy shoes when the one who's supposed to wear them is not present to try them on? Odds are they have to return them because they don't fit.
Emi > Misha > Hanako > Lilly > Rin > Shizune

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griffon8 wrote:Kosher, just because sex is your answer to everything doesn't mean that sex is the answer to everything.
Sore wa himitsu desu.
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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Chapter 12 now up

Post by DanjaDoom »

Mirage_GSM wrote:I thought what I meant was obvious, but now I'm not so sure anymore...
It's not that she mightn't like shoes or that buying shoes is "gay" or anything. It's just - how do you buy shoes when the one who's supposed to wear them is not present to try them on? Odds are they have to return them because they don't fit.
No No No, we established that liking ferrets named Banana isn't gay, not buying shoes.

To be fair, Aaron isn't the greatest at critical thinking, as much as he might think (heh) he is. If he did end up buying the shoes, he wouldn't realize he never asked Suzu her shoe size until later.
My fine literary endeavors: Real, M&M, Rat Race, and Hideaki: A Tale of Manliness. Feel free to stroke my ego and read them.

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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Chapter 12 now up

Post by DanjaDoom »

Sorry it's taking so long guys, I'm muffed up creatively over here. Maybe it's just me being hard on myself, but everything I keep writing seems like shit. Writers block sucks ;_;

Also, I've been going over some past chapters and I'm seriously considering rewriting some of them, due to problems with characterization, dialogue, etc.

I have a pretty good idea for the next Hideaki story, so that should be done soon.

Just letting my fans (all three of you) know what's up. As a side note, the next chapter of Real will be a very different one. You'll see...
My fine literary endeavors: Real, M&M, Rat Race, and Hideaki: A Tale of Manliness. Feel free to stroke my ego and read them.

We must embrace pain and burn it as fuel for our journey-Sanic
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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Chapter 12 now up

Post by DanjaDoom »

First off, I'd like to apologize for the atrociously long wait for this chapter. Between preparing for a convention and taking care of a new dog I've been hella busy.

This chapter's pretty much a prequel chapter, set a good month before Aaron arrives at Yamaku. Just something I've been wanting to try for a while now.

Enjoy, and for every comment I get I'll personally come to your home and make you dinner (I actually won't, mods, please don't ban me.)

Dust Mite Supernova
Time. Mother Earth. Change.

Some things can’t be fought, shouldn’t be fought. It goes against the stacked order of the world.

It’s gravity followed by everything else. That’s how things have always been. That’s how things will continue to go.

No one ever told that to the girl lying in bed, shielding herself from the dreadful screech of her alarm. Suzu Suzuki has been fighting nature all of her life. She wouldn’t crumble before this alarm clock, nor any other alarm clock in the world.

Sadly, her diligence and fortitude isn’t helping to stop the wailing.

“Stupid beeping... I just want to sleep,” she grumbles, flinging her Transformers pillow towards the offending electronic like a weak trebuchet. It serves to muffle it up, at least.

Unfortunately for Suzu, or as her new classmates in class 3-3 call her, “that narcoleptic girl,” the ordeal has left her feeling decidedly untired. Neither toss, tumble, cover pull, or any combination of the three was enough to bring the sweet reprieve of sleep back to her.

Knock. Knock. Knock.

That’s not helping things at all.

“Suzu, class is starting in thirty minutes! Time to wake up!”

The blue-haired girl would recognize the distinct accent of her friend Molly anywhere. A gifted foreign exchange student from India, she’s an unusual sight, even at a most unusual school like Yamaku. Perhaps it was their shared “strangeness” that brought the two girls together?

Shambling from her bedside with the gait of an amputated banana slug, Suzu nudges her bedroom door open after much maneuvering around scattered bags of Doritos.

“I have an alarm, you know!” she grunts, a tangle of eyelashes and eye boogers obscuring her vision slightly.

The Indian girl doesn’t even flinch at her friends tired outburst. Grumpy mornings at the Suzuki residence are not alien occurrences to her.

Had an alarm, I think you mean,” she snickers, observing the desecrated remains of alarm clock #845,231 (approximately) at the foot of the nightstand. Suzu rolls her eyes and invites her inside.

“Did you do what I asked last night?” Molly asks expectantly.

Suzu can only stare in confusion at her studious friend. “What?”

“Your homework?”

“Calculus is for gaylords. I thought we established this.”

“Your other homework, Suzu...”

“Oh... what?”

With a slap to the forehead, Molly motions around the Chechen war zone that is Suzu’s bedroom.

“I told you, you need to start organizing your stuff properly! The first step to helping you get more energy during the day is coordination and arrangement.”

“Arrangement, uh... shmarrangement. If I’m just gonna use that stuff later what’s the point in putting it away?”

Molly jams a strict finger against her friends sternum, nearly knocking the blue-haired girl off of her bare feet.

“That’s the kind of attitude that’s going to mess you up later in life! First you're leaving stuff around the room, then you're not paying your bills, and finally you wind up getting pregnant at some bus stop because you didn’t listen to Molly!”

Molly has an uncanny ability to make you believe what she’s telling you, even if it’s total bullshit.

“Your lamp is not a shirt hamper,” she continues. “And putting your bras on top of that stuffed bear I gave you last month is not cute.”

“Miki thought it was funny...”

“Miki tried to bribe Mutou to say ‘bonerfart’ the other day after class, her concept of humor is skewed. Now, are you going to do the smart thing and listen to me from now on?”

“I’m not listening to you now,” answers Suzu, at the moment preoccupied with a stain on her wall that looks kind of like Che Guevara eating a popsicle.

Groaning in frustration, Molly yanks various articles of clothing from all around the room, throwing the amorphous blob of cotton and polyester into her narcoleptic friends non-waiting arms.

“Just get dressed and meet me downstairs...”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“A-tisket a-tasket
A green and yellow basket
I wrote a letter to my love
And on the way I dropped it--


….....

What was that next line?"

“Miss Suzuki.”

“No, no, it was something else--”

“Miss Suzuki.”

“Oh, wait, it was ‘I dropped it, I dropped it.’ Duh!”

“Miss Suzuki!”

Suzu peeks up from behind her cerulean bangs to meet the eyes of her science teacher, Mr. Mutou. He’s not angry. Exasperated, more like.

“It would be wonderful if you could at least attempt to pay attention in class today. Granted, I may not be an expert in the field of sleep disorders, but I highly doubt an episode would last throughout my entire class period every single day. At least give me some credit, please.”

Some snickering wafes through the classroom, which Mutou waves off quickly.

“Back to our studies, ladies and gentlemen. Please open your books to chapter six, page eighty three.”

Suzu remains undaunted by his criticism. What does he know anyway? What do any of them know?

Two weeks ago was the beginning of the school year. Two weeks ago was the day she realized that she didn’t really care too much. Just about the entire makeup of the class was different from last year. Granted, she wasn’t exactly best buddies with many people then, but having to sit in a class with complete strangers is never the most comfortable of experiences.

Suzu has always fancied herself a people reader. Their motives and feelings have always been rather easy for her to discern. Whether it be neurological side effect of her condition, she’s not sure. The science of the whole thing is a mystery to her. Nonetheless, socializing has no part in her reality. As far as she’s concerned, the walk up to the classroom is merely an interlude to her sleep.

Life is dumb and I want to sleep.

A small object zooms past Suzu’s peripheral vision and lands off to the side of her desk. At first she contemplates throwing the offending object to the wayside for daring to interrupt her rest. However, curiosity overwhelms her, and she clandestinely begins to unwrap the wadded parcel as Mutou jots down some equations on his blackboard.

“We are requesting your presence in the Newspaper club headquarters, room 2-6 during lunch tomorrow for an exclusive interview with none other than the club president herself, Natsume Ooe! If you cannot meet us at the allotted time, please write down a time most suited for your convenience on the dotted line at the bottom of this page. Lunch will be provided, on us!

Hoping to hear from you soon!

Sincerely, Naomi Inoue
Vice President of the Yamaku Academy Journalism Committee"


On a hunch, Suzu turns her head to look out towards a the class. A few students look genuinely surprised to see the blue-haired girl making a concerted effort to give a damn about the people behind her.

It doesn’t take long to figure out the identity of her secret admirers. They’re waving over to her like they’re her long lost friends. One of them has brown hair and two different colored irises, one brown and one green. The other is a blonde, but otherwise unremarkable looking girl. They seem strangely unperturbed by Suzu’s disinterested stare. In fact, they haven’t stopped waving the entire time. Either their minds simply can’t comprehend someone rejecting them, or they’re unusually dedicated to their craft.

Why would they want to talk to her, anyway? Are they making profiles for antisocial students and rounding them up for some mandatory friendship camp? Does Suzu run the risk of being assimilated into some thought police project to patrol the school and keep everyone at a one-hundred percent level of happiness?

Is it even worth it to find out?

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Suzu paces back and forth along the section of lockers, only halfway invested in what’s going on in the real world. There are tiles on the ceiling to count, by God, and she’s going to be the one to count them.

Meanwhile, two girls on the opposite side of the personality spectrum look over the letter. They don’t like what they see, if their souring expressions are anything to go by.

“Seems a bit suspect to me,” Molly chimes in, examining it with a forensic eye. “You said they just tossed it at you? It doesn’t have your name on it. Maybe they meant it for someone else?”

Suzu shrugs. She’s still counting ceiling tiles.

“They were waving at me. Unless waving at people that stare at them is just some weird quirk, I think they did mean it for me.”

An overly-dramatic snap and a few clicks of a tongue let everyone in the vicinity know that Miki Miura has decided to throw her two cents into the discussion.

“Here’s what you should do. Go watch, like, a shitload of gangster films, right? Go out, buy a suit, wear sunglasses indoors for the entire day, go up to them and be all like ‘What up, homie?’ It'd be so completely badass!”

Miki seems genuinely surprised that her foolproof plan isn’t receiving thunderous applause and tear-stricken faces of joy. The only reward for her troubles is a consoling head pat from Molly, as if she were a kindergartner who just wet herself.

“Miki, it’s sweet of you to want to help, but... no.”

The purple-haired girl swats away her friend’s hand with an agitated stump. “We can do without the condescending attitude, thank you very much!”

The Indian girls smile turns impish. “Spell condescending!”

“No problem! Let’s see, uhm, c-o-n-d... a... condescending is that one part of the water cycle right?”

“Close enough,” Molly shrugs. She turns back to Suzu before the girls already stringy attention span fluctuates any more.

“It’s up to you, Suzu. What do you want to do?”

Want to do... Want to do....

Like fat ladies in viking helmets, these words soar menacingly around Suzu’s blue head, going all kamikaze on her thinking process. Decision making is not, and never has been, one of her strong points. Is it so much to ask that they just leave her alone and watch the ceiling?

“... I don’t know.”

“You don’t know?” Molly presses.

“I don’t, no.”

The indecisiveness of Suzu irks Molly a bit, but she does a good job of masking it. Miki intervenes to provide a more sympathetic voice.

“Well, maybe sleeping on it would do you some good!”

Before this idea can be considered, the bell rings out across the campus. Like dedicated colony ants, the students file their way back to their classes, their limbs sufficiently re-limbered. The trio decide to do the same.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“O-Onii-chan, wait! I feel it... Ah! It’s stirring!”

“I-It’s OK sis... just hold it tight! Wait until you hear feel it pop!”

“Onii-chaaAAAAAGH! Not there, y-you baka!”

“Sorry! J-Just a little... bit... more!”

POP

“Yay! The cupcakes are almost ready! Now we just need to put them in the oven!”


“This is the last time I borrow one of Miki’s cooking animes,” Suzu gripes to herself.

Closing the lid of her laptop, she settles down into her covers, like a small mammal burrowing into its hole. She hasn’t bothered to shower yet, even though she’s been trailed by a distinctly french-fry like smell ever since she got out of class a few hours earlier. It doesn't concern her too much. She doesn't have to waste time getting cleaned up, and she gets to smell french fries for as long as she wants. It’s a win-win situation, really.

The blue power light of the laptop dims, and she follows alongside it. The effects of an eventful, rigid school day have begun to wear on her. Suzu isn't a creature of automation. Her time is ever-flowing, ever changing. If she does something the same way every day, she’s probably sick. Like, death bed sick. Of course, Mr. Mutou would probably call that sentiment of hers a little hypocritical.

The faint sounds of superfluous chatter waft through the hallways outside, disappearing just as quickly as they appeared. She’s alone again.

But, that’s alright. She’s got a lot to think about. Thinking is always easier when you’re alone, away from the cramped ambit of the Yamaku classroom. After all what’s a classroom but a seminar in regurgitated ideas? A breeding ground for obnoxious club presidents, apparently.

“I’d much rather learn my own way,” she tells herself as she lets the soft fabric kiss her cheek.

Dust particles fly around her room, illuminated romantically by the orange glow through her curtains. If there was an acoustic guitar nearby, it would be difficult to resist the urge to strum it. She loves those little specks. They’re her soundless muses, leading her to the doorstep of the dreamworld. One of the only parts of nature she doesn't have to fight.

Satisfied, she drifts off to sleep.

Que Sera, Sera, Suzu Suzuki.
Last edited by DanjaDoom on Wed May 01, 2013 12:51 am, edited 1 time in total.
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We must embrace pain and burn it as fuel for our journey-Sanic
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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Chapter 12 now up

Post by nemz »

Total Destruction wrote:I'm probably really gay, because I thought about a ferret named Banana and audibly squealed in glee. The fuck wrong wit me.
Same here man, and my gay bro tells me I'm painfully straight. I think you're safe. :lol:
Rin > Shizune > Emi > Hanako > Lilly
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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Chapter 12 now up

Post by DanjaDoom »

nemz wrote:
Total Destruction wrote:I'm probably really gay, because I thought about a ferret named Banana and audibly squealed in glee. The fuck wrong wit me.
Same here man, and my gay bro tells me I'm painfully straight. I think you're safe. :lol:
Banana confirmed for best character then?
My fine literary endeavors: Real, M&M, Rat Race, and Hideaki: A Tale of Manliness. Feel free to stroke my ego and read them.

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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Side Story #1 Now Up

Post by nemz »

If I say yes someone's gonna end up writing a banana pseudo-route, man.
Rin > Shizune > Emi > Hanako > Lilly
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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Side Story #1 Now Up

Post by DanjaDoom »

nemz wrote:If I say yes someone's gonna end up writing a banana pseudo-route, man.
I would ask Doomish to draw Banana fanart and write a grimdark story about him if I wasn't so sure Silentcook would give me a dissaproving finger wag
My fine literary endeavors: Real, M&M, Rat Race, and Hideaki: A Tale of Manliness. Feel free to stroke my ego and read them.

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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Side Story #1 Now Up

Post by nemz »

Rin needs a pet camel spider named Leopold and it and Banana can have adventures and solve crimes. :D
Rin > Shizune > Emi > Hanako > Lilly
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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Side Story #1 Now Up

Post by Doomish »

Image

Did someone say my name? (Ferrets are not this big but it's a dream so it's okay)

(LOOK AT IT FULL SIZE HERE PLS IT LOOKS A LOT BETTER)
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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Side Story #1 Now Up

Post by DanjaDoom »

Holy shit Doomish! Gimme a hug 'fore I give you a knuckle sandwich!(A light one)

I now have two pieces of official fanart. Schweet
My fine literary endeavors: Real, M&M, Rat Race, and Hideaki: A Tale of Manliness. Feel free to stroke my ego and read them.

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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Side Story #1 Now Up

Post by Total Destruction »

Okay, I gotta step my DanjaDoom fan-ness up a notch. That's the best damned thing I've ever seen.

:D

@nemz: Been a minute, boss. I'm one to talk, but still.

Back to the prequel: was that a weird baking/incest hentai or something? Hahah.
... Danger.
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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Side Story #1 Now Up

Post by DanjaDoom »

Total Destruction wrote:Okay, I gotta step my DanjaDoom fan-ness up a notch. That's the best damned thing I've ever seen.

:D

@nemz: Been a minute, boss. I'm one to talk, but still.

Back to the prequel: was that a weird baking/incest hentai or something? Hahah.
If you want to make any more MSterpieces, feel free to. I like to nurture young talent (especially when they're making shit for me).

Implied incestual relations is how all Japanese siblings cook their food. Should have paid more attention in social studies, son.
My fine literary endeavors: Real, M&M, Rat Race, and Hideaki: A Tale of Manliness. Feel free to stroke my ego and read them.

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Re: Real (A Suzu/OC Story) Side Story #1 Now Up

Post by DanjaDoom »

Annnd here we go. I'm very tired and have to wake up in 4 or 5 hours, so I figured I should post this already. It's another wonderful prequel chapter.

Shout out to my homie MirageGSM for proofreading it through and giving me tips. Ride Together Die Together.

It goes without saying that I love comments on my stories, so please let me know what you think!

Burning Satellite of Love

“Iced Mocha?”

Suzu politely declines the offer, still not fully invested in the idea that the drinks in this classroom weren’t spiked to make her “open up” more.

Naomi shrugs and sets the pitcher down onto the mahogany desk, littered with so many coffee stains it now resembles the world’s most uncooperative game of Whack-A-Mole. Nearby, club president Natsume clicks away at the keyboard with great studiousness. Her eyes dart to and fro with precision, as if channeling the cherry wood pendulum on her desk.

Her singular composition ends with a final click on the keyboard and the whir of the ink printer at the back of the room.

“Naomi.”

“Yes?”

“I’ve taken the liberty of typing up our projected earnings for this month. Would you mind running it down to Ms. Hakamichi downstairs?”

“Right away, ma’am!”

Suzu watches her zoom past, unsure of whether to be impressed or nauseated by the trying-too-hard formality of these two. They could give the student council a run for their money. That’s probably their plan, in fact.

“Why not just email it to her later?” she ponders aloud.

“Formality is grand, preening is grandeur,” Natsume chuckles, starry-eyed like a pre-teen gushing over her new boyfriend. It elicits some dirty images of Natsume alone at night with her spreadsheets in Suzu's overactive mind.

“Now, shall we start with the interview?” she continues, rolling forwards in her comically over sized synthetic leather chair. Her eagerness to move on to the next subject lends credence to the theory that she’s not entirely sure what that mantra of hers actually means.

“I’m not yet mentally prepared,” replies the misty-eyed girl curtly. She can go tit for tat when it comes to being difficult if need be. “In fact, I’d like to ask you a question, if I could.”

“Oh? What about?” Natsume inquires. Like any good journalist, her true disposition is difficult to discern, but even now Suzu can sense a growing botheration emanating from her.

“Why me?”

“Sorry?”

“Why did you invite me up here? I don’t think I’m all that terribly interesting.”

A great warmth radiates over the amber-haired girl’s body, as if she were yearning for this question. Her body is limber and bright as she begins her obviously well-rehearsed oration.

“A few weeks before this year started," she begins. "Ms. Inoue and I sat down to discuss our plans for the future. After a long... eventful chatter, we decided that, if we could do but one thing before we leave this school, it’s this.”

Whatever “this” is, it’s valuable enough to warrant a few glimmering seconds of dramatic silence.

“To create a web of human interaction! A link, so to speak... are you still following me?”

Suzu nervously shakes her head. “Not particularly?”

Natsume gives her an understanding grin that may or may not be condescending.

“Simply put, our aim is to create a detailed and intricate portfolio of our entire class. I mean, why go through the trouble of going up to people and getting to know them? That could take weeks! So, we decided that, in the interest of promoting community and togetherness, Ms. Inoue and I would take time out of our days to interview our fellow classmates. And you’re our first subject! Pretty exciting, no?”

No.

“Maybe. What were you going to ask?” Suzu ponders cautiously.

“Oh, nothing too personal, trust me!” Natsume guarantees with a wave. Her reassuring tone is none too reassuring.

Soon the return of Naomi, sweaty from a hurried race around the campus, brings an end to Suzu’s stalling tactic.

“Did she get the memo?”

Naomi nods in the affirmative while she attempts to catch her breath. Wiping away sweat from her brow with a tidily folded hankie from her shirt pocket, she dutifully takes a seat next to her club president.

“Shall we begin, Miss Suzuki?”

She shrugs in resignation. Why not just get it over with?

“Perfect!”

Did they just read her mind? The duo produce a sleek, silver tape recorder and place it squarely between themselves and Suzu. They want to be sure to capture every last bit of information they can, it appears. Efficiency.

“First question,” begins the bespectacled girl. “What’s your favorite color?”

Easy enough. “Mandarin orange or midnight blue.”

Naomi looks up in surprise. “Hmm, strange, I would've expected it to be more along the cyan line...”

Suzu raises an eyebrow. “Why?”

“Oh... no reason.”

“Let’s move on, shall we?” Natsume suggests. Naomi nods, shamefaced.

“Favorite novel?”

Don Quixote and The Very Hungry Caterpillar.”

“A favorite television show?”

“I like Mystery Science Theater 3000 myself. It’s a television masterpiece, I’d say.”

They nod civilly, like two intellectuals forced to take in the inane ramblings of a bumpkin. They press on all the same, for the sake of journalistic integrity. Plus, the pizza won’t arrive for at least another twenty minutes.

“Well,” Natsume resumes. “This is shaping up to be quite the introductory chapter! I’m foreseeing good things for this little project of ours. Now, I think it’s time for the next series of questions.”

The narcoleptic girl shrugs. “Your call.”

“Tell me, Miss Suzuki, do you have any fond memories of your parents?"

The word reverberate through the walls of her mind. It makes beads of nervous sweat rise to the pale skin on her hands.

Parents...

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“Dad! Dad! Look what I drew for art class!”

The eager young girl shoves the creased mess of paper into her father’s face, her smile threatening to engulf a healthy portion of her face.

“It’s me and Banana playing dodgeball! Do you like it?”

On the contrary, the short, balding man more widely known as Suzu’s father seems more caught up in cleaning up the brown java stains that were spilled onto his shirt during his daughter’s kamikaze attack. He retreats back into the kitchen, grumbling silently the entire way, not even having taken a glimpse at his daughters work.

The little girl remains unfettered. She’ll just root herself to the ground until he comes back! Its foolproof.

As expected, her father returns to the dining room, the scattered coffee stains now replaced with one large water stain across his chest. As he begins to finish his scrambled egg and toast breakfast, he finally acknowledges her.

“Suzu, you know that’s not what you were supposed to draw,” he scolds coldly. “Go try it again.”

And that’s it. Father and daughter time is over for the day and will be until the process repeats tomorrow morning. In some vain effort to feign companionship, she sits perpendicular to him and folds her arm over the white tablecloth. Despite the abundance of warm reds and yellows her mother’s painted around the room, the atmosphere between the two of them is distinctly chilly.

Her father leaves five minutes later, and Suzu returns to her room once again.

Sometimes she contemplates tearing down her walls. Or maybe bringing in buckets and buckets of paint to splash onto her furniture. Maybe she’ll shove her toys into the cabinets? She doesn’t want to do any of this, of course. She loves her walls, her room, and especially her toys. She also loves her father. But sometimes it’s as if he doesn’t return the favor. Even if it takes her destroying something, all she wants is to be... something. Yelled at. Laughed at. Hugged.

Anything to let her know that he’s not an android. Anything to let her know that he knows she exists.

A muffled squeak permeates from underneath a nearby cabinet. No sooner does she turn her head to inspect than a blonde blur rockets over to her feet and begins to paw cutely at her skirt.

“Banana!” she coos in a hushed tone. Careful to make sure that her mother hasn't woken up yet, the young narcoleptic girl brings the beady-eyed creature onto her lap. He burrows his head into the pocket of her blouse, leaving a maelstrom of yellow fur in his wake.

With a nostalgic smile, she runs her fingertip along the ridge of his head.

“At least I know you still care, Banana.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“I... went fishing.”

Natsume raises a skeptical brow. “Fishing?”

“Yeah, fishing. I went fishing with my family when I was younger... I caught a big fish. It was fun.”

With a light shrug, they continue with their interview.

“As we all know,” Naomi articulates, donning the interviewing helm. “The relationship between a mother and daughter is a treasured one. Tell us, Ms. Suzuki, are there any particular memories of your mother from your younger days that you hold especially dear?”

“My mother?” Suzu repeats, sweat brimming on her forehead.

“Yes,” she repeats, a bit slower for the nervous girl’s sake. “Your mother.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“Suzu, dear, would you like something to eat? I bought some... sandwiches.”
The woman abruptly stows away her snack foods back into the dusty blue lunchbox, disheartened by the sight of her daughter. She’s cried herself to sleep again.

It’s been a hard two days for both of them. The backseat of a minivan, no matter how nice, is no place for a girl in her first year of high school to stay. But they can’t go back. Not now.

Word travels fast in their town. Suzu already gets made fun of for her narcolepsy. Whenever she walks by, people laugh and run out of the way to avoid her “falling on top of them.” What would it do to her to have a mother who ran away from her problems? To have a mom who ran away from her worries instead of fighting them head on?

Nonetheless, she can’t help but smile when she sees her little girl. She’s since become a young woman, of course, but it’s impossible to look into her eyes and not see the bubbly girl encouraging her mother to have an emergency plan for any alien invasions.

But alas, time travels fast when you reminisce, and already the skyline has begun to turn a shade of regal purple. Placing the keys in the ignition, she pauses for a short while before driving off. A friend of hers has offered to put them up in her family's motel while things get settled, however long that will take. Months, maybe.

A groggy voice moans from the backseat.

“Did you have a nice nap, dear?” the woman chuckles.

The young girl pats away specks of dust from her windbreaker. The chill of the fall months always rolls through this part of Japan first, giving its residents the gift of the autumn leaves before anyone else on the island. Right now though, leaves aren't the most pressing issue on the minds of the two women in the car.

“Mostly...”

She gives her daughter a sad smile. She hasn't stopped smiling for the last few days, as if stopping would collapse the facade of rightness she’s built up.

“Mom?”

“Yes honey?”

“Are we going home soon?”

The smile cracks. Just a little bit. She still needs to hold on.

“Not for a while, I’m afraid. No.”

“... Is it because of me?”

“No!” she half-yells. Her daughter doubles back in surprise, so she measures herself and begins to speak with a much quieter intone.

“Sweetie, if there’s one thing I want you to know, it’s that none of this happened because of you. This is just something that’s been boiling over for a while, that’s it. Your father and I... we just can’t work anymore. That’s all there is to it. Do you understand?”

Her daughter nods wordlessly, still not wholly convinced by her mother’s tale. The sad truth is, she shouldn't be. It’s a lie. A lie with the best intentions, but a lie nonetheless. Suzu’s condition and the growing effects it was having on her school life had only succeeded in widening the distance between her and her father until their home life had become almost unbearable. So, when her mother told him one late night that she was leaving, he didn't put up too much of a fight. He almost seemed to be expecting it, in fact.

Of course, Suzu doesn't know any of this. But she’s a smart girl. She’ll figure it out someday. Maybe sooner than anyone realizes. How she’ll take it is a matter that no one can know for sure.

“Mom? Are you alright?”

The woman keep her eyes transfixed towards the darkening sky and the people passing them by like rolling stones. The street lamps pop on. Some of the light glistens off of the tears on her cheeks.

“Just fine, honey.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“When I was seven she bought me Banana.”

Her questioners stare at each other in bafflement.

“Your mom bought you some fruit?”

“What? Oh, no, Banana is a ferret... best ferret in the world.”

Hold the tears in, girl. You can’t let them see you cry. That’s the last thing you want to do.

Natsume clears her throat with just a hint of uncertainty. “And now we've arrived at our final question! It’s been quite an exciting process, wouldn't you agree?”

“Most definitely!” concurs a bubbly Naomi. Natsume chuckles.

“I was talking to Miss Suzuki, but your enthusiasm is welcomed, Miss Inoue!”

Naomi rubs her head in embarrassment and resumes her interviewing duties. The grin on her face is highly unsettling.

“Now, Miss Suzuki, we as teenagers understand well the trials and tribulations of a relationship--”

Uh-oh.

“--so, our question to you is, do you have any tantalizing relationship stories to tell? It could really benefit some people in the department of love!”

This foray into gossip mongering is a thoroughly expected, though still thoroughly unpleasant, turn of events. Still, though, it catches Suzu off guard.

“I... wouldn't know anything about that,” she stammers.

Like sharks smelling blood in the water, her two captors grin from ear-to-ear with the most devilish of glee.

“Surely you've at least fancied a boy?” Natsume pries.

“Well...”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~
CLONK.

“Sorry about that!”

Suzu dismisses the boy’s worries with a wave, tossing them back their baseball.

“Guess that puts an end to our sandwich lunch, huh?”

The boy sitting on the knoll next to her takes a thoughtful bite from his chicken salad sandwich. Jin could make mowing the lawn look like a spiritual epic. It had something to do with his eyes.

“Maybe you just put those boys up to it because you don’t like my cooking?” his partner accuses.

He laughs. “First of all, making a sandwich isn't technically cooking. Second of all, if I really hated your cooking that much, I would've told you a while ago.”

Her emerald eyes bore into the side of his head like a drill. “Would you really tell me?”

“No, probably not,” he admits sheepishly. The two of them share a laugh as the early afternoon breeze starts to pick up. In the few months since she’s been here, the park has quickly become a favorite spot of hers. The path that leads into it is off the main road by a mile or so, leaving it a secluded spot used almost exclusively by the nearby residents. A few of those residents, of course, being Jin and his family. The nicest people in the world, in Suzu’s eyes.

A new world? Or just a substitute world? Will she ever go back to that world she once knew? How will she settle back if she does?

“Thinking?”

Why does he always know these things? What makes him so damn good at that?

“A little bit.”

“What about?”

“You shouldn't ask a girl that question!” she chastises, stealing away the last bit of his sandwich for good measure. The chicken actually does taste a bit under cooked. Maybe he was right about the “bad chef” thing...

“My apologies. You just seemed to be lost about something.”

“What, you've never thought hard about things?”

Jin pops his shoulder bone and leans back against the tree, hands deep in his coat pockets.

“Nope.”

“Nope?”

“Nope.”

“Never?”

“Not even once! Life goes too fast for me to think about things that don’t really matter in the end. You come in with nothing, you leave with nothing. In the end, you’ve lost nothing! Right?”

His morbidly optimistic attitude would be off-putting if it was coming from anyone other than Jin.

“I guess,” Suzu nods.

Silence rings out through the landscape. The kids have long since stopped their game of ball and have begun a heated game of Pokemon. This goes on for awhile, until the kid in the red begins to cry and everyone’s forced to go back home by his overbearing mother.

“Hey, Suzu?”

That was Jin’s voice, almost drowned out by the sudden breeze that's carried across the bumpy scenery. He sounds so at peace when he’s tired, as if sleep welcomes him like an old friend. It stirs up a bit of envy in Suzu.

“Yeah?” she responds.

Shifting his light frame against the tree trunk, he pulls the brim of his hat down over his eyes, leaving only his thin, parted lips visible.

“Let’s not change.”

~~~~~~~~~~~
“No.”

A bit abrupt, maybe, but it got it’s point across. Natsume and Naomi flinch backward at her.

“No... what?”

“I-I can’t...” she begins. Whatever words could have formed in her mouth crash land faster than a burning satellite. That’s actually a fairly fitting description of how this entire day’s gone.

She jumps to her feet, sending her rolling chair flying back a good few feet. Everything inside is bottled up. It feels like she has a fever. There’s a tsunami of things Suzu wants, needs, and has to say right now.

“This interview is over.”

For now, she’ll just settle with that.

Both members of the club look to be at a loss as to what to do. Technically, yes, the interview is over. They just didn't expect things to end quite in this manner. That manner being a busted office chair.

“Um, I’m sorry for that, by the way...”

“It-It’s fine,” Natsume hurriedly assures her. “We've been meaning to order some new furniture for some time. I’m pretty sure that was around before the school was even built. Naomi, get the trashcan from the closet, will you?”

Her assistant dutifully searches through the nearby storage space. She never takes her eyes away from Suzu, as if breaking contact would be grounds for a severe facial mauling. All three of them remain silent in the room, each responsible in their own little way for the most disastrous non sports related interview ending ever.

“You can leave, if you want to, Miss Suzuki,” the president tells her. Despite the occurrences, she offers a dignified smile towards her inaugural guest of honor.

With a hasty bow, Suzu makes for the exit but can’t help but to linger at the threshold for just a little while longer, out of sight. What happened in there, exactly? She picks up the two voices in further discussion as they move around debris.

“Will we be using that for the project?”

“Hell no.”
My fine literary endeavors: Real, M&M, Rat Race, and Hideaki: A Tale of Manliness. Feel free to stroke my ego and read them.

We must embrace pain and burn it as fuel for our journey-Sanic
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