Ow.
Hearing a voice, he strained his ears, but the fierce gusts of snow
drowned out the quiet sound. He looked around the world smothered in
white, feeling like he might be blown away. Even when he tried looking in
the direction the voice had come from, shards of ice danced dizzyingly
around him and seemed to slice at his skin. He couldn't even open his eyes.
I fell… It hurts.
He heard the voice again; it sounded incredibly weak. I have to find
her faster, he urged himself. But the sub-zero storm blew straight at him,
and he took one step backward and then another.
Nestled in the pure white snow, he saw an even whiter fingertip.
He saw her slender wrist, her little elbow, her shoulders—then he saw
her face, buried in the snow.
He tried desperately to move forward. He was wholly focused on
trying to save her, pushing his snow boots through the drift that they were
buried in. He reached out his hand and tried to grab those fingers.
But…
I can't anymore.
Unable to reach her, unable to make it in time, he began to slip.
"AHHHHHHH TAIGAAAAAAA!"
***
The moment he cried out, he felt like he had fallen down.
"Whoa! That…was…a surprise!"
When he moved his fingers to cover his mouth in shock, he realized
they were trembling with a terrible force. The palms of his hands were slick
with sweat, and when he touched his lips, he tasted salt.
It was a dream. Just a little nightmare.
Takasu Ryuuji continued to tremble intensely. Every muscle in his
body was stiff; he couldn't relax. It almost felt like the back of his school
jacket would burst right open, allowing the demon king inside to slither out.
I'm glad it was a dream, but what—
"A-are you okay? How about you take a seat again, all right?"
Ryuuji raised his face at the urging voice, finally regaining a sense of
reality. He was in the middle of the classroom, standing as stick-straight as
a wooden doll. He faced the teacher's platform, where the bachelorette (age
30) Koigakubo Yuri stood. His other classmates silently watched his
demonic molting from their seats.
"S…sorry! I guess…I-I was half-asleep…"
Flustered, Ryuuji sat back down and covered his face, which felt like
it was on fire. He was supremely embarrassed.
The last thing he remembered was putting his head down on his desk
after class had ended. He'd closed his eyes, tired of waiting for the
homeroom teacher to go through the final motions that would officially end
the school day.
"It's fine. It's all right. Yeah, of course. This isn't your fault."
Clasping her fingers together at the V-neck of her sweater, the
bachelorette (age 30) seemed strangely calm as she nodded at him. Her
voice softened kindly in a way that didn't suit speaking to a student who
had fallen asleep in the middle of homeroom. "Having someone as close as
Aisaka-san get lost on the mountain must have been traumatic for you,
right?"
As though echoing their teacher's kindness, his other classmates
didn't even make fun of Ryuuji for shouting Taiga's name in his sleep. In
his seat at the very front of the classroom, Kitamura Yuusaku turned
around, echoing "Right, right…"
Kushieda Minori turned around from the seat near the hallway.
"Right, right…"
Ryuuji was sure that Haruta and Noto were going "Right, right…"
behind him, too. The only one who pretended not to notice was Kawashima
Ami, who was looking outside from her window seat.
"Now that you're awake, Takasu-kun, remember to bring that
printout tomorrow."
Ryuuji noticed the printout that had been set on his desk while he was
sleeping. It was a future aspirations questionnaire with blank spaces for
answers to be filled in.
"We'll use your answers in a parent-teacher interview to decide how
the classes will be organized next year. I'm just repeating myself for the rest
of you, but don't forget it, everyone. Now, what do you say?"
Haphazard replies of yuh and aight sounded from all over the
classroom while Ryuuji took in a deep, deep breath. He held his head in
both his hands and curled his back like a shrimp in distress as he looked at
the printout.
Who cared about his aspirations? Trauma, schrauma.
It had been a whole week since the school trip. Even the muscle
soreness from his novice attempts to ski were already long gone, and all
that remained were the memories. The fun things, the things that hadn't
gone so great, the things he had smiled about, and the things he hadn't—
among those memories, the folder on Aisaka Taiga was especially and
unnecessarily large.
She had fallen off a snowy cliff.
Ow…
She had gone missing in a blizzard.
I fell… It hurts.
The blood dripping from her forehead. The paleness of her throat as
her head tilted limply back.
Oh…Kitamura-kun?
And to top it off, she had mistaken Ryuuji, who had gone down the
cliff to save her, for Kitamura. In her haze, that girl—Taiga—had told him
something she shouldn't have.
My feelings for Ryuuji just won't go away.
"Agh…"
Ryuuji didn't even care about crumpling his printout as he put his
head right down on his desk. BAM! The sound he made was pretty loud, but
everyone seemed intent on pretending they hadn't heard it for his sake.
He inhaled a lungful of the smell of his desk, closed his eyes, and
held his breath. Whenever he remembered Taiga's words, the blizzard rose
back up in his head.
I just like Ryuuji, no matter what I do. That was what Taiga said. She
uttered those words as she was being held by none other than Ryuuji
himself. She had completely mistaken him for Kitamura, and he couldn't
correct her. After he'd climbed the cliff, the adults had whisked Taiga away
to the hospital before they could talk.
So Ryuuji hadn't heard her—or, at least, he was pretending he hadn't.
He was pretending that it was Kitamura who went down the cliff to save
her, and Taiga hadn't said anything at all. It was only in his violently
wheeling memories that Taiga's words remained.
So what was this about his future? He was still caught in the blizzard
from a week ago, but they wanted to talk about next year's classes? They
wanted to talk about tomorrow? About the future? His future?
Without realizing it, Ryuuji's face contorted like that of a poisoned
demon. How was he supposed to think about his future in these
circumstances?
"Um, Takasu-kun, we're doing the closing bows." A girl poked him
in the back.
"Oh…"
Ryuuji quickly raised his face. Everyone else had already long since
stood up, and all they needed to do was give their homeroom teacher a bow
of farewell at Kitamura's signal. His classmates pretended not to notice
Ryuuji's chair clatter as he stood up and lowered his head along with them.
The homeroom teacher stepped down from the teacher's platform and
left the classroom. 2-C was immediately seized with after-school clamor.
Laughter and conversations erupted all around.
Taiga's small form had yet to return to the midst of that din.
She'd left Ryuuji behind by himself in the blizzard world. Actually,
she might have just run away. She wasn't at her condo. She hadn't come
back since the school trip. The bachelorette (age 30) had said that Taiga's
mother took her away but that she had gotten sick and was recuperating at a
hotel in Tokyo. He didn't know if that was true or not. Her phone had been
out of service the whole time, and he couldn't get a hold of her.
Ryuuji scowled even more sullenly. His sanpaku eyes seemed to glare
at Taiga's seat as though he were licking it. The chair appeared to shift
slightly in response, but it was probably because someone had just run past.
Taiga might remember everything. She really had said that stuff, and
she might remember it had happened, and she might have realized that the
person she said it to wasn't Kitamura but Ryuuji himself, and she might be
planning to never come back again. That was how far Ryuuji's thoughts had
gone.
Even though school was over, Ryuuji couldn't start walking. He pried
his eyes away from the empty seat, but the blizzard inside his mind refused
to subside.
The icy storm from that day was still freezing him in place, even
now.
If he could see the real Taiga safe and sound—if he could only see
her face and hear her voice—then he might be able to escape from that
blizzard world.
***
"It's coooooold~! And the line's not moving an inch~! Phooo~!"
"But four people just came out together… Ugh, standing still like this
is making me even colder!"
"What time is it? Whoa!"
His cell phone told him it was already five. After checking that he
hadn't gotten any messages, Ryuuji closed the flip phone and rubbed his
gloved hands together so fast he could almost have started a fire with them.
The sun had already set, and the cars and trucks traveling along the
national highway next to him lit up white, reflecting the light. Now that
they were in February, the temperature had dropped below freezing. The
moment the dusk wind blew, its intensity and coldness made the high
school boys close their mouths for a moment. Spring seemed like it would
never come.
Noto held his headphones, which were playing nothing, in his
trembling hands (he didn't look cute at all). His already tiny eyes squinted
even smaller.
"Saying it doesn't help, but it's so cold! I guess the colder it is, the
better the ramen tastes, but there's a limit! I wonder how much longer it'll
take?"
"I think we've gotten more than halfway through the line, but
actually—whoa! There's a huge line behind us now. It's going all the way
over to that light!"
"Hey, don't get out of line. Everyone's out for blood right now.
They'll cut in front of you."
Grabbing Haruta's hood as his friend staggered away from the line,
Ryuuji bowed his head slightly to the group of students behind him. They
apologized furiously—S-s-s-sorry! Oh, no, it's my bad. No really—and he
and the students went into a loop of bowing their heads back and forth at
each other for nearly five seconds.
The line of people on the national highway sidewalk continued past
the next street corner. At the head of that line waited incredibly popular,
steaming hot, and toasty ramen and tsukemen, but there were just too many
people ahead of the three of them. If the restaurant announced that the broth
had run out or something, they might just start to cry.
The restaurant that Ryuuji, Noto, and Haruta were waiting to enter
was a popular chain that had opened a few days ago near their school. Noto
and Haruta had invited Ryuuji there—probably because of the whole
"Taiga!" incident—and the three of them had made their way over. They
knew from word around school that there were ridiculously long lines, but
they'd had no idea the wait would be this bad.
"Actually, sorry, Takasu. I didn't think it'd be this big of a deal.
You've got to go shopping for dinner, right? Are you gonna be okay? Will
you have enough time?" Noto asked Ryuuji as he shivered. Ryuuji waved
his hand, No, no.
"It's nice trying out ramen that's popular enough to have a line like
this. It's not like I could come here alone. We made it this far, so we've got
to eat before we go home."
"Ughh, I don't wanna go home."
Ryuuji and Noto turned to Haruta, who sniffled as he corrected
himself, "Well, I wanna eat the ramen, but I don't wanna go home."
"Wait, what'd you do? Did you break a vase or something? Did you
rip a hanging scroll?"
"Did you break your gramps's bonsai? Did you draw eyebrows on
your dog?"
"My gramps already kicked the bucket a while ago, and I don't have
a dog. It's more serious than that…like, it makes me sad to say it myself,
but I'm an idiot, right…"
Yeah, we know, Ryuuji and Noto nodded vigorously.
"And I've got super bad grades, right…and I need to talk to my
parents about this future aspiration stuff, and that's really been weighing on
me…"
Ryuuji sighed as he recalled the printout. Haruta and he exchanged
looks that cried, I don't wanna.
Meanwhile, Noto seemed quite optimistic about it.
"It's not like we really have to worry about it until next year's exam
season," he said. "All they're using it for right now is to split up the classes,
anyway."
Noto looked up at Haruta, whose nose was running.
"Come to think of it," he said, "are you planning on doing the
humanities course? Or are you trying for the science course?"
"Uh…I'm not even thinking about which course to take… I might
not even graduate… Yuri-chan's been telling me this for a while, but I
really might not even graduate at this rate… She even went out of her way
to call my place this time. When she told them that, my parents got all
down. Well, I guess maybe the humanities course would be better. If I did
the science course, I'd get in trouble with all the math eventually. You're
definitely gonna be in the humanities course, right, Noto-chi?"
Noto nodded. He was a strange specimen whose only natural aptitude
was in language.
"Yeah. So, I'll get into a literature department somewhere, sneak into
a publishing company, edit a music magazine, and eventually become a
freelancer! I'm gonna become a review writer. I can't imagine doing
anything else."
"Whoa, you've been saying that for a while, haven't you, Noto-chi~?
I'd be happy just graduating. If I could get a recommendation, I might try
college, but I don't really care about majoring in anything. I guess if
nothing else, I could just help out at my dad's work."
"What do your parents do again, Haruta?"
"Interiors."
Interiors…?
"My dad's, like, an artisan. It's so cool. Plus, I heard they make a
killing."
He means interior decoration… After figuring out what Haruta was
talking about, Ryuuji stared at them both.
"This is kind of rude, but I like…didn't expect you both to actually
be thinking about the future. I kind of feel like I've been left behind."
"What? What are you talking about?" Noto breathed white out of his
nose and jokingly hit Ryuuji's shoulders (it wasn't cute). "You've got a
good head, Takasu, so you don't gotta worry about the future. You're good
at math, and you're in the science course, right? You and Master Kitamura
have probably got the national selection in the bag."
The high school they went to was unofficially considered a collegebound school. Every student there was expected to go to college. When
they became third years, they were divided into three science classes and
three literature classes, making six classes in total. Those with the best
grades would be put into the national selection track, which was divided
into two classes (one for the sciences and one for humanities), limited to
twenty-five students each. In the past, students who did well would just go
to local public colleges, but there were a lot of people who got into selective
private schools now. Kanou Sumire, who went overseas before graduating,
had been in the school's national selection science course.
"But I've heard rumors that the national selection course goes pretty
fast," said Ryuuji. "They apparently cover everything we're supposed to
learn in our third year in one semester, and they just study for exams or
something after that. I think I could get in with my grades…but I'm not sure
about it. I'm not even sure I want to go to college, so I feel like the spot
would be better going to someone else."
"What?! You're not going to college with your grades?! Are you
going straight into the workforce?!"
Noto sounded hysterical, surprising Ryuuji.
"Well, my family just hasn't got any money. It's not like I want to go
to a particular college or do anything specific… I'm not against studying, so
I wouldn't mind being a student for four more years. So I was thinking, why
not work and save up money for now and then go to college later?"
"It's not like you haven't got any money. Your mom's been running
her shop forever, hasn't she?"
"It's owned by somebody else. She just works there. And it's not like
she can work there forever… But ever since the high school entrance
exams, my mom's been telling me, 'Ryuu-chan, you're going to go to
college, so you have to go to a college-bound school. ☆'"
Crossing his arms together, Noto turned his face up to the dark skies.
"Wait, Takasu, your nickname is Ryuu-chan…"
"Gross, right?"
As they talked, the line slowly made its way forward without them
noticing. Haruta pushed at their backs.
"Okay, okay, you two, we're moving forward—forward."
"Anyway, I guess I'm not going to be in the same class as you next
year, Takasu. I'm going to be with Haruta in the humanities track, so there's
a chance the two of us might be in the same class, but…right, that means
we're going to be separated from Master Kitamura, too."
"Take another step forward. It's cold, so let's huddle together. Ahh,
it'd be such a bummer if I got separated from Noto-chi, too, and left all
alone. Let's stick together like this even if we end up in different classes. I
wonder what'll happen with the girls? Taka-chan, did you ask?"
"Ask what…?"
"Kushieda, of course. Is she in the humanities course? She looks like
she would be, just judging by her face."
"I think she's probably humanities. Ta—" He tried to answer Haruta's
question as though nothing was up. "Taiga mentioned something about that
at some point."
It was probably because of the strong wind that blew at him and the
chill that seemed to pierce right to his bones that he couldn't get his mouth
to move properly. I see, Haruta quietly murmured next to him. Noto
nodded.
"Then it's settled, Takasu. You're going to be in a different class from
Miss Kushieda. That must hurt. Actually, how've things been with her
lately? You haven't really been talking about her much."
"Everything's about the same as back then."
He remembered the night of the school trip when they'd talked in the
hotel lounge. His heart had been throbbing. It had been his final chance to
confess, and it had been when he'd finally, clearly realized that Kushieda
Minori would never like him.
Once he knew that, he couldn't continue with his one-sided love.
"It must be awkward, then."
"It's not awkward so much as…I don't know. It's not like I'm
avoiding her, though."
"Did you give up?"
"It's like I used up everything I had…"
He could have kept having feelings for her, even if he never got
anything out of it. He could have prepared himself to keep being hurt but
also to pray for something to happen. He could have continued to believe
that Minori might change her mind. He could throw himself into beautiful,
extraordinary, sacrificial love. He knew he could have. He understood that
was an option.
But…
"I see…" said Noto.
"Ah, well," said Haruta, "things just turn out the way they will~!"
Ryuuji wouldn't do that. He couldn't do that.
He felt like the line had been drawn, not in the moment that Minori
rejected his feelings but when he decided he wouldn't, couldn't do that.
Ryuuji knew firsthand that love could end in ways other than rejecting or
being rejected by someone.
Having done that, he could get a fresh start. He could do that—but he
wouldn't.
He couldn't just move on that easily.
Just when he had given up on his unrequited feelings for Minori, he'd
found out about Taiga's. Ryuuji didn't know why she hadn't come back. In
the end, the one who was left behind—who was abandoned—was him.
It was like he was still wandering in that blizzard, even now. He felt
like a prisoner, confined in that impossible world of ice along with Taiga's
illusory voice. The real world progressed forward, day after day, and he
couldn't even tell how he would be feeling tomorrow, much less what his
future would be like.
"Agh, it's cold…"
The chill that seemed to crawl up his back made Ryuuji grit his back
teeth. As he rubbed his freezing shoulders, he thought about how easy it
would be to flip through the days of his past like a disposable calendar,
ripping each of them off and throwing them away.
"Brighten up, Taka-chan. We're almost to the ramen, okay?" Haruta
smiled as he poked at Ryuuji's hunched back. Ryuuji breathed out white air.
"Things have been rough for you, haven't they, Taka-chan? Kushieda
rejected you on Christmas Eve, and then you got hospitalized, and then you
got rejected again at the school trip, plus Taiga got lost, and now she's been
out since then. Of course you feel bad."
"On the other hand, Kushieda-shi hasn't changed at all," said Noto.
"If I hadn't heard it from you, Takasu, I wouldn't have known that she'd
rejected a guy at all. I wonder how she's so tenacious?"
"I wonder what happened with her fight with Ami-chan," said
Haruta. "It's hard to tell what's going on with women from the sidelines.
Actually, did you make up with Maya-sama, Noto-chi?"
"Huh…well, she's completely ignoring me right now, of course…"
The three boys looked at each other's faces, pitifully ignorant of what
to say. Ryuuji rubbed his freezing nose and ended up looking down at his
own toes.
Minori was probably at softball right around then. All they'd said to
each other that day was Taiga's out today, too. I haven't been able to get a
hold of her on the phone.
The prisoner in the blizzard world fruitlessly inspected his own
wounds. Love was futile—that was the only truth he knew.
"Oh, looks like the line's moving a bunch all at once."
As a rowdy group of people came out of the ramen store, the long
line gradually shortened.
"Okaaay! The next three guests can now make their way in!"
When they heard the energetic voice calling them, the three of them
turned to each other with faces that said "Finally!" They could put aside the
chill of reality because, beyond the hanging cloth that covered the door,
steaming hot ramen was waiting for them. They pushed up the deep blue
cloth and finally stepped into the dim shop where the air was fogged with
humidity.
"Please take three seats at the counter! Ngahh?!"
That Ngahh?! was pretty enthusiastic, too… Ryuuji thought as he
looked up at the female employee putting out a glass of water for him.
"Whoa?!"
He nearly fell right out of the chair he was about to sit in but caught
himself. On Ryuuji's right, Noto dropped his bag, and on Ryuuji's left,
Haruta had taken a mouthful of water before he spat it all out with a
"BFAAH?!"
"Don't look at meeeeeeeeee!"
From where she was standing behind the counter, the employee
squirmed.
"Just kidding! You can take a good ol' gander at me…"
She posed proudly in front of them, a towel snugly tied around her
head. She wore a black T-shirt with the name of the ramen shop on it and a
matching black apron. Kushieda Minori's mouth curved up as she chuckled
"Heh heh." She was most definitely real and made up of tangible mass.
"Oh…" Without thinking, Ryuuji pointed at her bold face.
"What're…you?!"
"I'm an employee!"
"No, but…wh-what about softball club?!"
"It's over! The days are shorter in winter, so we wrap up earlier! But
you sure surprised me. I had no idea you were all lined up out there. Well,
how about I take your orders now? Also, if you say you want 'ra-women
instead of ra-men,' I'll poke your eyes out."
"One ra-women."
"A ra-women please."
"Give me a ra-women."
Bsht, bsht, bsht. Starting from the right, Minori's thumb jabbed one
of each of their eyes in order.
"We're sorry! Three ramens please," Noto said.
"Okay, good choice! Three ramens coming up!"
ROGER! They heard a voice rumble from the kitchen, which was at a
level higher than the counter.
The busy employees going in and out from the kitchen were lit up
with an intense light. Ryuuji could see countless polished pots sitting on top
of flames that glowed from the back of the kitchen. Most of the employees
were men, but there were a few women, and then there was Minori. They
were all drenched in sweat as they skillfully managed the customers'
orders.
"So you started another job here, too?" said Ryuuji. "What happened
to the family restaurant?"
Minori, reaching across the counter to wipe it down, turned toward
Ryuuji. "I didn't quit, but this place has better pay, so I got two hours here
to try it out."
She flashed a peace sign… No, it was a two-hour sign. Her smile was
as brilliant as ever. Her smile was the definition of energetic. Minori had no
concern for the change in Ryuuji's heart as she smiled at him.
"Actually, Kushieda, can you even make raaamen~? I wouldn't want
your amateur raaamen after lining up outside for an hour and a half."
"'Course not. I'm just on the floor. I also wash the dishes and manage
the line."
"Check please!" someone called, and Minori quickly answered the
person as she flew to the register. They watched her go.
"So while we were just standing around in the cold, she finished
softball club and started work…" Ryuuji unconsciously mumbled. She's
way too tough. Noto nodded slightly from beside him.
While he'd been brooding about trivial stuff like disposable calendars
or whatever, Kushieda Minori had been, and still was, working. Unlike
Ryuuji, she was always moving forward. She was leaving Ryuuji further
and further behind. The distance between them only widened. With the
desperation of an animal that would die if it stopped moving, she couldn't
even pause to talk to Ryuuji, the one she had shaken off.
They were both only human, and even the same age, so why were
they so different? Maybe it was a question of what kind of drive a person
was born with. But in that case, hadn't he already lost by a large margin?
"Why are you always working so much?" Noto asked Minori as she
took away some bowls on the tables. She adeptly piled the bowls on top of
each other as she used her free hand to busily wipe down the table.
"Because our second year ends in just two months. It's my last spurt
before I head to the finish line."
Come to think of it, Minori hadn't given Ryuuji a clear answer when
he had asked her something similar in the past. He felt like Taiga had once
mentioned not knowing why Minori worked so hard, either.
"No chitchat, part-timer! Get the bowls cleared!"
Minori's shoulders jerked up when she heard the sudden shout.
"That's the boss. His eyes are gonna open soon." She ran off, leaving them
with those parting words. Ryuuji and the others looked at each other.
"His eyes? Are gonna open?"
"Are his eyes always closed or something? Isn't that dangerous?"
In that moment, the whole restaurant suddenly went silent. The
customers' eyes went beyond the counter to a lone middle-aged man who
was illuminated with light. The man's eyes were firmly closed.
Is he going to open them? one of the guests gulped.
What the heck is he doing?
Fwoosh! The man's eyes opened.
"Special technique—reincarnation cycle!"
He grabbed several netted ladles filled with balled-up ramen noodles
from a gigantic, boiling pot. Then he hurled the steaming noodles around
and spun them vertically. The hot water that flew off the noodles landed
right on the trio's faces.
"Hot, hot, hot, hot, hot!"
Though they didn't know it as they writhed at being splattered by
boiling water, this was a demonstration that only the normally close-eyed
chef could do. In the restaurant (which was named Zodiac), this was the
chef's method of straining water from the ramen noodles.
This is dangerous! Ryuuji bent back, but the other guests were
entranced, thrusting their heads out as they tried to get even a drop of
boiling water on their own faces.
***
The ramen had been good, but Ryuuji ended up getting home later
than expected.
He had wrapped his scarf all the way up to his mouth and held eco
bags in either of his hands as he hurried down the gloomy Zelkova-lined
path alone at a slight jog. His ears hurt so much from the wind that they felt
like they were being torn apart.
Speed was his priority for that day's dinner. Even though he was a
sucker for side dishes, he shook off the temptation and stuck to buying just
fried things, pork, and a radish, planning to make an easy pork and grated
radish soup. He had some great cabbage he'd gotten from his landlady, plus
minced green onion to use in the stock, and, come to think of it, he'd gotten
some citrus yuzu from his landlady, too. He had more than enough
condiments, and other than that, the remaining ingredients he needed to
stick into the dish were just Japanese sake and konbu seaweed. If he added
those together, the moisture that would come out of the cabbage would
automatically create a soup.
He should still have frozen rice. He could be done with it in just
twenty minutes.
His footsteps rang out over the freezing asphalt. He turned at the
familiar corner and arrived at his usual street. Then he stopped to look up at
the second story window of the condo next door.
During that week, he'd developed a bad habit of stopping at that spot.
The window he looked up at was still curtained. The living room was
dark, and there were no signs of anyone moving in it.
So she still hasn't come back. Ryuuji unconsciously furrowed his
brows. What in the world could the owner of that place be doing, and where
was she doing it, and why hadn't she come back?
The whisper he'd heard on the class trip revived in his mind. I just
like Ryuuji. Ryuuji had heard it. He had heard Taiga's last words. Is there a
clue in them? Did she leave some kind of hint about why she hasn't come
back?
Had she really gotten sick like the homeroom teacher told him? He'd
heard she had barely gotten a scratch in the fall, but maybe her injuries had
actually been worse than that.
If that wasn't it, was it because she thought that he and Minori would
get together, and the thought was too painful for her to bear?
Was it because she'd figured out that Ryuuji found out how she felt,
and because she couldn't show her face in front of him?
"You idiot…"
He tried saying it quietly out loud. Taiga probably wouldn't be able to
hear it, but that was what he wanted to say to her.
If the reason she hadn't come back wasn't because she was sick, but
because of something like that, then Taiga really was an idiot. What use was
there in running away like this? Did she plan on never coming back and
never seeing him again? Did she think she could get away with that and
leave him behind to pretend none of it ever happened? Did she think she
could just close her eyes and plug her ears so she would never know what
happened between him and Minori?
What if—Ryuuji thought, but then shook his head.
No matter how long he looked up at the extravagant condo in
thought, he would never find an answer. If he didn't ask Taiga herself, he'd
never know what the truth was.
His whole body shook from the chill of the northerly winds that he
couldn't even open his eyes. Ryuuji took a deep breath. Anyway, he had to
get dinner ready. He side-eyed the condo entrance as he tried walking past
it.
"Gweh!"
That was when it happened.
Everything in front of his eyes went dark. His throat closed up, and
he couldn't breathe. In that moment, as he fell over, Ryuuji understood the
true nature of a random attack.
BAM! He dropped his bag. "Ta…"
Taiga—was going to kill him.
"Oh, yikes…"
At the corner of his vision, he saw the small hand that had been
holding on to his scarf suddenly let it go. After being so cowardly strangled
from behind, his throat was assailed by the cold outside air.
"Guh-hck! Ugh…cough cough…! Cough!"
"Stop, you're being way too dramatic."
Ryuuji gagged pitifully, still on one knee and half in tears.
"You…you idiot…!"
Without thinking, he shouted the message he'd wanted to tell her
earlier.
"You strangle someone and just say, 'Oh, yikes?!' I actually lost
consciousness for a second, like seriously! What are you trying to do to
me?! Who comes up to someone like that?!"
The more he talked, the more impassioned he became, but Taiga just
pouted. Her expression seemed to boastfully say Oh, how could you? It's
not like this is my fault. He pointed a finger right at her face.
"Oh, how could you? It's not like this is my fault."
She said it out loud! She actually said it!
Ryuuji's eyes glinted crazily as Taiga proudly puffed out her chest.
Her expression, coupled with the way she thrust her chin high into the air,
made it seem as though insolence itself were wearing clothes and walking
around.
"I saw you around that corner. I thought about calling out to you, but
yelling in public is kind of embarrassing, right? I tried waving my hand at
you a little, but you didn't notice me at all. Is there something wrong with
your eyes? Have you got an oil slick on them or something? Are you
actually washing your face?"
"Whatdidyousay…?!" Ryuuji growled as though he were reading
aloud a curse, still guarding his precious throat with both his hands. "Don't
mess with me! You know what, you—you—what were you… What were
you doing—"
That was all he could manage to say. Ryuuji's lips froze right then.
His voice stuck in his throat. The finger he held pointed at the tip of Taiga's
nose quivered, and he couldn't bring himself to say the next words.
"…Taiga, it's you!"
He finally got his voice to work again. Then, he simply bent over
backwards. He opened his eyes wide, raised both his hands, and just sat
right down on the street.
"Huh? You're being weird. What's wrong with you?"
Ryuuji's spine quivered. Taiga really had come back.
She was standing right there before his very eyes.
"You can keep blabbering in the afterlife," Taiga growled. Her lips
twisted up, and she gave him a look that said, I'm gonna be the one to send
you there. With ferocity befitting the Palmtop Tiger, she grumbled
unpleasantly in her throat.
She had her school uniform and her usual duffel coat on. A giant bag
crossed her chest, and she had both hands in her pockets. Her nose was red
from the cold. Her long hair was tied up and spilling down one side of her
shoulder. Instead of wrapping her scarf around her neck, she had just left it
loose like she was some thug from the mafia.
He spotted a white bandage on her forehead.
"Ta…Taiga…"
She came back. She came back home. Ryuuji's lips quivered. Tch,
Taiga clicked her tongue.
"Why are you being all weird now?" Seemingly annoyed, she twisted
away and glared down at Ryuuji from a 45-degree angle as he sat on the
street.
"You-you-yo…"
"Like I said, what?!"
"Wh…where did you go…?! Why didn't you come home right
away?!"
"Hrk!"
Ryuuji grabbed at the easiest part of Taiga that he could reach. He
wasn't trying to get back at her for what she had done earlier, but this just
happened to be both ends of her scarf. As a result, he was now strangling
Taiga as he shook her as though he were interrogating her.
"Do you know just how worried I was about you?! What the heck!
Were you! Doing! Up until now?! And who were you with?!"
"Guh…that hurts, you idiot!"
Voom! Taiga's right hand tore through the air as though trying to
break the sound barrier. She hit Ryuuji's chin. That hurt, but—but—but—
but—
No matter what I do…
"What's wrong with you?! You pig-dog, demon-faced devil-grimace!
You skeleton!"
"Whoa, whoa, whoa! WHOA!"
Slap, slap, slap! SLAP! Ryuuji managed to avoid two of the blows,
which was a spectacular feat, but only made Taiga angrier.
"Don't you dare avoid that!" she said stubbornly.
She latched on to his collar. She grabbed his hair, his ears, and his
face in both hands, and then, as if she were going to yell her insults and
complaints right at his nose, she took a big breath. In that moment…
…Ryuuji saw the sidewalk lights reflected in her eyes.
When she blinked, it was like stars fell from her eyes, glittering with
a mysteriously deep color. He felt her skin from up close, thick with her
body heat. He felt the strange warmth of the hands that touched his face and
the breath that almost grazed his lips.
"Uh!" He desperately pried himself away from her.
"Wha—?"
Shaken by the strangeness of it all, he'd pulled away too
aggressively. To escape Taiga's hot hands, he had writhed with desperation
that couldn't be misconstrued as a joke.
The two of them wordlessly faced each other. The silence sank into
the chilly asphalt.
Taiga seemed taken aback by Ryuuji's too-sudden resistance. Her
mouth was slightly ajar. She tilted her head as if to say But this is supposed
to be normal for us.
Ryuuji couldn't say anything. The ears and cheeks she had grabbed
still felt hot, like they were burning. He didn't know what kind of
expression he had on his face, but as Taiga looked him, she seemed to
realize something.
"What's with you…"
As she took a trembling breath, a faint rosy color rose in her cheeks.
It's about Ryuuji—
"What is with you?!" Taiga's wide-open eyes glittered with the
desperation of a wounded animal.
"Whoa?!"
"What! What! What! What! What! What is it?!" She flailed both her
arms and started to assail Ryuuji once more. There was a recklessness and
desperation about her, as though she were trying to destroy all that her
hands could reach. Taiga thrashed her arms and legs like a child as she
drove Ryuuji to the wall.
"What do you want to say to me…?!"
"Uh…"
Bam! She hit him in the chest. Then, picking up where she left off,
she latched back onto his collar, almost like she believed she could
overwrite the strange atmosphere floating around them by redoing
everything. But she couldn't reverse the rosy redness that dyed her face up
to her ears. Her breath was stifled, and she was biting her lip, but Taiga
continued to glare at Ryuuji.
Was it his throat or the hand she was holding him with that was hot?
Was it his chest or Taiga's heart that was ringing out—
Because I like Ryuuji.
In that moment, Taiga held his throat and shoulders fast as she
brought her face close to his. Ryuuji couldn't even make a sound as his feet
failed him and floated in the air.
He didn't know what happened, but it was like his brain crashed.
Everything suddenly went white.
The impact was several times worse than when she strangled him.
Heaven and earth flipped, and the stars burned out. Everything in the whole
world burned to nothing in that heat. He couldn't see anything, couldn't
hear.
He saw a glimpse of Taiga's sullen face as he looked up at the sky
that had fallen and realized he was upside down. Now lying faceup on the
street, Ryuuji mused over his present situation like an idiot.
"Ahh…wait, you flipped me over…?!"
Taiga had flipped him, breezily reversing the sky and ground.
Because she was holding his neck, he had been saved from having his head
hit the ground, but, well, actually she hadn't saved him at all.
"Wh-what do you think you're doing?! What do you think you are?!
A random attacker?! A mugger?! What's so great about attacking me?!"
"Sorry. But you were looking at me weird all of a sudden. As a
maiden in distress, my instincts kicked in."
"I was just surprised because you came back out of nowhere!
Actually, you're the one who attacked me first! I'm the one who was in way
more danger!"
"You tried to strangle me though."
"You tried to strangle me even before that!"
Ryuuji got back on his feet, flailing both arms like a conductor as he
encroached on Taiga's space. Taiga turned away sulkily, which just annoyed
him more.
"I was thinking this whole entire time—This. Whole. Entiiiiire. Time.
About what could have happened to you and why you wouldn't come
home. I was worried about you for sooooo long! You didn't even tell me
anything, and then just when I think you've suddenly come home, you try
to strangle me! You hit me! And to top it all off, you flipped me over!
What's going on here?! Explain! Where have you been up until now?! Was
the reason you didn't come home because you like AHHHHHH!"
"Whaaat…?"
Taiga fell silent as Ryuuji cut himself off with that sudden yell. As
she slowly and uncomfortably took a step away from him, thick sweat
began running down Ryuuji's forehead, his armpits, and his back. It's not
like I can say that out loud.
It's not like I can say that.
"You like me, don't you? You thought I was Kitamura and confessed
to me. Do you remember? Could it be, maybe, that the reason why you
didn't come home was because you realized that?"
He couldn't. He absolutely could not say that.
Ryuuji swallowed the forbidden words and held his breath. His head
went numb, and his body went numb, and for some unknown reason, only
his heart continued to squirm in the middle of his chest as though it were an
independent living being.
Taiga's forehead furrowed. She watched Ryuuji surreptitiously—all
while keeping a good two meters between them.
But…this girl liked him.
"I-I-I-I-I-I, I-I, I-I-I-I…I-I-I…"
Had she finally come home because she had prepared herself? Had
she come back to face him? To hear his answer?
"I-I-I got a radish…!"
Bsht!
Ryuuji thrust the radish that had fallen out of his eco bag at Taiga's
nose. Still silent, Taiga looked at it.
"Are you really okay?"
"I'm fine! I got pork…! I got fried tofu…!"
As Ryuuji rattled off the names of the things he had bought, Taiga
thrust a freezing cold convenience store bag against his cheek. "This is
frozen fried rice," she said.
"Eeeeek!" Ryuuji reflexively jumped at the sudden coldness. "Th-that
was cold! What're you doing?!"
"Are you back to your senses now?"
He gaped. He opened and closed his mouth, grasping for a retort.
Who do you think made me this mess in the first place, or Would you rather
I tell you something serious out of the blue, or—
"This'll take ten days to heal. It's almost better now."
But before he could answer, Taiga pushed up her bangs and pointed
to the white bandage on her temple. When he saw her do that, Ryuuji's
complaints all disappeared. The sweat that had soaked his skin suddenly
cooled in the midwinter northerly wind.
"Did…did they give you stitches?"
Maybe…he had gotten to a point where he couldn't distinguish
between his imagination and reality. That might be why seeing Taiga's
injury with his own eyes was such a shock. Ryuuji couldn't move as he
looked at the white bandage. Even words seemed to escape him.
Taiga snorted. "I wouldn't need stitches for something like this. They
said they could just bash a huge staple in it to keep it together and make it
heal faster, but I said I definitely didn't need that. It sounded scary. I've still
got a cut, but it doesn't hurt. I can wash my head like normal now. It's just
super itchy."
"Hey, don't scratch it!" Ryuuji grabbed her fingers in a fluster as she
tried to fiddle with her cut. As though her healing wound suddenly ached
now that she'd remembered it was there, Taiga brushed Ryuuji's hand away
roughly.
"Well… Sorry. I know I made you worry. I didn't get hurt that bad, as
you can see. Also, I lied about being sick. I'm completely fine. I was just
skipping school."
"I see, so you're completely fine. Then…what? Huh? Huuh?!"
As she watched Ryuuji's eyes go so wide they could have split, Taiga
shrugged as though she didn't care.
"I did it because I haven't seen my mom in a while. I didn't think
she'd actually come, so I was pretty emotional. We stayed at a hotel and
spent time with each other. We went shopping and ate together, and went to
the movies, and talked. She spoiled me as much as I wanted."
"You're close…with your mom…? And that's why you didn't come
home…?"
"That's right. My relationship with my mom is going great, despite
the circumstances. We were separated for a few years because she lives
pretty far away. See, she's not like that crummy old man. He's got that
whole irritating 'He's a father but doesn't do anything!' thing, but she's not
like that, so I think I can behave for her."
Taiga nodded to herself. The commentary, though persuasive, felt
rehearsed somewhat.
"Uh-huh, uh-huh…like I'm falling for that…!" Ryuuji held his head
and let the confusion from the past week all out with a sigh. "Do you know
how worried I was…?! Why would you turn off your cell phone?! If that's
what was going on, then you could have told me! You could have messaged
me or something!"
"My phone battery died."
"You could have charged it at a convenience store or shop or
somewhere!"
"Oh, could I? Huh, I didn't know."
I see, I see, so it was the battery… You were taking your sweet time
hanging out with your mom… I guess I was the only one stuck in that
blizzard for the whole week.
"I'm sorry I didn't tell you. I really am. You, Kitamura-kun, and
Minorin looked for me, right?"
"You don't remember, though, right…because you were
unconscious."
"Koigakubo Yuri told me at the hospital. She said you were all
reckless, and she was kind of mad, but it made me happy to hear about
about it. I promise that next time, if you get stuck in the snow, I'll go out to
find you."
After saying something incredibly serious, her nostrils flared as
though she were slightly embarrassed. But even as she did that, she nodded.
As he watched her, Ryuuji thought, I knew it.
Taiga didn't remember anything. He was confident of that. That
meant the reason she had come back was because her vacation with her
mom was over, and it wasn't because she had readied herself to hear his
answer after confessing.
In that case—if he pretended he hadn't heard her, everything would
go back to the way it was. Even if he couldn't change what had happened,
he could at least pretend he'd forgotten about it. He could pretend, just like
Minori had pretended Ryuuji's feelings didn't exist. It had hurt him when
she did that, but it probably wouldn't hurt Taiga, because he would be in
sync with Taiga's feelings about the matter, which were that she wouldn't
tell him how she felt.
"So, you really don't remember anything…?"
Yeah, Taiga nodded. "But—" She turned her long eyelashes down
and muttered in a low voice as though she were talking to herself. "I feel
like I had this dream. Kitamura-kun carried me on his back, and it was like I
was half-asleep and just letting everything out and saying stuff like an idiot.
That was…a dream, right?"
Ryuuji didn't hesitate. "It was a dream," he responded.
In that moment, a sudden, freezing cold gust swept over them. "It's
cold!" Taiga groaned and held down her hair, which had been swept up by
the wind. She quickly pulled her coat closed. She rounded her already
narrow shoulders so they were even smaller and knit her eyebrows together.
"Kitamura really did carry you on his back up the cliff, but you didn't
say anything. You were unconscious the whole time—that's what I heard."
"Really? Good. For a second, I was like, 'Huh?! Maybe that really
did happen?!' and I got super nervous."
"You really are—"
Ryuuji swallowed a hard lump in his throat and licked his lips. Taiga
had accepted a lie like that. She could be strangely sharp about things
sometimes, but in that moment, it seemed she wasn't showing any keenness
at all.
"You really are a klutz."
What? Taiga pouted for a second. "Tch, That's kind of frustrating. I
guess I can't argue that. That's right, I am a klutz. After what happened, I
really, really do get that. But…I'm sincere in my own klutzy way."
As though she had prepared herself for something, she looked at
Ryuuji's face and said, "I was thinking about it this whole time…did you
get to ask Minorin how she really feels? You didn't lose your chance to talk
to her because I caused that mess, right?"
If his eyes could see the wounds in someone's heart, Ryuuji thought,
then his vision would probably be dyed red right now.
"You don't have to worry about me and Kushieda anymore."
"Why? Oh, is it because you don't want me sticking my nose into it
since I'm such a troublemaker? In that case, I'll—"
"No, it's not that. That's what you think? That's not it. It doesn't have
anything to do with what happened to you. I just don't have a reason to get
an answer from her anymore. That's the truth."
Taiga seemed to be at a loss for words. She closed her mouth. Her
eyes, which had overflowed with tears when she found out that Minori had
rejected Ryuuji, opened wide.
But no matter how intensely she looked at him, the words he couldn't
say and the feelings he couldn't question wouldn't change. Why did you
want Kushieda and me to get together?
"I don't get what you're thinking. But I just want you to know…that
if you need my help, you just need to tell me. Definitely tell me. In my own
klutzy, sincere way, I'll help you."
She probably meant it, too. That was the kind of person Taiga was. If
she knew that the person she liked was in love with someone else, she'd try
to help that person. Ryuuji knew that. He'd seen what she did when she
knew that Kitamura had been tormented by his unrequited love for Kanou
Sumire.
"I can't figure out what you're thinking either…"
Why did she have feelings for him now? What had happened to her
feelings for Kitamura?
Part of him wanted to know, but the other wondered what he would
even do if he found out. Would he try to support Taiga's feelings for
Kitamura once again? Would he try to persuade her to remember that she
had been in love with Kitamura before? Would he tell her that she no longer
had a rival and that all she had to do was try a little harder? Was that really
what he was thinking of doing?
"I'm cold! That's what I'm thinking. I'm thinking that standing
around here talking was a stupid decision. Let's go home. We'll catch
colds." As though trying to cut the conversation with no foreseeable end
short, Taiga flipped around. She immediately started walking to the condo
entrance.
"Wait…"
"No. It's cold."
"Are you just eating frozen fried rice for dinner? Why don't you eat
at my place? It'll make Yasuko happy. She's been worried about you this
whole time, too," Ryuuji called out to her in spite of himself, but Taiga
turned around slightly and shook her head.
"It's fine. I like fried rice. Tell Ya-chan I say 'hi' and that Taiga's
doing completely fine."
"Don't be stubborn."
"I'm not. I feel like I've had the stubbornness crushed out of me…"
As she went up the steps of the entrance, Taiga turned back around
one more time. She had a slight smile on her face, as though she had told a
joke. Maybe it was because of the cold, but her pale face was splotched
with red right at the tip of her nose.
"I'm really going home now. I'm tired, so I'm going to eat this quick
and then sleep. I'm going to go to school tomorrow, so things will be fine."
A cold gust flipped Taiga's skirt, and the hood of her coat rustled.
The auto-lock on the door echoed loudly as it closed.