Once the hot shower poured over his head, all the muscles in his
body that felt like they had frozen finally regained their normal mobility.
Ryuuji thoroughly wiped himself down with a towel and took a breath. He
would have to deal with everything else starting from here, but at least his
life wasn't in danger anymore.
"Done with your shower?" Kitamura's voice came from the changing
area.
"Yeah," he answered. Ryuuji wrapped the towel around his hips and
stuck his face out through the door.
"Things are pretty much half-dried, but I'm prioritizing your
underwear and socks for now. The rest of your clothes…well…I think
they'll take a while… Hmmmmm…" Kitamura patted down Ryuuji's jeans,
which were spread out on a stranger's washing machine. He grabbed the
hair dryer again. "I guess I'll put it back in for a little longer."
"No, no, this is fine," said Ryuuji. "I can wear this."
He lowered his head and made a cutting motion with his hand, giving
thanks like a professional sumo wrestler. Even though Kitamura had also
walked through the snow without a coat and been chilled to the bone,
Ryuuji had heard the sound of the hair dryer the whole time he was
showering.
His clothes probably wouldn't be so easily dried, since they had been
fully submerged in the just-about-freezing water of the river, but the
underwear that Kitamura handed him was definitely warm and dry, just as
he said.
"Ahh…I feel like I've just gotten back to normal. They were so
sopping wet that they were sticking to my butt this whole time, and it felt so
gross." Ryuuji squirmed to put them on under the bath towel he had
wrapped around his hips and nodded.
"You're changing like a girl about to get into a pool," Kitamura
blurted out.
Ryuuji tried to laugh it off. "What…huh…?"
As he thought for a second, his eyes opened wide. A girl about to get
into a pool? Yeah, I love that. It's a delicacy—like eating something that
pops against your teeth—was not what he was thinking. His close friend
had just suddenly become terrifying.
"Have you been peeking on girls while they were changing?!"
"What could have put that into your head?" Kitamura pulled off his
glasses, which were fogged from the humidity, and wiped them clean.
"When I was in elementary school, we didn't have a locker room, so all the
boys and girls changed together in the classroom."
"Oh, that's all… I was actually really scared for a sec. Actually, don't
watch me like that. Unlike you, I'm shy about being naked."
"I'm not looking, I'm not. See, I'm not?" Kitamura stood imposingly
in front of Ryuuji and seemed to purposefully lower his glasses, opening his
eyes wide. You idiot! That's Haruta level! Ryuuji retorted, and they joked
about for a bit as he finished getting dressed.
"I wonder if Aisaka's changed?"
"Her…her hair was all waterlogged, so probably not yet."
They turned their eyes to the ceiling and were both briefly silent.
Taiga, who had been sopping wet like Ryuuji, should be using Ami's bath
on the second floor in Ami's room.
As the snow continued to fall, Ryuuji had run with his friends to the
Kawashimas' house, an attractive, tiled, two-story building built upon
extensive grounds. Ami's father's older brother and his wife lived on the
first floor, while the second floor had been divided into four side-by-side
studios. Ami said she was using one as her own. She lived alone in the
studio but ate her meals in the main house. She said the point of it was that
it was like a kid's room but with more space.
No one was in the main house, so Ami let the boys into the first floor,
and the girls went upstairs. Instead of stealthily escorting them through like
thieves, Ami gave them a proper tour of the downstairs, like she'd invited
friends over and wanted them to have a good look around. The recessed
ceiling bathed the patterned sofa in warm light as she pointed out each of
her family members' places. Some cushions, a cardigan, and a magazine
had been left lying around somewhat untidily. It looked comfortable. He
could see traces of the inhabitants' well-off status and excellent taste in the
things lying around.
Using the bath would leave obvious traces, Ryuuji told Ami, but she
had easily answered, "I can just tell them that I used it. You can use
whichever towels you want, too."
This house must have been a saving grace for Ami after she ran away
from her own parents' house because of the whole stalker commotion,
whether she realized it or not.
"If Kawashima's uncle and the others come back and see us here,
they'll think we're breaking in, won't they? And we'll seem like a pair of
violent thieves that were even shameless enough to take a bath…" Standing
on the thick bath mat, which felt nice under his feet, Ryuuji looked around,
unsettled. He saw pristine and matching towels, makeup, a razor,
toothbrushes, and toothpaste—no matter how cozy the place was, he was in
the middle of running away. He couldn't stay here for long.
In a hurry, he stuck his legs into his still cold and damp jeans, without
caring how they felt, and even put on his T-shirt and parka. He still had no
idea what to expect.
"You're probably fine for tonight. I asked Ami about it, but the Mr.
and Mrs. seem to have already left for night duties."
"They're working at night? Are they doctors or something?" Ryuuji
roughly brushed up his wet hair, trying to banish the face of his mother,
who also worked.
"The husband works at a college hospital. The wife is a nurse and
caregiver, so it seems like she works in other places. They don't come back
until morning, so that's as much relief we could have asked for…but the
issue is my place. She's still there. That person." Kitamura once again took
off the glasses that he couldn't seem to unfog and then used the hem of his
shirt to wipe the lenses.
Ryuuji fiddled with the switch of the dryer in his hand. "Calling her
'that person'…makes her sound like some ridiculous mastermind or
something."
"She looked like one. Kind of a like a final boss."
"She did make a surprise entrance. Did she come in a Porsche?"
"She did. Um, and how do I put this, she was pregnant, too."
When Taiga's mother had showed up at the Kitamuras' place,
Kitamura had apparently told her, "I know somewhere they might be. I'll
bring them back, so please wait here," and just left. He'd contacted Ami
and Minori, and they had run around town looking for Ryuuji and Taiga.
In other words, it seemed Taiga's mother was at the Kitamuras' house
at that moment. Kitamura had already gotten several calls from home on his
cell.
"If my mom mentions Ami's name, they might come searching here,
but… Well, if it comes to that, we can pretend no one's home." Kitamura's
naked eyes seemed larger than ever as he squinted and then smiled.
"I'm…really sorry."
Ryuuji had only just come to the realization that he'd ended up
pulling the people around him into this mess. Despite his gallant and selfimportant proclamations of fighting, and running, and loving Taiga, he was
causing his friends trouble. He was causing them worry and needing their
help.
He rubbed at his eyes and turned his face down. He and Taiga had
finally gotten their feelings through to each other, but the world where they
were tied together by their resolve and infatuated with each other couldn't
exist without others inconveniencing themselves to help.
Maybe if they just hadn't fallen into the river—but even then, they'd
still have been at a standstill. The meager change they had between them
wouldn't even cover bus fare. Maybe if Taiga hadn't dropped her money—
but how far and how long could they even go with just twenty-four
thousand yen? They might have been able to hide out the rest of the week at
a cheap place, but he wouldn't even know how to find a place like that. The
police would have gotten involved, and their friends would still have
searched for them, worried about them, and run around in the snow.
Was it better this way? Maybe this was actually the only thing they
could have done?
"It wasn't supposed to go this way…"
Then how should it have gone, instead? If the god of fortune had
asked him that, Ryuuji wouldn't have known how to respond.
"But, but, it's kind of like I really… Taiga and I really didn't want it
to happen like this—"
"It's okay." Kitamura shook his head broadly. "I did all that stuff with
the bleached hair and everything, remember? Well, this isn't a give-andtake kind of situation. I'll never forget what you did for me, of course, but
I'm not doing this 'cause I owe you."
His friend's words, which echoed in the herbal fragrance faintly
wandering through the bright changing room, certainly seemed genuine.
But just because Kitamura believed it was true didn't mean that Ryuuji
could accept it. Not yet.
There was something he was hung up on. This long, complex
equation had been wrong from the outset, and the wrongness of blindly
obeying it stuck in his craw. Ryuuji felt like plunging his finger down his
throat and throwing it all up, but he couldn't even do that.
"According to what you guys said earlier, her mother's going to take
Aisaka away, right?" said Kitamura. "Even though Aisaka doesn't want to
go—Aisaka said she was going to be kidnapped right before our eyes. In
that case, this isn't just you guys' problem anymore. Aisaka is our friend,
too. I can't just stand by while she's in trouble. And you're also my friend.
If a friend is being torn away from a friend he cares for, then I'll do
anything to help them both."
He had no hesitation, no indecision, no pretensions.
"There's something you and Aisaka finally, actually, really figured
out too, right?"
Ryuuji nodded, because he wanted to answer Kitamura's words with
the truth. Even though it wasn't all within his grasp yet, he wanted to
convey everything that he could see in his heart as words. "I don't want to
leave Taiga's side…"
He pushed up his hair, which had stuck coldly to his cheek from the
shower, and awkwardly and earnestly moved his lips.
"Because I love her."
He realized that his toes, which had just finally warmed up, were
starting to get cold. He stooped over to put on his socks. His body staggered
stiffly. It hadn't been easy to get to where he was now.
Kitamura must have understood that, too.
The feelings Taiga had once had for Kitamura absolutely weren't
fake. And the unreachable feelings within Ryuuji that shook his heart so
intensely, the times he'd wished for things to go well between Taiga and
Kitamura—and the times he'd wished they wouldn't—weren't fake, either.
The feelings that continually drew him closer to Kushieda Minori weren't
fake. Not a single one of those feelings had been wrong. They'd been real,
and they'd lived in all the moments that had passed with as much power as
they could.
They'd lived, and survived, and finally made it here, but it hadn't
been an easy path. They were bruised and battered all over, but they were
still moving toward the future, Ryuuji thought.
And for the foreseeable future, his feelings were dedicated to Taiga.
"Then don't let her go." Kitamura said curtly in his resonant voice,
putting his silver-framed glasses firmly back on his face. "Fight to protect
her with everything you've got."
He was certain Kitamura was his fellow in arms, but the worry
clouding Ryuuji's heart still swirled darkly. He had pulled his friend into his
own battlefield, and he still didn't know whether that was right or wrong.
"It's just," he said, "I kind of feel like…there's something wrong with
the way I'm fighting."
"Just think it through," said Kitamura. "I'm definitely going to be
here for you."
Ryuuji finished drying his hair while Kitamura waited in silence. His
face, reflected in the mirror, looked strangely firm and tense. He looked like
a frightened member of the yakuza on the run—no, he looked like a scared
little animal.
He stuck his feet into his wet sneakers. They locked the main house
with the key they had borrowed and then headed to Ami's room on the
second floor. When they knocked, Ami's voice called to them: "It's open,
come in!"
They went inside.
"Well, this is practically a rock. This is too hard to be considered
food."
"What did you put in it? What're you trying to do?"
"That's weird… I just melted them and let them set…"
"That's some miraculous chemistry you've accomplished. The cacao
must be surprised, too."
"This stuff is practically a weapon now. You could assassinate two or
three people with this."
"That's so weird, why'd they turn out like this?"
The three girls had buried themselves deep under the blanketed and
heated kotatsu, and were in a heated discussion over the homemade
chocolates Taiga had made and given to Ami. Ryuuji could see three sets of
teeth marks standing out on the sweets.
Turning to Ryuuji and Kitamura, Minori's forehead wrinkled as she
said, "This is kind of ridiculous. I wanted something sweet, so I tried biting
into one, but none of our teeth are a match for them. They're confections
unfit for consumption. No, that's not quite right; they're consumptions unfit
for confection."
Ami continued after her, "Ugh! Takasu-kun, you've got river stink!
That river's definitely dirty~!"
"Of course it's dirty. It's stagnant if you look at it in the daylight. Ah,
my twenty-four thousand yen is still sunk, too…" Taiga looked cute in a
velour tracksuit that she probably borrowed from Ami. "If I had just put
some effort into it, I wonder if I could have found it?"
"What are you… What an idiotic thing to say… Actually, what're
you doing going off and borrowing nice clothes?!"
"Well, I think they'd be too small for you, Ryuuji."
"I'm fine without them! What happened to the clothes you were
wearing?!"
They're right there. Shoulder deep in the heated table, Taiga used her
chin to gesture to a corner of the room. Her coat was at least on a hanger,
but the rest of her clothes were stuffed into a plastic bag and still wet.
"Ahhhh…!" Surging waves of reality drowned Ryuuji. The wet
clothes Taiga had taken off and cast aside would gradually rot with the
certain flow of time. Time, that was ticking even now.
"Don't just stand there. Get under the table. You, too, Yuusaku. You
can get in if you sit next to each other, can't you?" Ami pulled up the open
side of the table blanket for them.
Most of the furniture in the room was made up of steel racks, piled
recklessly with all kinds of things—a small TV, a heap of magazines, a
stereo for an iPod, and even brand-name bags. Ami's room felt like a
temporary rental.
"Where…do you sleep? You don't have a bed."
"I have a foldable futon. When I bring out the heated table, I put it
away in the closet where it's supposed to go."
"You don't even have a desk to study at."
"Of course I do, it's this one here."
Still snugly buried in the kotatsu, Ami hit its surface with the palm of
her hand. For having no bed or desk, I'm surprised she always looks so put
together, Ryuuji thought. "It's fine. My parents' house is actually really nice
—wait, she's already asleep."
Next to her, Taiga was burrowed in all the way, curled up with the top
of her head pushed against Minori's hip, and snoring.
"She must be exhausted. Just leave her alone for a while."
At Kitamura's words, Ami pulled away her hands, which had been
just about to shake Taiga's shoulders. They all ended up silent for a while,
listening to Taiga's breathing as she slept. Eventually, Minori opened her
mouth first.
"So, I didn't get to ask this when Taiga was talking just earlier,
but…" Voice lowered, she fidgeted with the cord of her parka, staring at the
discarded peel of a mandarin that someone had eaten and left on top of the
table. "Why is the situation with Taiga's mom so hostile? Does Taiga not
like the person her mom married? We're sure that Taiga doesn't like her
mom…right?"
"Well, of course." Giving Minori's profile a sidelong glance, Ami
answered in Taiga's place. "First off, she stuck by her dad after the divorce.
No matter whose fault the divorce was, girls would normally follow their
moms, wouldn't they? But that didn't happen—you say you're her best
friend, but it looks like you don't actually know much about Tiger."
"It's because I once… I once got in a fight with Taiga about that guy.
About her dad. Even after we made up, I didn't feel like I could really bring
up her family."
Ryuuji remembered something odd. During Christmas, Taiga had
declared she would be a good girl and sent her father and his new wife
presents, but now that he thought about it, he didn't remember there being
anything addressed to her mom. She hadn't even known her mother was
pregnant. And even when she had been horribly betrayed by her father at
the culture festival, even after she attacked Kanou Sumire and got
suspended, Taiga had never asked her mother for help. Even when she got
hurt during the school trip, she never asked for her mom to come.
He didn't know whether she didn't want to ask for help or just hadn't
been able to ask, but regardless, the rift in their mother-daughter
relationship might have been much, much, much deeper than he originally
thought.
"So basically, Tiger's running away so she won't be separated from
Takasu-kun. If she goes with her mom, she'll be taken from him. I'll only
say this because she's asleep, but…" Ami took a quick glance at the
unmoving back of Taiga's head and lowered her voice. "Things turned out
this way because you decided to do this too, Takasu-kun, but to be blunt…
Don't think what you're trying to do is that realistic."
But I'm here, Ryuuji thought as he watched Ami's expression, though
he couldn't get the words out of his mouth. He existed because Yasuko
actually had done something unrealistic in the past. Yasuko had gotten
pregnant, run away from home, had him, and cut off all contact with her
parents for the next eighteen years, raising Ryuuji alone.
High school student or not, if someone set their heart on running
away, it could be done. Ryuuji's existence itself was proof of that.
Ami, of course, didn't know that. She continued to speak.
"Even if you actually got away and got married, is that really going to
be happily ever after? Takasu-kun, it's nice that you and Tiger have decided
to live together, but—how do I put this? You keep saying you're adults, but
you're kind of throwing the actual adults to the wolves? Like—are you
really going to cut ties with Taiga's mother forever? Isn't that kind of
childish? It's like you're saying that as long as things go your way, you've
won."
Unable to retort, Ryuuji dropped his eyes to his own fingertips. She
had a point. Still, he couldn't help but recall his life with Yasuko. She
regretted the things she'd done, and she was trying to use Ryuuji to salve
her own conscience. Was it so wrong for him to want to run from that?
Maybe everything would have been fine if he'd just kept in mind
what was convenient for everyone else, swallowed his own desires, and
behaved how the people surrounding him expected him to. But the adults in
his life had manipulated him for their own convenience, and once he
realized that, it became difficult to answer to their expectations. He didn't
want to just cut ties with them like Ami said, of course, but he didn't want
them to control him, either. If he and Taiga didn't break free of their grip,
they'd never be able to live as they wished.
He knew this meant they might end up having to quit school and find
jobs. He might never see Yasuko again. He didn't want that to happen, but
he knew it was wrong to expect her to feed two mouths.
"If Takasu and Aisaka are prepared to go through with this, I'll
support them with everything I've got. I'll do anything for them," Kitamura
muttered.
Since the table was cramped and had become uncomfortably hot, he
had moved away to sit on Ami's exercise ball. His eyes met with Ryuuji's,
and Kitamura shrugged, trying to hide his embarrassment.
"When you said you'd figure out a way to get married, it made me
genuinely happy. This definitely isn't how it usually goes, and you're
moving too fast according to how the world works, but who cares?!"
Kitamura grandiosely raised both arms in the air without so much as
wobbling on the exercise ball. "Kushieda said that she'd choose her own
happiness for herself, didn't she? I'm going to do the same. I'm going to
choose my own happiness. Takasu, Aisaka, you just have to go for it! Even
if you're beat and have no idea what's coming next, even if things are a
mess, it's fine! You just need to be happy!"
"That's not a majority vote," Ami said, raising the pointer fingers on
both her hands. "One nay. One yay. Kushieda, this is the decisive vote.
What do you think?"
Minori, who had been fidgeting with the mandarin skin, stopped for a
moment. She put the palm of her hand in front of Ami's face, trying to say,
wait a sec. With her other hand, she hid her own lowered face.
"Kushieda…" Ryuuji looked at her. Maybe even Minori couldn't find
the words when she was cornered like this. Ami pouted her lips slightly
and, like Ryuuji, stooped to look up at Minori's face.
"Bwah ha!"
"Bwah haaa!"
The two of them burst out laughing.
"Sah-rry…it hwas too bwhig…" Minori had stuck the whole peeled
mandarin into her mouth. Orange fruit juice dripped down her chin as she
tried to desperately to swallow. "Hwai a sec, hwai a sec."
Like a snake swallowing a mouse whole, her neck writhed painfully,
and then finally, the mandarin descended.
"Ahhh, that was a shock… My mouth's way smaller than I
thought…"
She drank some tea and steadied her breath. Then, as though she had
decided what she wanted to say way earlier…
"Anyway," she said as she looked at Taiga, who was fast asleep. "I
think it's absurd for Taiga to be taken away against her will. I can't accept
that. I don't want to be separated from Taiga. I don't want Taiga to be sad. I
don't want Takasu-kun to be sad, either. I don't want that—but I don't think
that's right, either. I don't think there's anything in this world that's right. I
don't think we can decide what's absolutely right or wrong for someone
else to do. It's just that I want my friends whom I care about and who mean
so much to me, Taiga and Takasu-kun, not to suffer. So, that's what I
choose. I agree that they should escape."
"I can't believe you're phrasing it like that!" Flustered, Ami raised
her voice. "It's not like I wouldn't be sad about Tiger disappearing! I want
to do something about it! But, but, I just end up thinking about whether
that's the best thing for the future! Aren't you thinking about that?!"
"I know what you want to say, Ahmin, but there's one thing you
don't know. Taiga's parents are, at their core—"
—terrible.
That was probably what she wanted to say, Ryuuji thought as he
watched Minori's mouth while she faltered momentarily. She'd hesitated at
the last minute to condemn her best friend's parents, which might have been
the correct decision.
Taiga's small shoulders emerged from under the table blanket, though
they weren't sure when she had woken up. She combed out her soft hair,
which was so long it tangled around her face and shoulders, with her fingers
as she got up.
"Minorin… Don't finish that thought."
Just like all the times they'd horsed around and messed with each
other, Taiga rubbed her head into Minori's shoulder. As if taking her
temperature, Minori held her hand to her own forehead and bit her lip for a
moment, looking regretful. Eventually, she nodded slightly.
I'm sorry, really. Her whisper reached Ryuuji's ears.
"I get why Dimhuahua is worried about us." Taiga's face was bright
red from the heat of the table. Even the rims of her eyes were dyed red.
"And also, my mo…that hag…that woman…my mother came here to help
me, I know. I think she's trying to go through with her responsibilities as a
parent. But when my mom divorced my dad, she left me behind and went to
that man. I can't forget that. She's going to have a baby with a guy she
loves whom she got to choose, and I'm just some guy's kid who didn't need
a mother… I can't ever expect her to love me the way that I want, even if
she came to help me, because if I expect anything from her, she'll leave me.
I've learned that from it happening over and over—that I'll never have the
things I want. I've been trained and broken in with all that word implies, I
think. But—"
Despite the painful words, Taiga smiled slightly. She looked at Ami,
Kitamura, and Minori, and then her gaze met with Ryuuji's.
"…you fall in love with a certain boy. You like that he's kind and
understands you, and being with him is fun, and you can't leave him—it's
like an addiction. He's kind of weird, but you like his voice and the way he
talks, the way he opens his mouth when he eats. You like his hands and his
fingers and his lips… Actually, who cares about all of that?"
You really don't care, Minori teased. Yeah, who cares, Taiga nodded.
Kitamura went silent, and wrinkles appeared on Ami's forehead.
"But I wanted to always see him. I aaaalways wanted to remember
him and this whooole time just seeing him would make my heart race, but
I'd still look. When I was near him, the inside of my head would feel like—
bam—like it was exploding and everything would go white… I don't know
when it started to be like that, but I just couldn't help it. I thought I needed
it to stop. I had to stop because that guy liked someone else. And then it
was also because that girl also liked that guy. I pretended it was out of
friendship and loyalty, but the real reason I wanted to turn my eyes away
was because I thought that I wasn't allowed to want things. If I wanted
something, it would break. Ryuuji didn't like me, and I didn't want to be
jealous of Minorin, and if I reached out to grab it, I thought that everything
would magically go to ruin—it's kind of stupid, but I really thought that."
Taiga spoke all at once, still breathing shallowly. "I still kind of think that,
even now. Since I couldn't stop and tried to actually get Ryuuji, maybe I
caused the Aisaka family's ruin. I wonder if it's my fault?"
"'Course not!"
"Like it would be!"
"Of course it ain't!"
"Are you an idiot?!"
As the last of the four people's worth of retorts finished, Minori
decided to suddenly blind Taiga by poking her in the eyes. "Oh…I went
harder than I meant to… Sorry… What should I do…"
Taiga covered her eyes and went facedown on the table. "Well, but
that doesn't matter anymore," she said in a muffled voice. "I'm going to
fight, too. I want to be with Ryuuji, so if my world self-destructs because of
that, no matter where I am, I'll survive. I absolutely won't lose. I won't give
up on Ryuuji. And I won't give up on Minorin or Kitamura-kun…or
Dimhuahua, either. Because I love you. No matter what mass destruction
comes, no matter where I am, I won't stop loving anyone."
Ryuuji thought about what to say. What words would be strong and
certain enough to convey his resolve to Taiga and everyone else? He
thought and then spoke like he had thoroughly reflected on what he would
say.
"Then you're…declaring your love at the epicenter of the world…"
Takasu…
Takasu-kun…
Takasu-kun…
You…
Was it cold because of the snowy weather, because he had fallen into
a river, or because of the temperature of the air filling the room? The cold
silence lasted a good five seconds.
"Waaaaaaaaaahhhh… That's so grosssssssssssssss…"
"Was it actually bad enough to make you cry??"
Ami had started to cry fat tears. Ryuuji thought she was probably
being provocative, as usual, but she looked back at him with hard, reddened
eyes.
"I can't stand thiiiiiiiiisssssss… Ahh, I want my
moooooooooooooom…"
"Was it really that bad…?"
Ami stood up. "You can have this, so hurry up and just
goooooooooooooo!"
"Oh…!"
She took one of the keys from a Louis Vuitton key case on the steel
rack and threw it over to Ryuuji. He barely caught it. He remembered that
old and yellowing key from somewhere. "Is this…the villa's?"
"It is." Blowing her nose, Ami breathed in. She gently wiped away
the tears on her face. "There isn't any electricity. They turned off the gas. If
you open the stopcock on the meter box, you'll be able to use the water, but
it'll track how much you used."
He looked at Taiga's face. Taiga also looked at Ryuuji as though
reluctant. He hesitated, but…
"We can't borrow this… Of course, this is—"
"Then what are you going to do? Like this is the time to act all high
and mighty." When he tried to return the key, Ami put her hands behind her
back to say she wouldn't take it. "You decided that you're running, right?
Then you've got to be bold about it! No one's saying you'll live there
forever or anything! Even if you take a part-time job, you need a place to
live, don't you?! You don't have to go, but you can at least take it as
insurance!"
How much trouble would Ami be in if her parents found out?
Thinking over all the possibilities, Ryuuji was still unable to put that key in
his pocket. He was immobile, like a robot whose battery had died down. If
the police got involved and people found out that Ami offered them a place
to hide, then wouldn't she end up in as much trouble as the ones who had
run away?
She was probably actually prepared for that, too. Ami was a person
whose heart was always passionately swayed by the power of evertremendous affection.
But was this really okay?
"Oh…" Kitamura said, looking at his phone. "'At least send us a
message. We are very worried.' …It's from my mom. Time's almost up for
me tonight. They might even come here. Should we leave now, you two?"
"If you're headed to Ahmin's villa, you might be too late to take the
train. When we went during the summer, I looked up the schedule, but I
think the route ended pretty early in the evening. If you leave now…"
"Ryuuji and I don't have any money."
"I'll lend you some," Ami said. "Oh, but you actually might not be
able to make the train. Wait a sec, I'm pretty sure you can check the
schedule on your phone."
"No…it's fine, you don't have to check," Ryuuji told Ami, who'd
pulled out her phone, and he looked at Taiga. "Taiga, let's go back home
one last time. I'll get some money. Tomorrow, you come to school. Tell
your mom you want to at least show your face one last time to your class.
You think you can come?"
"I'm not sure… She said that she would send in my school
withdrawal through the mail…but if I say that I want to hand it over to my
homeroom teacher in person, then maybe… What are you going to tell Yachan?"
Ryuuji hesitated for a moment. If he went home, would Yasuko be
there? He'd heard that only Taiga's mother was at Kitamura's house, so
maybe she'd gone home alone after she had her argument with him. Maybe
she had gone to work.
"She's probably at work, so I don't think she'll be home though…"
If she was at home, then what would he do? What would he say? Was
it better for him to say nothing and just disappear the next day from school?
"You have to make sure you apologize for what you said to Ya-chan
earlier and take it back. And then, talk to her about what we're doing and
make sure she understands. I'm sure that Ya-chan will actually get it. She'll
help us."
She wouldn't, Ryuuji thought. She wouldn't understand, and she
wouldn't help them, but he couldn't just say that to Taiga.
When they all went out the front, the snow had stopped. Here and
there, the asphalt showed through one to two centimeters of white. It might
have been because the temperature had increased slightly, but it melted
under their shoes as they passed.
They all immediately noticed the black Porsche that appeared at the
crosswalk a short walk from Ami's house. The car, with its low height and
unique shape, glided to a stop on the shoulder of the road. Taiga's mother
emerged, leaving the engine running.
She walked up to Taiga.
"Juicy Couture."
She grabbed the nape of the parka Taiga had borrowed from Ami and
turned it over to look at the tag. Her gaze looked heartless, her eyes light
grey even in the darkness.
"Kawashima-san? Which of you is her? Would that be you?" Her
eyes glided over Ryuuji, Kitamura, and Minori, coming to a stop at Ami.
"This is quite expensive. We'll buy it from you."
"What? Uh, you don't need to! Please don't worry about it~!" Ami
waved her hands in her usual good-girl act, but there was no hesitation in
Taiga's mother as she pulled her wallet from her small clutch. She moved
with dexterity that made one think of the assertive smoothness of a sports
car.
"This should be enough, shouldn't it?"
"Um, I really… Actually, my parents bought me that, so—"
"Then please relay this to your parents."
She forced Ami to take fifty thousand yen. Ryuuji didn't know
whether that was a reasonable amount, but it was like this cancelled out
Ami trying to lend out the clothes. With that, it would be like no trace of
Taiga was left behind.
It was almost like a mother fox trying to erase all evidence of her
child from around their abandoned nest hole, dusting over footprints,
trampling and kicking the dirt in order to not even leave a scent.
"We're going."
Taiga turned around, looking anxious. She looked at Kitamura, the
boy who had, day after day, supported her. Whom she continued to see as
someone to look up to, who had made her heart flutter.
She looked at Ami. They had been rivals, opposed each other, gotten
in arguments, hit and kicked each other, and without realizing it, they had
grown close.
She looked at Minori. She looked at the face of the girl she adored.
Then, she looked at the face of her only love in the whole world.
"H-have a good life."
Ryuuji, unknown to himself, was trembling slightly as he listened to
the words Taiga sent him off with. Though he knew that it was an act, that
this was just a temporary parting, it was terrifying. If this was really the last
time they would say goodbye to each other, what would he do?
He waved his hand and answered, "Yeah," holding back the urge to
start running.
Should he follow after her? If he let her go, if this was going to be
their last goodbye, would it be better if he grabbed her hand and just ran for
it?
But the car door made a loud clunk as it closed. He couldn't see
inside because of the tinted windows. Taiga and her mom drove away.
Even Minori had started moving as if to go after her but sensed in the
leap of Ryuuji's breathing next to her that they should hold back.
"It'll be fine, right…" Kitamura let a few words spill out.
"It'll be fine. I'm sure. Because Tiger is pretending like she's going
with her, but she's really here with us."
Minori nodded at what Ami said.
***
If Yasuko had gone to work, the lack of shoes at the front entrance,
the coldness and darkness of an empty house, the closed curtains, and the
silence that seemed to seep into the bottom of his feet would have all been
ordinary. Possibly because of the snow, however, Ryuuji slowly turned his
head.
The first sign things were out of place came from the birdcage not
being in its normal spot.
He looked into his own room and Yasuko's, checking that the
birdcage really was gone. Forgetting to even change his damp clothes, he
went right and left through the two-bedroom apartment. He tried calling the
store. In the middle of telling them he was Yasuko's son, they asked him,
"How's your mom doing? Do you know how long she'll be out for?" and he
knew that she hadn't gone to work. He put down the phone and thought of
asking the landlady. Then, for the first time, he noticed the thing left in the
middle of the low table.
On the note, which bore the squirrel-shaped trademark of a phone
shop, was an address.
The name of the closest station was written on it, and even a phone
number. Next to it was the watch he'd worn to the Christmas party.
"…"
His throat made a strange sound.
The situation was no longer I'll run away from home and abandon
Yasuko. It was no longer about whether that was okay. It was no longer
about whether that was how adults did things. He needn't have worried
about those things.
He was the one who'd been abandoned.
"Uh—"
They really were exactly alike, mother and son. The one who was
quicker to run was the winner, and the one who got left behind was the
loser.
Ryuuji dropped to his knees, or rather, didn't have the willpower left
to stand. Before he realized it, he was sitting on the tatami mats. He didn't
even know what he was looking at, what he was listening to, what he was
doing, or what he was thinking as he took several drawn-out breaths.
Am I really starting from here again?
He had no idea where those short words he had assembled into one
phrase had come from. Am I really starting from here again? He just kept
repeating that. Am I really starting from here again? He forgot to blink. He
was exhausted and worn out, but he was starting again—his spine felt like it
was being crushed one vertebra at a time—he couldn't even move his
fingertips.
Tick, tick, tick. He realized the watch was making a faint sound.
"Ah ahhhh, ahhhHHHHHhhhhhhhhhh!"
Thrown with terrific force, the watch hit the sliding door and stopped.
Ryuuji knocked over the table, grabbing the overturned legs to stand back
up. He threw it against the wall. He punched the tatami mats with both
hands. He held his head and scratched at his face, and since he had nothing
in reach to hit anymore, he punched his own thighs.
"Why did this happen?! You can't be serious, you've got to be
kidding, you've got to be kidding! You've! Got! To! Be! Kidding! Am I
supposed to start over again?! Is it going…to keep going…like this…?!"
His voice seemed to go shrill as he writhed and yelled and clawed at
himself. "Taiga…Taiga! Taigaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!"
Come, please be with me, he cried out, like a baby, though his cries
would never reach her. Ryuuji rolled over on the tatami mats.
Maybe this was the "mass destruction" Taiga had spoken of? If you
acquired something, something would be taken from you in return. If you
desired something, everything you loved would be destroyed. This was what
that meant. But did he even have the right to be so hurt by his mother
abandoning him? He'd been planning to abandon her himself, after all.
In a way, he was in exactly the situation he hoped for. He'd gotten his
wish.
"Taiga…"
Ryuuji once again called that name, covered his face, and buried his
head in his knees.
The sliding door had once been patched with a flower made from the
love letter that Taiga wrote for Kitamura. She'd knocked the hole through
the door back in the spring, when she first raided the house. Though it had
looked a bit shabby, that sakura-colored patch had had a kind of sweetness
to it. It seemed to match their old house, and he actually really liked it. That
was why, even though he had several opportunities to fix it, after everything
was said and done, Ryuuji had created excuses to continue leaving it as is.
But now it was caved in, busted through by the watch he'd thrown.
Another trace of Taiga's presence was erased.
He imagined taking Taiga's small hand and the two of them running
away as far as they needed to go. They would run and run, escaping from
the crumbling and cracking ground that followed on their heels. But if they
did that, would the whole world just end up being destroyed?
Ryuuji coughed. When it came to just deserts, this one was well
prepared. Yasuko, who abandoned her parents, had now abandoned Ryuuji.
If that hadn't happened, then Ryuuji would have abandoned Yasuko. Any
kid Ryuuji might go on to have was sure to abandon him too, if Ryuuji
didn't abandon them first.
Taiga had also been abandoned by her parents and would now
abandon them in turn. Her future kids would abandon her. It would be a
cycle of abandonment, absent of love or affection.
Slowly, Ryuuji came to a realization. Being abandoned by Yasuko
wasn't what really hurt—it was what the abandonment had revealed to him.
Seeing not just the betrayal happening right now, but the ones in the past
and the ones in the future, the way this pain would be passed on from
generation to generation—that was what made him sad.
He saw that this sorrow would stay with them even if he ran away
with Taiga. Even if she ran away with him, Taiga, in that future, would be
sad.
Taiga was afraid of inviting destruction into her life, and so she was
offering to sacrifice her bond with her parents to protect her love for Ryuuji.
She might not be consciously aware that was what she was doing, but it
was. Where did Ryuuji plan to lead Taiga while she was like that? What
was he trying to show her? What destination did he think awaited them if
she abandoned everything she had to reach it?
Wanting things isn't bad, Ryuuji wanted to tell Taiga. But in a way, he
was helping to destroy everything. Their friends, who'd put themselves in
harm's way for Ryuuji and Taiga's sake, might have been part of that
destruction. Ryuuji and Taiga had locked themselves into an endless cycle
of sorrow, all while saying they would do anything for the sake of
happiness.
He was stupid, stupid, stupid. He was a kid who had no idea how
small he was.
"I…really had it all wrong…"
In that moment, Ryuuji felt like he was sinking into a deep body of
water. It was even deeper than the icy river, and he had dreamed for a long
time of the bottom of a darkness where light wouldn't penetrate. But this
was safe. Ryuuji was curled up, his head under his body, always sinking
there. And then finally—finally—he took a foamy breath and breathed it
out.
Taiga.
Bubbles issued from his lips with the utterance of that one and only
name. His eyelids opened, feeling hard as scales. He gradually lifted his
heavy head. He braced his hand on the tatami. Waking from his long dream,
opening his intensely gleaming eyes wide, the dragonling known as Ryuuji
got back on his feet.
(Up, up, faster.)
He headed to the sink. With water that was so cold it numbed him, he
washed his face, wiped himself with a towel, and took off his strangesmelling clothes. He threw them into the laundry basket. He changed his
underwear and put on clean loungewear. He glared at the bright red face
reflected in the mirror with enough force to murder it.
(Even faster, float to the top.)
His dancing body parted the four seas and raised a roaring column of
water mixed with white, cloudy bubbles. His gigantic shadow stretched
across the ocean surface. The spray turned into torrential rain and came
pouring down. A tsunami erased a continent and birthed several new
islands, and Ryuuji ran up into the sky with his own four limbs. He passed
through the clouds in a breath, devouring flashes of lightning. He could
even fly.
There were things in this world he still wanted to see and do. Ryuuji
sought for them, using the power of his imagination to soar as high as the
stratosphere.
(Food. Anyway, I'm going to eat dinner. Where would I do it? Where
would be a good place? In a marble room with a large skylight. It'll have
crimson curtains and a fireplace. No, a nightscape with Tokyo Tower in
view…or maybe the Rainbow Bridge? It'd be lit up like a jewel and look so
pretty. Under the stars would also be nice. Or maybe even the moon, with
Mars or Jupiter in the sky… No, it's got to be the Earth. I want to see a
rainbow… Maybe a big waterfall that's making a rainbow with its spray.
And as for the sky…well, I like the sunset.)
He righted the table he'd upturned, holding it as gently as he could in
order to keep from scratching the tatami. He repositioned each of the floor
cushions, placing his, Yasuko's, and Taiga's on the floor. He put the TV
remote on the right side and lined it up with the corner.
(A red sunset. The sun will be golden, and the edges of the ashy
clouds will shine like they're burning. Under those clouds, there'll be rain
coming down. And we'll have a really big, absolutely huge table set…on the
beach… No, it's got to be on a savanna. On a sunset savanna's grassy plain,
right in the middle. There'll be a waterfall off in the distance, and it'll make
a rainbow, and rhinos and giraffes will be walking around leisurely.)
He wiped the table down until it was sparkling.
(The tablecloth will be bright white, for sure.)
He whipped the cloth he was wiping with, making it flutter. Ryuuji
could see the tablecloth that would puff up with the hot winds. In the
distance, the grassy ocean that broke into waves and the cries of the far-off
beasts and the fluttering of birds' wings—on the TV stand, where he could
pick them up whenever he felt like it, stood several Takasu sticks. He took
one and traced around the bottom of the TV. The small bits of dust that had
gathered from the static electricity came away with gusto. Ryuuji grinned.
(Aperitifs. First, we'll bring out sweet fruit liquor. Plum liquor… No,
that's too normal. Strawberry or something, instead. Maybe fig would be
good. And small glasses that let the red light of the sunset shine through.)
Ryuuji crawled on his hands and knees to the edge of the TV stand.
Like a veteran hunter sighting his prey, his eyes lit up. What he was after
was the area around the wall socket where the cables were entwined behind
the TV. No matter how carefully he cleaned, dust always accumulated there.
There there there. Ryuuji bared his teeth. He poked around with the
Takasu stick and got the dust that was easy to see, but the real challenge
was yet to come. Ryuuji yanked all the cords from the outlet in the wall,
skillfully reeling them in. The fluffy dust bunnies that had been in hiding
tumbled forth, and he quickly wiped them away with his towel.
(And then the soup and hors d'oeuvres. Wait…I can't just serve them
one at a time, though.)
Taiga was sure to pout and would probably complain—there's
mosquitos, it smells like animals, "There's poop from something over there!
I won't allow this! Ryuuji! Travel back through time and clean it up before I
ever see it!"
Minori would be sitting next to her. "But they're animals, they poop
whenever they want to."
Her eyes would stop on Ryuuji as he got up, and she would leave her
seat to come help him. Meanwhile, Ami would have a Chanel bag resting
on her knees. Despite her pretty face, she would say something terribly
spiteful and twisted.
"Oh deaaar, Minori-chan! You're! So! Kind! ♥ Isn't that kind of
suspicious? Why, aren't you the suspicious pair?"
"I got here in time! Sorry for being late! I was so busy with student
council work! Oh!"
"It's fine, Kitamura, just keep your clothes on. Kushieda, don't make
a big deal about the curry and don't say it looks like poop!" It seemed
Haruta really wanted to eat curry. Noto looked somewhat restless—ah, he
was worried about Kashii and Kihara, who sat next to Ami. Really, he could
just try talking to them.
Dust could even build up between the metal tongs of a plug and then
ignite from static electricity. Ryuuji had heard that could cause house fires.
Sitting cross-legged by the wall outlet, he held the Takasu stick tight and
swept up every last speck of dust with masterful skill.
The wind crossing the savanna would tousle the back of his hair. He
would turn and see the infinite, grassy field leading to the two-bedroom
apartment.
French? Italian? Chinese or maybe Japanese food? Maybe it would
be a large pot filled with boiled taro that would actually get everyone
excited. Vapor would rise intensely from the bamboo steamers lined up in a
row. He would steam little bits of dim sum to death. There would be pasta
rolling with meatballs and gratin with cheese layered so thick that it
couldn't be cut through. Crispy acqua pazza. Bavarian cream that would
overflow from the bowl. A cake tower decorated with mimosa flowers.
Ryuuji would even make white rice and, after all was said and done, he
couldn't leave out the curry. Haruta would thank him with applause.
There would even be a spot for Kanou Sumire at that huge table. She
would arrive with a heavy-looking trunk, and Kitamura would stand up to
help her. Their teacher Koigakubo Yuri would show up too, and they'd
tease her for being all dressed up. Inko-chan would be perched next to a
dish, and even the Takasus' landlady would be present. Of course, so would
Yasuko.
Showing up in a foreign car—or at least pretending to—Aisaka
Rikurou would saunter in on foot, accompanied by Yuu, whom he'd never
met. Taiga's mother and her new husband and impending baby would
arrive. Yasuko's mother and father would be there, too. And, with a
magazine stuffed in front of his stomach and a glittering Rolex on his wrist,
Ryuuji's dad would be there as well. Even the people he'd parted with in the
past and hadn't seen again—even people he had yet to meet—they would
all be there.
Everyone would be at Ryuuji's table.
Everyone would open their mouths wide and laugh with joy. And
because everyone in Ryuuji's world would be there, Taiga, more beloved to
him than anyone, would be laughing, too. And if Taiga were laughing, then
Ryuuji would laugh louder than anyone else.
The people Taiga loved—all of them—would be there, and they
would be laughing. That was how it had to be. He wanted his and Taiga's
future to be like that. There was only one thing Ryuuji wished for in the
world, and it was that.
"Okay!"
He wiped around the wall socket until it was immaculate. He turned
over the towel and wiped the TV stand until it squeaked. He went back to
the sink and washed out the towel, wrung it out hard, and scrubbed at the
sink. He went on his knees and wiped the floor. He washed the towel again
and wrung it out.
"I'm doing it!"
Ryuuji got on all fours in the hallway that was so short it was
suffocating and put the towel down on the floorboards. Here we go. "Start!"
He raced down the hall with the rag. He wiped down the corners of the
kitchen, changed direction and backtracked, with his arms outstretched like
wipers to swab down the walls as he went.
What was wrong with having dreams? What was so sinful about
having hopes? He wouldn't let a single person fall behind. He wouldn't
give up. The mass destruction he and Taiga feared would absolutely never
come. He would show Taiga the world he had seen as he flew through the
skies.
But before that could happen, there were things he needed to do.
"Rice…"
Ryuuji picked up the hard grain of rice that had dug into his knee and
bit his lip hard. He, Ryuuji, would need to take in all the pain and sorrow
here. Could he do that? Would he falter?
Eyes unflinching, he stared at his destination. If he could compare
himself to a dragon racing through the heavens, then there was nothing for
him to fear.