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Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #180 on: October 03, 2007, 12:21:38 PM »
Chapter 15 of 29

I woke up because someone was entering the apartment.  I rolled over and looked at the alarm clock.  It was almost five in the morning.  I rubbed my eyes sleepily and sat up, listening carefully.  I heard light footsteps going about the living room, a person putting things down quietly on the table.  The footsteps then headed towards the bedroom, and the door slid open to reveal a shadowy figure that could only be Aya.  She paused when she saw me sitting up.

"Hi.  Are you asleep?" she whispered.

"No," I croaked, clearing my throat afterwards.  "I'm awake."

She walked in closer to look at my face.

"Are you sure?"

I smirked and hit her head gently.

"I'm sure."

She had thought I was sleep-talking.

"Sorry for waking you up," she apologised as she moved off to the chest of drawers to get herself some pyjamas.

She started to change and I lay back down.

"It's okay.  Did you just finish recording?"

"Mmhmm," Aya said, pulling on an oversized pair of fluffy pink pyjama bottoms that made me laugh whenever I saw them.  "I got a drive home from one of the sound engineers.  He lives nearby."

I rolled over to face her.

"My Aya-chan in a car with an undoubtedly handsome and dashing sound engineer at such an hour," I grumbled.  "Is it wrong to feel a little jealous?"

She stopped, giving me a cool look.

"Yes," she sniffed, and then continued what she was doing.

I rolled onto my back and laughed sleepily.

"Joking, joking."

She finished putting on her pyjamas, leaving her clothes scattered on the floor (I made a mental note to tease her about that later), and then slipped under the covers, sitting and looking down at me.

"Besides, he wasn't handsome or dashing.  Kind of geeky."

I smirked and sat up again.

"I know it's not the best time of day to bring it up, and if you want to wait till later, that's fine, but you said you had to talk to me about something..." Aya said abruptly, trailing off, reminding me that I still had to tell her about what happened with Kuniko.

The curiosity must have been eating her alive all evening, I realised.  I took a few deep breaths, returning her look, and then without any melodramatic airs, I told her the simple story of what had happened right under her nose at the convenience store.

"... and so after she apologised, she said she wouldn't say anything to anyone."

"That's why you asked me to leave..." Aya mumbled, still stuck on the first half of the story.

She sounded like she could be angry.  I nodded carefully and watched her intently, wondering what her final verdict would be.

"Why didn't you tell me any of this before?"

So she had decided to be angry at me.

"I'm really sorry," I said calmly.  "I was a bit surprised, too, and I thought it was better if you left and I tried to talk to Kuniko by myself..."

I looked down at my hands and wished that time would speed up so we could whip through this talk.  I felt as bad as I had when I'd first arrived and had to tell Aya about what had happened with Hiroshi.  Everything was my fault again.

"I'm not mad at you," she said matter of factly.

I looked back up at her, and she smiled briefly.

"Yeah?"

"Yeah.  I was just wondering why, but it seems like a good enough reason."

She patted my hand.

"I'll give Kuniko the benefit of the doubt.  If you trust her, then I'll trust her.  Besides, I like her."

"Really?" I asked hopefully, and into the stillness of the early morning, Aya's soft laughter was like a beautiful sonata.

"Really," she confirmed.  "I wasn't just pretending to get along with her.  Besides, if I team up with her, we can really get under your skin, and you know how I love to do that."

I frowned.  Maybe this happy ending wasn't so happy.  Maybe it was for Aya and Kuniko, but not for me.  Not if I had to tolerate those two and their relentless teasing.

"Tell you what," I muttered.  "You and Kuniko go off, become best friends, and live happily ever after.  I'll go and live with monks on a Tibetan mountain peak."

She ignored my biting statement and laid herself down, pulling the blankets up to her chin.

"I think we should have her over."

I mimicked her actions and lay down.

"Who?  Kuni-chan?"

"No, the Crown Princess,"  Aya said, rolling her eyes.  "Of course Kuniko."

"Just before you walked in at the store, she was bugging me about wanting to come over.  I don't know if she still wants to, but if she does, then we should let her," I babbled.

There was a silence on Aya's end, and I looked at her to see if she'd fallen asleep.  Her eyes were still open, and she was looking up at the ceiling pensively.  She looked even more tired than I felt, so I squeezed her hand.  This caused her to turn her head to look at me.

"We'll make plans later.  Let's sleep now."

She smiled and nodded, closing her eyes as if she'd been waiting for my permission to enter Slumber Land.  I loosened my hold on her hand and closed my eyes, too.

"I'm sorry, Miki," she mumbled, forcing me to open my eyes.

"Why?" I asked in surprise.

"Because..." she muttered in a half-asleep tone.  "I went to bother you at work."

I chuckled.

"That just means I get to return the favour one day."

She smiled, her eyes closed.

"You can visit me any time."

And that was the last sentence spoken between us before we fell asleep.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #181 on: October 03, 2007, 12:22:03 PM »
Chapter 16 of 29

I woke up an hour and a half later to my alarm clock.  I raised my head feeling like I had been dead and was being revived slowly, the knife being pulled out of my gut rather than being pushed in.  Aya didn't stir as I hit the snooze button and let my head fall back onto my pillow.  Ten minutes later, my clock rang again, and I got up, muttering rude things about the alarm and its maker.

Aya remained dead, rolled on her side and facing away from me.  My hands hovered over her ribs for a few seconds as I considered shocking her awake, but I remembered that she hadn't even slept two hours yet.  I backed away slowly, grabbed the clothes and things I would need, and left the room, closing the door gently.  I got ready quietly in the living room, and then as a second though, I wrote a note saying good morning and reminding her innocently to pick up her clothes from the floor because I certainly wasn't going to do it for her.

I had to go into U-Con early.  At lunch break I would come back here to eat quickly and then go to 7-Eleven to do a long afternoon and evening shift.  Aya had something to do in the evening, and I might possibly not see her until the next day.

I opened the door to the bedroom quietly and crept in.  Aya was still facing away.  I studied her carefully.  She was absolutely still.  Too still.  Her torso wasn't moving at all like it should have been if she'd been alive.  I was suddenly gripped with an icy fear.  Was she even alive?  What if something had happened overnight and she'd stopped breathing while in her sleep?  Did I have enough time to save her?

Nervously, I put a hand on her back, and my legs weakened in relief when I felt a slow, steady beat.

"Don't scare me like that," I scolded her softly.

She made no effort to reply.  Of course not.  She was asleep.

I sat there for a few minutes, my hand on her back, watching her still body, waiting for it to move the slightest bit.  It didn't, and I shook my head in wonder.  Was this what I acted like when I was asleep?  Everyone told me I slept like a log.  Or at least I was stone still when I wasn't flailing about and having conversations with myself or fighting battles against particles in the air.

I checked my watch and saw that it was time to go.  Before that, I reset the alarm clock for nine.  That would leave Aya an hour and a half to get ready for her meeting.  For a few weeks in a row now we'd sat down on Sunday evening and talked about our schedules just so that we'd know when the other was going to be around.  It was a good idea.  This way we didn't have to keep asking each other questions like "What time do you have to wake up?" or "Will you be home tonight?"

Placing the alarm clock just out of arm's reach so that she'd be forced to get up to turn it off, I took a last look at the pink pyjama-clad girl and left after I'd committed the scene to memory.

I overslept on the train, waking up just as the doors were closing at my stop.  I had to double back, which meant once I got back to the proper station, I had to run all the way to the building so that I would be on time.  I rode the elevator up to my floor and walked out calmly to see Tsuyoshi with his head down on his desk.  He wasn't moving.  Was it Day of the Dead?  First Aya.  Now Tsuyoshi.

"Guchi!" I snapped at him, approaching the desk.

I heard him emit a low sound of acknowledgement.

"What's the matter with you?" I demanded.

He lifted his head up and looked at me with bloodshot eyes, making me take a step back.

"What in the..."

"I'm dead," he groaned

I peered into his eyes carefully.  They were completely red and they swam in his sockets, not focusing on one thing.  I looked at his cheeks, and they, too, were the colour of a tomato.  His hair looked windblown, and his clothes were dishevelled.  I began to form a picture in my mind of what had happened.

"Let me guess," I started, taking off my jacket and sitting in the chair beside him.  "You went out partying last night, missed your train home, maybe did some late night karaoke with the rest of your chums, and then spent the last few hours before trains re-opened at a love hotel with some girl whose name you don't know."

He shook his head, swallowed hard, and then gripped my wrist weakly.

"There was no love hotel," he wheezed out.

"Oh," I laughed.  "So you guys just did it in a parking lot?"

He tightened his hold on my wrist.

"There was no girl."

I gave him a sceptical look just to annoy him, but I had no reason not to believe him.

"We stayed up drinking until I caught a train home in the morning to change and then rush over here."

"So you're still drunk?" I asked amusedly.

He nodded.

"But I feel sick..."

I removed his hand from my wrist and moved away from him.

"Just warn me if you're about to purge your entire system of all that alcohol.  I'll get out of your way."

He went stark white, and I wondered if he felt sick because he was imagining the future I'd predicted for him or because that future had come.

The latter.

He bolted out of his chair and raced to the washroom as I winced.  I'd go and check on him in a few minutes.  There was nothing I could do for him at the moment.

I settled into my space and then took a trip out to the vending machines in the hallway.  I bought a couple of bottles of water and brought them back with me, opening one and drinking a quarter of it.  Ten minutes had passed and Tsuyoshi had still not emerged from the washroom.  I grabbed one of the bottles and headed over to the men's washroom, knocking loudly.

"Guchi!" I called out.  "Are you okay?"

"Yeah," came the delayed, weak response.  "Dandy."

I rolled my eyes.

"I'm coming in," I announced, waiting for a count of three and then pushing the door open.

Tsuyoshi was sitting and leaning against a wall, his knees pulled up to his chest.  He looked up at me when I walked in and tried to get up.

"Don't stand up.  Here," I said, handing him the bottle.

He took it with a grateful look and took a sip, almost gagging as he swallowed.

I wanted to lecture him about the idiocy of drinking until five in the morning on a work day, but I was sure it was the last thing he wanted to hear.  He could tell he'd made a big mistake.

"What did you drink?" I asked.

"Beer, shochu, wine," he mumbled pathetically.

I clucked my tongue at him, but said nothing about his mistake of mixing his alcohols.

"Will you be okay?"

He nodded.

"I think I got rid of most of it," he said with a grimace.

"Good.  Now wash up and come back to the desk.  I'm missing out on my Guchi time."

I started to walk out.

"Hey, Miki-chan," he called out.

It had taken a lot of work to get him to start calling me that, but I'd finally prevailed recently.

"Thank you for helping me."

He gave me a happy look that made me groan.

"Don't you start falling in love with me or something," I threatened him, and he grinned shyly.

"Ew, with you?  No way."

"What do you mean 'ew'?!" I demanded angrily.  "Ew?!  Do I inspire 'ew' in people?"

Little boyish (and still slightly drunk) Tsuyoshi giggled.

"No.  I was just kidding."

"Good.  But I wasn't.  Don't you dare get some stupid crush on me."

With that, I turned on my heels and stalked out of the men's washroom while smiling secretly to myself.

Katherine happened to be walking by when I stepped out, and she stopped, looking up at the "men's toilet" sign and then at me, raising an eyebrow and pulling one of her oh-so-Western expressions.

"Umm..." I said.

"I won't ask," she said.

"Tsuyoshi-kun's in there," I told her, which made her other eyebrow go up to join the first one.

"Okay, now I have to ask," she said with a naughty grin.

"Oh, but, no!" I said quickly to destroy any incorrect assumptions in her mind.  "He's not feeling well."

"Whatever.  A woman following a boy into the men's washroom whether he's sick or not is a sign of something."

"No.  I mean, he's really sick.  I was just making sure he was alive."

Damnit, Katherine.

"Be careful, sweetie.  He's six years younger than you.  Just remember that when you're ready for marriage and he's still out partying until all hours of the morning."

"Oh, for heaven's sake!" I cried out.  "The guy is like the family puppy.  I wouldn't look at him like that in a million years!"

Katherine smirked.

"I know, but I like seeing you get all incensed.  It's fun.  I'll catch up with you later."

With a jaunty wave, she continued going wherever she was headed.

Aya, Kuniko, Tsuyoshi, Katherine...  My "friends" all had at least one thing in common - they all liked to piss me off on purpose.  Did I attract that kind of person around me?  Or was it just that Tokyo only had either friendly people who liked to bug me or complete jerks like Hasegawa and Ohashi?  I went back to my desk pondering this question.

Tsuyoshi joined me a few minutes later, and I kept him distracted with chitchat, asking him nosey questions about his life and his family.  At ten-thirty, I received a message on my phone.  I thought it was Aya at first, but it turned out to be Katherine.

If you have time, can you come down here for a few minutes?

I made sure Tsuyoshi would be all right by himself, and I skipped down to the dance studio.

"What's up?" I asked, walking into the large practice room Katherine was sitting in. 

She was fiddling with a stereo, searching through tracks on a CD.  When she saw me, she stopped and picked up a pile of clothes beside her, tossing it to me.  I caught it reflexively, confused.

"Change into that and give me twenty minutes of your time."

It was an order.  Not a request.  I looked around for a change room of some sort, but I saw none.

"Miki, it's just me in here," she pointed out.  "Get changed quickly."

I shrugged coolly and got changed in the middle of the room while Katherine continued to search through her CD.  She finally settled on a track and a vaguely familiar song started playing as I walked up to her.

"Over there," she said, pointing to the centre of the room.

I followed her instructions.  I guess this was my test.  Would I fare better than Tsuyoshi?  Katherine turned the volume up and I frowned.  Why the hell was she playing a Morning Musume song?  Out of all the music out there, she had to choose that?  She couldn't have known I'd wanted to audition to join the silly group that was now defunct.  She also couldn't have known that I knew Aya, someone very much connected to that group.

"Dance," she commanded me.

I stood there awkwardly.

"Um..." I mumbled.  "I don't know this dance.  Or this song, really."

"You don't?" she asked.

"No," I laughed, gaining confidence.  "I might have seen the promo video once five or six years ago."

"For some reason I thought you'd be able to pick up on this one," she said, turning the volume down.  "What do you know?"

I shrugged.

"I don't know.  Nobody's ever taught me a dance before."

She looked at me in an exasperated way.

"Don't you even know one of those stupid and catchy boyband dances?  And please don't tell anyone I called them stupid."

I shrugged again.

"No."

Why was she assuming I had been trained before or that I memorised dances?

She sighed and changed the track to something I couldn't recognise, standing up and coming to stand in front of me.

"Then we've got to get you familiar with something.  Follow me."

And so for the next thirty minutes, Katherine taught me a dance.  We repeated everything over and over again, and I was grateful that I was wearing different clothes.  I began to sweat like a horse.  When half an hour was up, Katherine went to sit down, which I assumed meant it was break time.  I followed her, but she turned around and pointed to the centre of the room.

"No.  You're going to do it on your own now."

I sulked for a second, but turned around obediently and went to the centre of the room while Katherine sat down and started the music.  She counted me in, and I did what I had learned to the best of my ability.  I messed up a few times, but overall, I got all the steps.  I finished the short little excerpt and gave Katherine a look as she stopped the music.

"So?" I asked her, waiting for her evaluation.

"Not bad," she said honestly, standing up.  "Your rhythm went a little off in some parts.  You tend to rush.  Mmm.  But in general, you're smooth."

"Better than Tsuyoshi-kun?" I asked.

She laughed.

"Much better than the family puppy."

I smiled in relief.  I had passed.

"What would-" I started, but I was interrupted by a holler from the door.

"Fujimoto!" barked my boss.  "What are you doing down here?!  Tsuyoshi-kun is dying up there alone answering phones."

"I'm on my way, sir!" I cried out, rushing past him and back upstairs, completely forgetting to change my clothes.

Five minutes later, Katherine came upstairs, putting my clothes down on the desk in front of me as I was on the phone.  I mouthed an embarrassed "thank you" and changed as soon as the phone call was done.

Tsuyoshi and I kept busy all morning.  He went through phases where he felt perfect and then phrases where he felt crummy.  When I noticed him getting a little green, I'd distract him with conversation.  Lunch time rolled around.  Tsuyoshi was on a full day shift, so I said goodbye and told him to call me if he felt sick.

"I'll be working, too, but I'll keep you distracted with my brilliant conversation on the phone."

"Miki-chan," he whined.  "Can't you give me, like, one of your friends' numbers?  Don't you know anybody you can introduce me to?"

"What, I'm not good enough?" I glared at him.

"I want to date a real girl," he retorted.

My jaw dropped in horror, and I was about to hit him when I realised that doing so would not be very girlish and thus back up his statement.  I stuck my nose up in the air.

"See you later, runt."

I walked out, blocking out his protests.  Either I had to get a new set of friends or I had to move back to Hokkaido.

The afternoon was a little more low-key.  Nothing memorable happened except that I got an e-mail from Aya saying hi and thanks for setting the alarm that morning.

I worked with Shiroshita until four-thirty, and then with Asato, our store's baby at sixteen years old.  Her school had allowed her to get a part time job in order to supplement her family's low income.  She was a sweet and bright girl who inspired protective feelings in most of us at that store.  Working with her was pleasant because she didn't talk back, and she didn't like seeing me get riled up.  We didn't have a whole lot in common, but our conversations weren't riddled with awkward pauses.

Asato and I were supposed to finish our shifts at nine-thirty that evening.  At a quarter past nine, the first of our replacements arrived.  A minute after him, the second of our replacements arrived.  It was Kuniko.  When she saw me, she waved and then quickly went to get changed in the back.  She came back out and walked over to me.  I was fixing up some products on a messy shelf.

"Hi," she said.

"Hi.  Late night shift, huh?" I asked, wondering if our conversation was really going to be as awkward as it was shaping up to be.

"Only until one-thirty.  Koda-kun's coming to replace me."

"I see."

With business taken care of, there was nothing to do but either talk about something else or say goodbye.  Kuniko made no sign of moving off, so I took a deep breath.

"Can we just forget yesterday ever happened?" I asked.

"Why should we?  I mean, it was just an accident.  And hey, now I know.  You're spared the work of having to tell me."

It was perhaps the most mature thing she'd ever said to me.  I looked up at the ceiling and let out a few quiet laughs.

"Do you still want to come over?"

"Sure.  As long as you two aren't all icky and stuff.  I can't stand people like that."

I let out a jubilant cheer.

"Finally!  Something we agree on!"

Asato looked over at us, wondering what we were talking about.  Kuniko opened her big mouth to quell the young girl's curiosity.

"She's just excited because she totally scored last night with this cool foreign guy who-"

I grabbed Kuniko and covered her mouth my hand.

"And she's just a big liar!" I called out to Asato, who gave us a worried look and quickly bent her head down to study the counter.

I let go of Kuniko.

"You're such a brat," I sneered at her.

"Anyway, when can I come over?" she asked, ignoring my insults.

I sighed.

Kuniko will always be Kuniko.  There's nothing about me that could make her not act this way around me.

"I'll let you know when Aya-chan's free.  Now do you understand why I kept saying she's really busy?"

Kuniko nodded heartily.

"Yeah, sorry about that before.  I thought you were exaggerating.  But I know that idols have it rough.  I had a friend whose sister's cousin went out with a guy who knew Koda Kumi's sister."

As if that had anything to do with understanding an idol's life!

"Kuni-chan, that has nothing to do with-"

"And then I looked the word 'gullible' up in the dictionary and I saw a picture of you beside it."

I pushed her away from me and started to walk to the back room.  Aya was going to be home late and I was hungry.  I would cook something and then save her the leftovers.  If she'd had a bad day, at least that would cheer her up.

"Since you're here, take over for me.  I'm leaving a few minutes early," I announced.

"Oh, why?  Your precious Aya-chan's waiting for you?" Kuniko teased me.

"As a matter of fact, she's not," I huffed out.

"Then I'm sure you're going to go and cook a wonderful meal for her when she gets home all exhausted."

My shoulders stiffened and I refused to look back.

"No," I lied.  "I'm not."

"Whatever you say.  Have a nice night."

I could hear her voice dripping with suggestion.  I wanted to yell at her some more, but Asato was around, and I didn't want to give her the impression that I was a scary person.  I went to the back, changed out of my shirt, and grabbed my things.  Asato looked at me and then at her watch when she saw me leaving.

"Kuni-chan here offered to give me five minutes of time absolutely free," I said, winking at Kuniko.

"I didn't.  And don't you dare follow Fujimocchan's example.  She's a delinquent.  You're a good kid, Asato-chan," Kuniko butted in.

"Bye-bye, girls!" I said, not paying attention to her words and waving.

Asato returned the wave shakily, wondering who to side with.  Kuniko harrumphed and crossed her arms, but there was a certain softness in her eyes that assured me that she was enjoying herself.  I didn't know how she'd managed to transform her behaviour from shocked silence to brazen teasing over the course of twenty-four hours.  I walked out of the store telling myself that it was only a matter of time until Asato started treating me the way all my friends did.

I went to Aya's, cooked, ate, bathed, and tried to stay up as long as possible.  It was midnight and she hadn't come back yet, so I gave up waiting and went to bed, falling asleep quite quickly.

I woke up in the pitch black of the night and felt warm.  Something besides a blanket was wrapped around me.  Arms.  I turned my head and saw Aya sleeping right up against me.  I looked over at the clock.  Three in the morning.  I smiled and didn't wake her up to ask her if she'd eaten the dinner I'd made.  I let her rest.

Even if we couldn't see each other during the day, it was good enough to have those one or two hours when we could be together even in sleep.  We worked hard to earn moments like that.  I felt like she was working hard for me.  A part of me, too, was working hard for her.  Even when apart, we were still together in our minds.

Kuniko would kill me if she could hear my mushy thoughts.  I shook my mind free of such things, snuggled my head into the pillow, and closed my eyes with a satisfied sigh, feeling warm, feeling protected, feeling happy.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #182 on: October 03, 2007, 12:23:31 PM »
Chapter 17 of 29

The next morning I woke up alone to an empty home.  It was six-fifty-nine, one minute before my cell phone alarm would go off.  I stopped it before it could start.  I sighed and got up, walking around the apartment and seeing that Aya was already gone for the day.  I half-heartedly got ready for work.

I missed her.  I was growing far too attached.  Since when did I miss someone so much?  I didn't need to be around people every minute of the day.  Yet with Aya, it felt necessary to talk at least just a little every day.  Every morning.  Every evening.

And it was with such thoughts that I began my day.

That day and the next few until the weekend were straightforward, although fun.  Aya and I got a few chances to spend time together in the evening, and I went out a couple of times with some friends.

Kuniko and Koda took me to a place in Roppongi where they shoved me in front of the group and forced me to speak English to foreigners they wanted to talk to, using me as a third-rate translation device.  Some help I was.  It took me four minutes of confused conversation and hand gestures to figure out that the group of girls Koda wanted to chat with were from Germany and did not speak English.  We had all been drinking, but still, there was no excuse for the amount of time it took for the revelation to hit.  That story made Aya chuckle when I told her the next morning.

The weekend came, and we both had Saturday and Sunday off, a rare treat on both sides.  On Saturday morning, the alarm clock started ringing, and instead of slapping my hand down on it, I slapped Aya's shoulder.

"You set the alarm, you dummy.  Why?" I grumbled.

She replied by crawling half over me, stopping the alarm, and collapsing on top of me to sleep, our bodies forming a crooked T shape.  I ignored the strange position, finding it quite warm, actually, and fell asleep.  Ten minutes later, the alarm rang again, waking me up.

"Turn it off," I demanded grumpily.

Aya pulled herself up and turned the confounded machine off.  Before she could settle back down in the same position, I rolled onto my side, pushing her aside and curling my legs up.  Aya proceeded to resettle and flip around, leaning her back against my legs as if they were a backrest.

"Get offa me," I mumbled sleepily.

"Get up!" she sang out in a voice far too cheerful for the morning.

"Offa me.  It's Saturday morning."

She didn't budge.

"You'd better get up.  I made plans for us.  Kind of a surprise until now."

"What plans?" I asked, growing a little interested.

"It's still a surprise," she said sneakily.

I growled and rolled onto my back, pushing Aya off of my legs and making her decide to lie back down.

"Don't be like that.  Tell me.  Otherwise I won't get up."

She sighed dramatically.

"Fine.  We're going over to Shiba-chan's for lunch.  I thought I'd better not jinx it.  But oh well.  What are the chances of you getting called in for yet another emergency shift?"

I opened my mouth to express my happiness about finally getting to meet Shibata when my phone rang. 

Aya just had to open her big mouth!

I rolled over her menacingly.

"I'm going to kill you for saying that.  You've gone and ruined your own plans," I growled, and I glared at her, my nose a centimetre away from hers.

The phone continued to ring, and she grabbed my shirt.

"You don't have to answer it, you know," she said coyly, but I rubbed my nose against hers and changed my glare to a smile.

"I know.  But if I don't, I'll have to call back later."

I rolled away easily, her hold on my shirt a superficial one, and I grabbed my phone.  The number confirmed my fear.  It was 7-Eleven.

"Hello?" I mumbled, not bothering to mask that I'd just woken up.

"Good morning, Fujimocchan!" came the energetic greeting, and I sighed in partial relief that it wasn't Fukuda.

"Kuni-chan.  Why are you calling me?"

"Oh, did I wake you up?" she asked innocently.

"What do you think?" I snorted.

"Aw, sorry.  I just wanted to- hey, is Aya-chan there with you?"

Ugg

My eyebrows twitched.

"Do you want to talk to her or me?" I asked, avoiding the question.

"Oh, so she is?"

"Kuni-chan, what do you want?"

"Ooohh, she is," she sang. 

If she had been in front of me, I would have strangled her.

"Tell her I'm sorry if I woke her up, too.  Or maybe you guys were already awake.  Maybe I'm interrupting a moment or-"

"Ogasawara!" I yelled, calling her by her family name, a rare move for anyone addressing Kuniko.

"Yessir!" she cried out exaggeratedly.

I looked over at Aya apologetically, and she was looking at me in mild surprise.  She'd sat up, leaning against the side wall, her arms crossed.

"What are you calling about?" I asked quietly and politely.

"Oh, well, I have a few minutes before my shift starts.  I was wondering if you were free next Tuesday.  Koda's got another place lined up for us."

I thanked my lucky stars that she wasn't calling me to ask to cover her shift for her.  Aya had gotten curious, and she came to kneel beside me, putting her ear to my cell phone.  I pushed her away and gave her a silly look.

"Uh, next Tuesday?" I asked, momentarily distracted.

"Yes, next Tuesday."

"With Koda-kun?"

Aya scrunched her nose up when I said his name, and I laughed silently, sticking my face in hers to dare her to protest.

"With Koda-kun."

"And where is this super sexy club?" I asked, and Aya pushed me down onto the bed, making me yelp out a laugh.

"Are you okay?" Kuniko asked.

I stifled my laughter as an errant Aya crawled up to sit on me.

"Yeah, I'm fine.  Where's the club?"

"Hey Koda-kun!" Kuniko yelled off the phone, and I deduced from this move that she and Koda were working the shift together.

While Kuniko confirmed the location, I looked up at Aya, who had a malicious smile on her face.

"Stop it," I mouthed at her, but she pretended not to notice as she began to play with the bottom of my shirt.

This is too much, I thought.

"What?" Kuniko asked, back on the line.

Oops.  Had I said that aloud?

"Nothing," I laughed nervously.  "So where's the place?"

"Shinjuku.  Near the place we went to as part of your welcome party."

I remembered that place well.  I hadn't forgotten about Leader and her girls, and I swore that one day I'd find them and-

"Hey!  Your hands are cold!"

Aya had stuck her hands under my shirt.

"Umm..." Kuniko drawled.  "How about I leave you two alone now?"

"No, it's fine," I growled, using my free hand to grab Aya's wrists and push her hands away from me.  "She's asleep and doesn't know what she's doing."

"I am not asleep," Aya piped up loudly, grabbing the phone from me.  "Hi, Kuni-chan.  It's me," she said sweetly, settling down beside me on her stomach as if preparing for a long session of girl talk.

I heard Kuniko's voice come from the phone, mirroring Aya's pleasant tone.  I crossed my arms and let out an irritated huff.  Without looking, Aya put her hand on mine.

"Yeah, she's getting all grumpy now that we're talking."

I flicked the palm of her hand with my finger, making her wince and pull her hand away.  I smiled smugly as she listened to Kuniko.

"Got it.  Oh, and if you want to come over some time next week, I have lots of open evenings.  Let me know when you're free.  Do you have my number and e-mail address?"

I felt dread as I could decipher Kuniko's answer on the phone.  "No," I heard her say.

"When we're done here, I'll e-mail you my information.  Miki-chan's too jealous to willingly give it out."

"No I'm not," I protested, but she shot me a look that said "Be quiet!  I'm on the phone!"

I shrunk back and shut my mouth.  Why was she allowed to bother me while I was on the phone, but I wasn't allowed to bother her?

Aya wrapped up her conversation with Kuniko, and they finally hung up.  I held my hand out to collect my phone, but Aya turned onto her side facing away from me.  I propped myself up to reach over and grab it back when I realised she was e-mailing Kuniko.  I grudgingly let her send her information with my e-mail address while I traced the word "brat" onto her shoulder, circling it with a heart, and then rubbing my hand over the skin as if to erase it.  When she had sent the message, she shoved the phone in front of my nose, and I took it from her, closing it and reaching behind me to put it on the table.

"Now, shall we go and meet Shiba-chan?" she asked.

I looked down at her.  She looked perfectly awake and harmless.  Only I knew the truth about what a conniving little devil she was.  I smiled toothily.  It was all very sexy.  Looking so cute but being so bad.  Who would have thought the Matsuura Aya of Japan was like that?  Not I.

"Does Shiba-chan like to tease people?" I asked.

"Don't be silly," she scoffed.  "Shiba-chan is far too mature for that kind of thing."

I bit back a remark about her own childish behaviour when she was around Kuniko.  I recognised the potential to get into another one of our long, playful spats, which were fun, but time-consuming.  We didn't have that kind of time.

"Then let's get ready," I said, and we got out of bed.

Aya e-mailed Shibata when we were approaching her apartment, and as far as I could tell, Shibata's response was positive.  The plans were still on.  I'd been half expecting to have the plans cancelled again.

Shibata's apartment building was just as nice as Aya's.  She might not have had the same monthly paycheque, but from what I'd heard, she was frugal at the right times and was thus able to live as she pleased.

Aya led me up the elevator.  Despite my trying to convince myself it was irrational, I became a bit nervous.  I didn't let Aya know, though, and I acted cool and collected.

"Miki," Aya said in a quiet voice as we got out of the elevator.

"Yeah?" I asked a little too quickly.

"Breathe."

I was going to protest that I wasn't nervous, but I changed my mind.  She could read my body language a little better than I'd thought.  I gave her a small smile.

"Have you told her anything yet?  Like, uh..."

Aya shook her head, her eyes twinkling.

"Shiba-chan's not the type that needs to be told things.  If she hasn't figured it out already, she'll be able to tell after spending lunch with us."

My eyes widened.

"Is she that smart?"

"Well, we'll see if history repeats itself," she mumbled.

I didn't get it, but I smiled again before we arrived at the door.  Aya reached out and rang the doorbell.  A few moments later, the door opened, and I was brought face to face with the other best friend.

Shibata was already smiling, knowing who she'd find behind the door.  She and Aya shared a familiar look, and then she looked over at me.

Everything seemed to stop around us as she held my gaze.  Her face dipped into the strangest expression I'd ever seen on someone being introduced to me, and while I'm sure time did not slow down or come to a complete stop, I felt that one second stretch out uncomfortably long.

She hated me.  I could tell right away.  Nobody would look at their best friend's friend with that expression.  She was undoubtedly thinking "How can Aya like this insipid-looking character?"

It was the worst thing that could happen.

"Hi," she said to me, still staring.

"Hi," I replied coolly, putting on my face of indifference.

If she didn't like me, I wasn't going to make a big deal of it.

She seemed to recover her senses, and she smiled a smile a person could never smile at someone he or she hated.  Had I been wrong about her first impression of me?

"Come in.  Make yourselves at home."

She drew the door open wider and stepped back, letting us come in.  Aya and I removed our shoes.

"Shiba-chan, Miki-chan.  Miki-chan, Shiba-chan," Aya said as a casual introduction.

"It's nice to finally meet you," Shibata said to me, all traces of earlier discomfort gone.

"Nice to meet you, too.  Thanks for having me over," I replied, turning the charm on just a little.

There was no use holding a grudge.  It might have all been in my imagination.

We launched into small talk, Shibata asking me what I did and what I had studied.  I, in turn, found out a little more about her and her plans to go to university to study anthropology.

Lunch time approached and Shibata addressed us.

"I thought we could go to that nice French café just down the street for lunch since I haven't gone grocery shopping yet."

We said it sounded like a nice idea, but for a second, I wondered if this "nice" café would be more Aya's style of place.  Tasty, but monumentally expensive.  I would have to suck it up and go with it.

"Next time I'll get Miki-chan to cook for you.  This girl is quite skilled in the kitchen," Aya said suddenly, presenting me with a gesture of the hand.

I frowned and looked up.

"Not really that skilled," I said.  "I do simple stuff only."

"No, I've heard from Aya-chan that you're quite a talented chef," Shibata jumped in.  "I'd be honoured to try your dishes one day."

"Well, maybe if we all work together we can make something good," I mumbled, remembering cooking with Baachan and Aya.

I excused myself to use the washroom before we left.  When I was going to enter the living room again, I saw Aya and Shibata standing in a corner and speaking in hushed voices.  I hesitated for a moment, unintentionally listening in on them.  I couldn't hear everything they were saying.  Only snippets of conversation.

"Hokkaido... Italy..." I heard Aya say.

"This is insane," Shibata muttered

"I know, but... found... in a restaurant of all..."

"... and she seems so... met?"

I wondered what they were talking about.  Me, no doubt.

I walked into the living room, and they didn't stop but transitioned smoothly into some conversation that had absolutely nothing to do with what they had been talking about.  It was a valiant effort, and it would have worked had I not heard what I had.  I decided to play the fool, however, to save them embarrassment.  I didn't want to cause a scene.

My chance came when Shibata went to her room to fetch her purse.  I went up to Aya and stood close to her.

"What were you guys talking about?" I asked softly.

She did such a good job of playing dumb that it almost fooled me.  She looked at me as if to say "Huh?  When?"  I didn't fall into the trap.

"You can tell me anything, you know," I reminded her.

She smiled.

"Don't worry, Miki.  Just Shiba-chan's private issues."

I had to wonder.

Shibata came back, and we pulled apart so we could go and put our shoes on.

We had a pleasant time at the French café.  It was reasonably priced, and I wished Aya had a taste for slightly cheaper places like it.

Shibata was as perfect as Aya advertised her to be.  I really liked her and felt like I'd known her for years.  But the memory of the initial moment when we met lingered in my mind like a bad aftertaste.  Also, the secret conversation they'd been having didn't sound like it had to do with Shiba-chan's private issues.  It sounded like it had been about me.  I cared what Aya was saying about me to her friends.  It was very important.

Pfft.  As if I need her approval or anything, I thought.

But no.  Maybe I did need her approval.

Aya and I got home around three o'clock after parting with Shibata.  We sat around for ten minutes in silence, wondering what to do in our spare time.

"It's been so long since we've both had an afternoon off together," Aya said, breaking the silence.  "Have we lost our creativity?  What should we do?"

Part of my brain was focused on trying to think up something to do, but the other part was working on how to approach Aya with my questions.  Questions about what she and Shibata had been talking about.  It had to do with me.  I needed to know.

"I have a question," I started.

"What is it?"

"It's about Shiba-chan."

She nodded for me to go on.  Looking at her face that was so willing to answer anything, no clue what I was going to ask her, I lost my nerve.

"What did she say was her favourite food?"

Of all the things I could have asked about Shibata, I had to ask something trivial like that.

"Oh, for when we have her over?" Aya asked with a smile.

I nodded enthusiastically.  My question wasn't so random after all.  Aya turned thoughtful and launched into a rant about Shibata's likes and dislikes as I listened with feigned interest.  My brain was still working on how to approach my question.

We spent the rest of the day watching some movies together, and I forgot about my question because I had to keep Aya from bawling her eyes out at the end of the first movie after the main character died and his wife was left alone to raise her son.  She sniffled a bit, and so I tried to brighten the atmosphere with silly conversation.  It worked, and full out hysterics were avoided.  I made sure we watched a comedy next.

After dinner, bath, and more television, we went to bed.  Hiroshi had always told me I had very bad timing.  I got talkative at the most inopportune times, and it frustrated him, especially when we were doing things that didn't require much talking.  Things that, in fact, required no talking at all.  Shibata and Aya's conversation started playing in my mind again, and I mumbled something aloud.

"Huh?" Aya asked, pulling back from me.

"Shiba-chan," I repeated.

She frowned.

"You realise that I'm Aya, right?"

I shook my head.

"I know that.  I just want to ask you something."

"Er, okay..." Aya said with a confused look.  "What is it about Shiba-chan that you want to know?"

She seemed a bit put off by this interruption.  I couldn't really blame her, but once I had something on my mind, I needed to deal with it.

"Your conversation today," I said weakly.

Aya sighed and rolled onto her back, looking at the ceiling.  In the faint light, I could see her eyes glimmering as usual, her smooth skin looking even smoother, if such a thing was possible.

"What about our conversation?" she asked.

"I got the feeling that she didn't like me much.  When I first met her, she looked a little... I don't know how to put it.  Unhappy?  Uncomfortable?  So I was wondering what you were talking about while I was in the washroom."

I spoke tentatively.  I didn't want to force Aya into things.  I simply wanted her to see the reason in telling me.

"No, not at all," Aya said firmly.  "She doesn't dislike you.  She likes you for sure."

"Really?"

"Really."

I waited for her to go on, but she had nothing more to say.  I lay there, unmoving, thinking it through until she made the first move and rolled onto her side to look down at me.

"Are you worried that if Shiba-chan doesn't like you, you and I won't be able to hang out anymore?"

It sounded so infantile when she put it that way.  Like we were back in elementary school.  I flushed under the safe cover of darkness.  Part of it was true.  While I didn't think Shibata disliking me would lead to me and Aya being separated, I did think that it could make waters unnecessarily stormy.

"I want to get along with her so that we can do things together.  I want all your friends to like me," I admitted.

She rubbed my tummy and tickled me.

"She likes you.  Don't worry.  I know you two will get along famously once you have the chance to hang out some more."

Her words comforted me and soothed the worry in my mind.

"Thanks, Aya-chan."

She smiled and didn't reply.  Instead, she continued what I'd interrupted.

At the back of mind, however, lingered a thought.  Just for ten seconds until I was distracted from such worldly troubles.  But ten seconds was long enough for my thought to file away its complaint for later review.

She never answered my question about their conversation.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #183 on: October 03, 2007, 12:24:09 PM »
Chapter 18 of 29

I had always loved Sunday mornings as a child.  Sunday mornings were my sleep in days.  My only sleep in days.  With school and club activities on all other days, I got a daily average of four to five hours of sleep.  But on Sundays, I made up for it.

This Sunday was no different.  I'd gotten used to the crappy curtains, and the light no longer bothered me (if it ever did, I just buried my face in my pillow (or sometimes Aya's neck, which was fun)), so I was able to enjoy a nice and long morning snooze.  This Sunday, I woke up a few times because Aya was tossing restlessly in her sleep.  When that happened, I put an arm over her like a metal bar and stopped her from moving around too much, drifting back into sleep easily.  At eleven o'clock, I coughed myself awake.  Something tickled the back of my throat, and I was jolted into the land of the conscious.  I opened my eyes, a few tears having gathered around them during my convulsions, and I stretched my arms above my head, only to be greeted by a soft "good morning" from beside me.

Aya was on her side, her elbow on her pillow and her head propped up on her hand.  She looked wide awake.  She must have been waiting patiently for me to wake up.  How kind!

"Morning," I replied cheerfully.

"Someone's unusually happy," Aya laughed.

I cocked my head to the side in thought.  Was I being unusually happy?  I guess Sunday morning sleep ins made me feel good.  Life in Tokyo was going so well.  I had a whole slew of friends, and I seemed to meet more every day.  Also, waking up beside a devil in disguise wasn't too bad either.  I grinned and said nothing in reply.

We lazed around for a good ten minutes, mostly keeping quiet but occasionally spouting out ideas about what to do in the afternoon.

"Aya," I whined.

"Hmm?"

"All our ideas sound like stupid date ideas.  I don't want to go on a date with you."

"Um, okay.  Sorry?" Aya said, sounding offended.

"Well, no, I didn't mean it in a bad way.  Just... aren't we cooler?"

"What do you want to do, then?" she challenged.

I tried to think of something good.  Something unique.  Something like what we did in Hokkaido with the snow and the hills.  I could think of nothing in Tokyo.

"I want to go play on a snowy mountain," I mumbled.

I thought I'd get teased, but instead, I got hugged.

"Do you miss your home?" she asked into my ear.

The truth was that I didn't miss Takikawa that much.  I loved the abundant nature there, but in Tokyo there were far more things to do and ways to keep busy.  I just missed the special kind of bond you could build when it was just you and another person all alone out in the middle of nowhere.  You couldn't get that in the capital city.  There was no "alone" outside of the house.

"No," I told her.  "But I miss the sheep!"

"More than your parents?"

"My what?"

Aya laughed, and stopped quizzing me.

"Can we go somewhere today?  Somewhere not so busy?" I asked, wondering if Aya knew of a place nearby.

She thought for a moment.

"I don't really hang out in the outskirts... but we could pick a train at random, ride it, and get off at the smallest station," she suggested.

I liked that idea! 

And so we decided to do that.  We got ready and walked over to the train station.  The sky was grey, soft rain clouds starting to form over the city.  I shivered a bit.

"Are you okay?" Aya asked.

I nodded, sticking my chin further into my jacket.

"I just get all these uncontrollable shivers when I'm around you," I replied jokingly, and she groaned.

Yes, it was a lame thing to say, but I was a lame person around Aya.

We took the train to Shinjuku station and then chose a number at random.  The platform that shared the chosen number was the platform we'd wait on for the next train.

We ended up going to Saitama.  I had been hoping we'd go anywhere but there, but as long as we were together, it didn't much matter where we went.  Aya pulled us off at one of the less crowded stations, and we wandered up to the surface. 

It was a nondescript city.  It looked the same as all the others.  And it was still cold.  No rain fell, but the sky looked a shade darker than it had when we'd first left.

We wandered around, had coffee and a snack at a small café, and tried to find out what the local thing of interest was.  Everyone we asked said there was nothing interesting in this town.  They all looked tired and worn out, even the younger ones.  They all wanted to leave their boring, ultimately unimportant town.  I knew the feeling and sympathised with them.

The most interesting part of the day came when it started to snow.  Not rain.  Snow.  And it snowed a lot.  It started so subtly that it didn't even register in our minds that the white fluff falling from the sky was precipitation. 

I smiled happily as we walked to the station to go back home.  Even if we only got a thin layer that would melt the next day, it was enough to see everything covered in whiteness for an evening.

We hopped on the train and fell asleep on the ride home, arriving at the station in the late afternoon.  When we stepped out of the train, we received a surprise.  It hadn't stopped snowing.  It had continued as we had slept, and there was definitely more than a thin layer of the powder on the ground.  I shivered as the snow went down my neck, reminding myself to bring a scarf if we went out later that night.

We got back to her apartment and had to shake the snow off our jackets and clothes.

"I can't believe it.  It hasn't snowed like this here in years," Aya mumbled as she hung her jacket up.

"I don't mind!" I laughed.  "I wonder how long it'll keep up, though."

We turned on the heater, made tea, and then sat at the table.  Half an hour of meaningless chatter later, Aya stretched her arms and then rubbed her stomach.

"I'm hungry," she declared.

"What should we prepare?" I asked.

She seemed to think a little too hard about the question, and I wanted to tell her to not worry too much.  She went over to the kitchen and looked through the refrigerator and cupboards.

"Hey, Miki-chan," she said in a sweet voice, calling me over.

"Mmhmm?"

I went to join her in the kitchen.

"Would you mind doing me a big favour?"

I looked at her suspiciously, but I couldn't deny Aya a favour.

"What?"

"Could you go and pick some things up at the grocery store?"

Boring.  Why couldn't we go together?

Regardless, I nodded.

"I need to review a script for tomorrow," she explained apologetically, "and I don't want to bore you and do it while you're around.  That way we can both have something to do for the next while and we can spend the rest of the evening together."

I didn't care if she went off and had to memorise a script while I sat around doing something else, but I guess if she wanted to save on time, it would help her out a lot if I did the shopping.

"Okay!" I said with a perky smile.

She made a list of things she needed, and I put my shoes on, taking care to put on my scarf to prevent from being snowed out of my jacket.  She saw me to the door, and then I was off to go shopping.

Some of the things on her list seemed so arbitrarily placed that I wondered if she'd actually meant to write them down.  I ran around the store, however, and got everything she needed, plus some additional things I thought we could use.  I paid, bagged my things, and scurried out in record time.

The snow was coming down hard and fast.  The flakes were giant, and as I walked, I kicked up piles of the stuff up in front of me.  It got into my shoes, and I cursed myself for not bringing warmer shoes to Tokyo.  I didn't think it would snow this much down here.

I made it back home safely, and I walked in quietly as to not disturb Aya.  I put the bag of groceries down on the kitchen floor and looked for the missing girl so that we could put the groceries away together.  She wasn't in the living room, so I went to her bedroom.  The door was open halfway, and I was about to call out to her and slide the door the rest of the way open when I heard something that made my heart stop.

"No, I sent her out to buy a long list of groceries.  I had to talk to you.  Your line's been busy till now."

She sent me out?  Like a mother would a child?  A master a servant?  Who was she talking to?  Why did she feel such an urge to talk to him or her without me around?  Was it what it sounded like?

I did something I wasn't proud of, but that was necessary.  I refrained from calling out to her and stood by the door listening.  She obviously hadn't heard me come in, so here were her real thoughts.

"It's just... it's weird what happened yesterday.  But you're not crazy.  I'm not crazy."

Silence.

I got the impression that she was talking to Shibata.  There was nobody else we had seen the previous day.

"Ah, yeah.  I thought you'd figure it out."

Pause.

"Is that- is that okay?  What do you think?  I mean, it's kind of..."

Shibata must have figured things out just as Aya had predicted.

Aya breathed out a sigh of relief.

"I really do.  She's... I don't know.  Something else.  Special.  To me, at least.  I can't even explain all the years of history..."

For one brief moment, I felt like laughing.  Just like Aya to overdramatically jazz things up.  More like months of history.  Not years.

"Listen, just don't mention that, okay?  I don't think I have a good way of telling her yet."

My ears picked that up nice and clearly.

Tell me what?  Did Aya have some sort of deep, dark secret that I wasn't supposed to know?  Something that she thought might make me hate her?  But there was nothing that I thought could make me feel that way about her...

"She won't understand."

Understand what?

"No, I can't."

Can't what?

"You have one now?  Okay.  I'll call you later.  Tomorrow.  From work."

And before I knew it, the conversation was over and Aya was walking to the door.  I panicked and turned around to run, but then thought it would look suspicious and turned right back around.  Right smack into Aya.

She looked at me with a startled expression, and I tried my best to make it look like I'd just walked in.

"Hi!" I said in a voice that was a decibel too loud.  "I'm back."

I could read the fright in her eyes.  She was scared that I'd overheard her and that I'd be curious.

And you know what?  I wasn't going to pretend.  I was curious.  I was more than curious.  I was a little upset.  Aya was finding excuses to send me out of the apartment while she had secret phone conversations about me.  If she didn't want me around, she should have told me and I would have moved out.  If living with me was too much to handle, I could understand that.  But being so secretive and telling other people about it rather than me hurt.

"Hi," she greeted me nervously.

I dropped the fake cheerful look and replaced it with a serious one.

"Sorry, Aya-chan, but what's going on?  I kind of heard some of that.  If there's something you need to tell me, or if you want me out of your house, I'll leave.  But I have to hear it from you."

Her faced darkened slightly.  Was she angry at me for having listened to her conversation?  Not my most shining moment, I'd admit.

"Miki, honestly, there's nothing you have to worry about.  I definitely don't want you to move out."

I crossed my arms, refusing to take that excuse.  She was avoiding the question again.

"That was Shiba-chan, wasn't it?"

She made no sound to indicate I was wrong.

"What is it with you two?  What did you tell her about me?  What's this thing you have to say to me?"

My questions sounded like machine gun fire.  She let me ask them and then took me by the arm, leading me to the couch.  She pointed to it.

"Sit," she commanded.

For some reason, I felt compelled to follow her instructions.  I felt like I was about to get some sort of answer out of her.  I sat down and waited.  She stood a few metres away and in front of me.

And then she began to speak.  At first I thought she was reminiscing about how we met, which threw me off guard and made me feel warm inside, but her words took another path, and I listened in disbelief as she told me things I could never have imagined.

"Something strange happened a few months ago."

She paused.  What an enigmatic statement.  I wondered what sort of story she was going to tell me.  She looked serious, so I, too, kept a serious expression on my face.

"At the end of October, as you know, I was supposed to fly out to Italy and start some special training, but I bailed out of the project.  I told you the reason I did that was because I couldn't stand the thought of being away for three months and that I wanted more control and a bit of a rest.  That's all true, but I didn't tell you the main reason."

The main reason? I thought curiously.

"The main reason I didn't go was because of you."

I was confused.  Now there was a paradox.

"But Aya, you didn't even know me yet," I laughed lightly.

She didn't laugh along.

"But I did.  Up until the morning of the twenty-sixth of October, a girl named Fujimoto Miki existed in my life.  Years ago, she came to Tokyo as the result of earning a soloist spot in Hello! Project after being denied entry into the group she originally auditioned for.  She - you - and I became best friends, and then some time later, even more.  Just like how we are now."

Her sentences came one after another, and I didn't know whether to giggle insanely at the joke or to tease her first and ask her if she was feeling all right.  Something, however, made me stay silent and let her continue without showing any reaction.

She talked a bit about my time as a soloist, about meeting her, about being put into Morning Musume, about graduating and then leaving the Project and then about becoming the star of the U-Con record label.

"While you were still in Momusu, You came to visit me at a concert.  It was my nineteenth birthday.  You came bearing gifts and confessions.  And from that moment on, we were inseparable.  Until, of course, the day I was supposed to leave for Italy."

I shook my head the slightest bit as I listened.

What the hell was she going on about??

"Huh?" I asked, begging for her to continue.

"That morning, I woke up beside you as usual.  We technically didn't live together, but we were usually together most days of the week."

I nodded once helplessly to acknowledge that I'd heard her.

"I fell back asleep, and when I woke up again, you were gone."

I scratched my ear nervously.

"Washroom?" I asked in a joking tone, although I didn't feel like laughing at all, for she looked far too serious.

"You completely disappeared from the world.  Everybody who had known you no longer knew who you were.  They'd never heard your name before.  All my pictures of you were replaced by different pictures.  In your place there were other friends of mine.  Even in the public eye, Shiba-chan became  my best friend, not you.  My past even changed without my knowing it.  I had done work with people when I'd really done that work with you.  Performances and films.  That sort of thing.  So that's why I didn't go to Italy.  Because in the space of about an hour, my world was not just turned upside down, but torn into pieces."

I stared at her.  She was serious.  Dead serious.  I felt a dull throbbing at the back of my head that I hadn't noticed before.

"I couldn't stand the thought of you having disappeared, so I tried every way to contact you, and when all those failed, I took a plane up to Hokkaido and found you.  It was by chance that I went to that restaurant, but it happened.  Even though you didn't really know who I was, I wanted to get to know you.  That's why I stayed up there for two months.  I tried to leave you because I knew that you had your own life and I was just intruding, but when you latched on to me and made me let you stay with me that night, I realised I could never leave you.  I was too selfish.  So I let you come down here with me, knowing that somehow you'd do well."

She stopped talking, and the first thing I thought was: I wonder if she rehearsed saying all that beforehand.

The second thing I thought was: How hard did she bang her head before I came back?

"Aya-chan..." I started, thinking over my words carefully through my growing headache.  "What the hell are you talking about?  Why are you making up weird stories?  I just wanted to know what you and Shiba-chan were talking about."

She seemed to wake up at the sound of my questions.

"The only person I've told this to is Shiba-chan.  She thought I was crazy at first, but once I went up to Hokkaido and found you, she didn't know what to believe.  What's more, when I took you to her place, the reason why she may have acted strangely at first was because she recognised you.  While you were in the washroom, she told me that she'd been overcome with a frightening feeling of familiarity when she saw your face.  She was trying to figure out why this was."

I drew in a shaky breath.  This was starting to get weird.  It wasn't just Aya now.  It was Shibata, too.  Were they trying to play some joke on me?  If I called Shibata, would she confirm this crazy story just so they could get their kicks?

No.  They wouldn't do that.  They would never go that far to tease me.  There was a boundary line between respect and disrespect that they would not cross

"And it's not just Shiba-chan.  You've been noticing it, haven't you, Miki?"

She pierced me with an all-knowing gaze, and I frowned.  Noticing what??

"People haven't been acting quite normal around you.  People stare at you in the streets.  Yes, you're beautiful, but it goes a bit deeper than that.  It's because they recognise you but can't quite place you.  It's like the memory has been buried so far back in their minds that they can't dig it out, only tug at a small corner of it.  People like Ohashi and Kuniko from U-Con hated you on sight because back in that other world, you were rivals.  They must have felt that when they met you.  Tsuyoshi felt the need to protect you at the club not because you were some defenceless girl about to get beaten up but because the kid worked for you as your secretary.  Even those boys staring at you when we went to the hot springs at the beginning of the year.  They were staring because they somehow knew you were as famous as I was, but couldn't quite remember how."

Too much information.  Too much information.  What did this all mean? 

Yes, I had felt strange vibes coming from many of the people I'd been meeting, but I had thought it was a Tokyo thing, not because of some ridiculous science fiction concept of multiples of the same people existing and dimension hopping and-

"Are you out of your mind?" I asked Aya calmly.

"I know it's hard to believe it, but please.  If you don't believe me, call up Shiba-chan and ask her.  Call up the number of people I phoned the day after you disappeared, asking them if they knew who Fujimoto Miki was.  Some of them are bound to remember me saying the name."

I sat, still as a stone statue.

Aya was talking crazy, but I believed her somehow.  She had no reason to lie to me.  No reason to make up ridiculous stories like this.  And the more I thought about it, the more I was remembering incidents where people had mistaken me for someone else or stared at me unabashedly on the streets.

"What, um..." I swallowed and tried to wet my throat.  "What's this other Miki like?"

Aya came a few steps forward and then manoeuvred herself to sit beside me.

"You and the other Miki are essentially the same person.  A few different habits and strengths since you were partially brought up in different environments.  She's just like you.  She looks exactly like you.  Talks just like you.  Sings like you."

I began to grow wary of this whole situation.  If Aya was telling the truth and she knew a superstar Miki, did that mean when she'd lost that superstar, she'd come up to find me to replace her?  Was I a replacement?  Was that why I was here with her now?  To provide her comfort by being someone that looked exactly like that someone in her memory?

She tried to put a hand on my leg, but I twitched away, pulling back from her.

"I know that you're probably weirded out-"

"Weirded out isn't even close to what I'm feeling right now," I said in a low voice, reigning my anger in and trying to stay calm.

"And I'm sorry that I didn't tell you the whole truth before, but you would have thought I was cra-"

"You are crazy," I stated, and she looked at me in surprise.

"I thought you trusted me," she said in a dejected voice.  "I thought it made sense to you."

"I don't mean about this 'other Miki' thing.  I don't even want to talk about that.  But... no matter who it was, how could you do this to me?  How could you use me like this?"

"Use you?"

Her face was twisted in a genuine expression of confusion, and I laughed darkly at it.

"To replace that other person," I clarified.

Her jaw dropped.

"I didn't replace anybody.  I just thought that you could come here and-"

"And what?  Take her place?  In most circles, that's commonly referred to as replacing," I bit back.

"But I thought you had the potential."

I let that word run through my head before replying.

Potential.

Potential.

"So let me get this straight.  The only reason you like me now is because in your other reality - or whatever - I was also a famous celebrity?  You brought me down here to mould me into that girl?  If I'd just been some regular girl off the street, you wouldn't have cared?"

This is not happening.  This is not happening.  This can't be happening...

"No, that's not it!" she cried out defensively.

"Whatever!" I yelled at her, sick of her excuses.  "Just shut up and leave me alone."

I stalked off to the bedroom and started to pack up my things.

"Where are you going?" she asked in an alarmed tone.

I didn't bother to organise anything properly, simply shoving it into the bag folded or unfolded.

"I'm getting the hell away from you."

She walked up to me and tried to touch me, but I shoved her hand away violently.

"All you've done is use me.  To make yourself feel good or powerful or... who the hell knows?  You're some sort of insane, perverted freak with serious issues," I spat at her.

I slung my bag over my shoulder, pushed past her, and went to put my shoes on.

"You can't leave, Miki.  It's dark already and there's a snowstorm," she insisted in a last, desperate attempt.

"I don't care about the dark or the snow.  Weren't you paying attention to me and our activities in Hokkaido?  Or were you too busy plotting how to get me in your bed and make me famous to notice we were hiking up mountains in fucking blizzards?!"

I yelled this out to her, yanked the door open, and pushed my way out.  Before the door closed, I reached into my pocket, grabbed the spare key that was there, and threw it on the floor of the entrance.  Without another word, I let go of the door and walked off to the stairs.  The door swung shut automatically, making a loud slamming sound as nobody tried to slow it down.

I raced down the stairs, too angry even to see straight.  I'd been living through some sort of lie for the past four months.  Aya had been lying to me since the first day she met me.  Now I had no place to stay.  I'd been close to saving enough money to start renting my own apartment, but I'd been so tempted to keep living with her that I'd been hoping she'd offer again. 

Plans had changed so suddenly.

I had to call someone, but I didn't know who.  The one person I was supposed to be able to trust implicitly had ended up being a liar.  I ran all the way down the stairs, not stopping for a breath until I was at the bottom.  After catching my breath, I forged my way out.

The wind almost blew me over, snow hitting my face as I walked through the storm towards the train station.  I was so cold.  I hadn't had time to bundle up properly, so I had no hat and no gloves, and my jacket wasn't even zipped up.  After ten minutes, I got to the station, my face wet with snow that had melted after hitting it.  I brushed as many snowflakes off of me as possible and then took out my phone, looking through my address book.

I didn't have that many people I could call in Tokyo.  Aya was out of the question since she was the person I was escaping from.  There was Kuniko, who was probably the person I could trust most at that moment, but she'd ask too many questions and I didn't want to talk about it.  There was the Koda group from 7-Eleven, but I wasn't particularly close to any of them.  Then there were my two bosses.  No freaking way.  And then Tsuyoshi.  I wanted to call him.

What am I thinking? I reprimanded myself.  He's a nineteen year old boy and he lives with his parents.  We have nothing in common.

Just a few hours ago, I'd been rejoicing over the amount of friends I'd made since moving to this new city.  Out in the cold darkness, I felt completely alone.  I had nobody I could turn to.  In the end, all I had was myself.  I could only rely on me.

But the amount of confidence in my own judgement that I'd just lost was staggering.  I had completely misjudged Aya and let myself be caught in her web of sweet words and mushy feelings, no clue as to what her true motives had been.  But even though now that I had a clearer picture of why she'd been so nice to me, I still couldn't get over her.  I felt like I'd been betrayed.  I was upset because I still liked her.  Quite a lot, in fact, and that was just wrong.  Nobody should like someone who had been revealed to be so twisted.  The spell should have been broken, but I still found myself wanting to close my eyes and forget everything she'd said in the last thirty minutes.

I wandered around the station for a few minutes, not going inside.  Where would I go?  There was nowhere in the city I knew better than here.  There were still a few hours until the station closed.  I had some time to think about my plan of action.  Afraid that Aya might come out searching for me, I walked fifteen minutes in the opposite direction of her apartment and found a family diner that was open until one in the morning.  I sat down in it and ordered the all-you-can-drink special, wishing it was alcohol, not tea and carbonated drinks.

It felt vaguely familiar to sit in a booth with my cold oolong tea.  The last time I'd sat alone at a family restaurant, I'd been in Takikawa, sulking over my break up with Hiroshi and my mistake of sleepwalking right into his bed.  Nakanoko-chan had happened upon me, though, and I'd felt better to at least have someone around who cared.  This time, there was nobody who would walk by to help me.  Nobody could understand the situation.  Nobody would believe it.  Not even I could believe it.

I shivered, wishing they'd turn up the heating a little, and I sat in silence, the people around me seeming to keep their voices hushed in deference to me and my suffering.  Growing frustrated with my own thoughts, I rummaged through my bag and brought out a book that I'd packed.  It was a paperback detective thriller that I'd bought with the money my mother had sent me for my birthday.  I'd read it once already, but it would do no harm to read it again.  To distract myself, I started from the first page and read my way through steadily.

The next time I looked up from it, it was ten minutes to one, and a waitress was hovering near my table as if urging me telepathically to leave so that she could clean up and leave on time from her shift.  Startled at the time, I made a quick trip to the washroom and then went to pay my bill.  I rushed over to the train station and was downcast to see that the trains had stopped.  Not that I had thought of a plan, but with the closing of the station, my options were severely limited, and I didn't like that feeling.  I sat outside the station, a few other unfortunate souls nearby.  They eventually got up and left.

It was freezing cold and still snowing.  My body didn't feel the cold anymore, though.  I was numb.  I had grown so used to it that I was actually sweating a little, my jacket still undone.  I hadn't even bothered to put on my hat and gloves even though they were sitting in my bag.

I sat on the cold, wet ground and thought for a long time.  I reviewed the past four months in detail.  I tried to analyse every moment I'd spent with that wretched girl.  The girl that had tricked me unfairly and displaced me from my home, making me think that I had a place where I belonged down here in this city.  The girl that had come between me and my potential fiancé.  The girl that had just... done everything to me.  Everything bad.  And everything good.

When I looked at my watch, it was two.  I took my phone out and flipped it open.  Aya had called me once and left no message.  She'd also e-mailed me asking where I was.  I ignored the message and put my phone away.  I crossed my arms and leaned against the wall.  It wasn't the safest place to be at night, but I had nowhere else to go.  I was homeless until the trains started up at some time around five. 

I should go back home.  Back to Takikawa, I thought over and over again.

As I grew sleepy, it struck me as odd that I would have to repeat that to myself.  As if I had to convince myself it's what I wanted.  Try as I might, though, I couldn't shake the feeling of dread that I got from the thought of returning to that town.  I shivered, but I didn't know whether it was from fear of returning to my hometown or from the snow creeping down my neck.

I fell asleep.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #184 on: October 03, 2007, 12:24:36 PM »
Chapter 19 of 29

Fire.  I was engulfed in fire.  Flames blistering my skin, melting my bones, burning hideous memories into my mind.

And then ice.  Freezing the parts of my body that still existed.  Stopping my heart and my lungs and my kidneys and my liver.  Forcing my blood's temperature to sub-zero levels.  My veins and arteries bursting from the popsicles forming in them.

And fire again.  Raging fire was all I could see...

With a start, I woke up.  Or I did somewhat.  I opened my eyes enough to be blinded by sun shining off a thick layer of snow that rested on everything.  I was leaning against the wall, my bag beside me, it, too, covered in snow.  I tried to move but I was paralysed.  I grit my teeth at the pain that shot through my entire body as I forced myself to sit up straight.  My head was pounding with a headache that made black spots dance in front of my eyes.  I was breathing shallowly and I felt like I was going to pass out because it was so damned hot.

Someone turn off the heating, I thought.

Despite the heat, I shivered.  I opened my dry mouth and out slipped a moan of pain.

Where am I? my mind asked.

I blinked a few times, trying to focus on something other than the white of the snow and the black spots that still ran around before me.  I saw a street and some stores and some parked bicycles...

Station.  I'm at the station.  But how did I get here?

I managed to move a hand and brought it up to my face.  It was numb.  I rubbed my temples, trying to banish the headache from my skull, but it didn't work.  I almost started to cry, it hurt so much.

I felt a buzzing.  The buzzing made me feel sick.  My ears started to ring.

No, not my ears.  My phone.

My hand fumbled to pull it out of my bag and I hit "talk".

"Hello?" I rasped out.

No, that's a generous description of what I did.  I barely made a sound.

"Miki?  Is that you?"

Someone asked me.  Someone I knew.  Someone whose name I couldn't quite remember.

"Yes," I said, trying to push my voice out a little more.

"What's the matter?  Where are you?"

What was the matter with me?  I didn't know.  Was there something the matter?  There must have been.  I couldn't move, couldn't breathe properly, couldn't feel anything but pain...

I knew where I was, though.

"Station," I croaked.  "Snowy station."

And then I thought that hanging up seemed like a good idea, so I did so.  No reason.  Just because.

I slumped back against the wall and closed my eyes.  I felt the world spin, and I asked it to stop.  It didn't.

An unknown amount of time passed.  I heard a faint ringing accompanied by a buzzing sound, but I ignored it.  I fell into a black hole, sucked through a tube of nothingness.

The next thing I felt were hands grasping me by the armpits and hefting me up.  I opened my eyes a bit, but I was leaning over someone's shoulder.  I could see the white of the snow behind us.  I felt myself being put into something.  A car.  I knew it was a car because I felt an engine turning as it drove off.

Who is this? I wondered.

I kept my eyes closed.  The world spun less if I did.  My head hurt less if I did.  I travelled further down the black hole.

And then hands were pulling at me again, dragging me out of the car.  I went inside.  It was so dark.  So very dark.  No white snow.

"Are you okay?"

The distant voice sounded warped.  It came from so far away.

"Hnnn," I replied, trying to tell this person I had heard the question but that I couldn't form words.

I had to try harder.  I was alive.

"O...kay..." I managed to get out.

There were no more questions.  I felt grateful about that.  It hurt my head to think of answers.

My next memory was of being undressed.  I wanted to protest, but I couldn't form words.

After being undressed, I was being sprayed by water.  It burned my skin and I wanted to scream, but I still couldn't make a sound.  I opened my eyes and I could see someone in the shower with me, but everything was too hazy.  I felt hands on me.  But kind ones.  Cleaning me with soap and a cloth.  Washing my hair.  Rinsing all the soap off of me.

I fell over and arms caught me, pulling me back up and holding me in place.

And then I was being dried and dressed in warm clothes and put into a bed.  Once in bed, I felt so chilly that I thought I was going to freeze to death right there.  I shivered and opened my eyes.  A blob of flesh was looking down at me, speaking to me, saying something.  I couldn't understand it.

I felt a hand touch my forehead.

It must have been a doctor.  That was a doctor-ish thing to do.

I closed my eyes, falling back into a painful dream of fire and ice.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #185 on: October 03, 2007, 12:25:52 PM »
A Brief Interlude:

Requiem for Three


I wake up choking.

"We're losing her," mutters a distant voice above me.

It's low.  A man's voice.

"Stop being so dramatic.  She's just coughing," says another voice.

A woman's voice.

I cough and hack and clear my throat, massive amounts of phlegm piling up in my mouth.  I flip onto my side and spit.

"She's spitting on the floor.  Get her a bucket," the man orders.

I continue to cough and spit as a yellow basin is placed under me.  I spit into that.  When I'm done, I lie on my back, close my eyes, and fall asleep.

And that's the last mistake I will ever make.  Some time later - who knows how long - my windpipe becomes clogged up with phlegm.  I cough in my sleep, but I don't wake up to clear my throat.  The phlegm sits there, blocking air from coming to my lungs.  It's all very painless because I'm asleep.  One minute I'm living and breathing, the next I'm dead.

Dead.

I have died.

I know this because once I've passed through that black tunnel and stepped into the white light, I'm hovering above my body, looking down at it.  I feel great.  Ethereal, but not sick.  I have perfectly clear vision.  I can see myself lying on the bed, a thin line of drool running down from the corner of my mouth.  My eyes are closed.  I look peaceful.

I float up and look at the room.  It's Aya's room.  I make my way to the door.  I'm half flying, half hovering, half bouncing.  It's weird.  I float out of the door and see two people sitting in the living room.  One is Aya.  The other is Hiroshi.  I move in close to them.  I know that they can't hear me.  I'm dead.

The strange thing about being dead is that once you're in that state, you know it and you accept it.  It's not like that movie Ghost that my cousin has forced me to watch three times.  There's no crazy "oh dear, what's going on?" moment.  You simply know that you're dead.  I am one hundred percent dead.

"I hope she's okay," Aya says.

She's sitting on the couch, hugging her knees to her chest.

"She'll be fine," Hiroshi says, perhaps a little gruffly.

He's got to be pretty mad at Aya for stealing his girlfriend away from him.  What is he doing in her apartment?

"I'm going to go check on her," Aya says nervously, starting to get up.

Hiroshi reaches out and puts a firm hand on Aya's shoulder to stop her.  Then feeling awkward, he takes it away.  Aya sits back down.

"She's fine.  Let her rest."

Oh, Aya.  Don't go into that room.  You're going to get such a shock... I think.

I start to cry a little.  Ghosts can cry.

I'm going to miss her.

Hiroshi crosses his arms and clears his throat.

I'm going to miss him, too.  I'm going to miss them both.  Two people that I love.

I hope neither of them ever go into that room.

They sit in silence, and I hover and watch.

Finally, Aya gets up again.

"I'm going to go and check up on her."

Hiroshi doesn't try to stop her this time.  I float in front of her.

"Don't go," I whisper.  "Don't go into that room, Aya.  Please don't."

But of course she can't hear me.  She can't feel me.  I can't move pennies to inform her of my presence.  Whoopi Goldberg's not going to come and help me out.

Aya walks into the room.  I can hardly stand to follow, biting my lip the whole time.

She doesn't notice anything strange at first.  The lighting in the room is dim.  She looks down at my body's face, even snickers at the drool, and wipes it away with my own pyjama shirt.

Ew.  Is that what she's always done?  Wiped my drool away with my own clothes?  She could at least find a cloth...

Then she notices something.

"Miki?" she asks.

My body, of course, does not reply.

"Miki??"

She puts her hand on my chest.  She puts her ear to my mouth.

"Hiroshi!!" she screams.

Hiroshi races into the room as Aya starts shaking my body.

"She's not breathing!"

Hiroshi pushes Aya aside and checks for my pulse and my breath.  He looks terrified when he can't find either. 

"Call the paramedics!" he yells.

He starts to yell in my body's ear as Aya, frozen with fear, stares.

"Call an ambulance!!" he yells angrily, making Aya snap to attention.

She runs to the phone and makes the call.  I watch Hiroshi work on my body.  He's checking my mouth, clearing it out, giving me artificial respiration...

It's not going to work, I think sadly.  I'm already out.

He doesn't stop, and I go to kneel by him, putting a hand on his shoulder.

"Thank you for trying, though.  I'll always love you for that."

He doesn't feel or hear me.

He continues to work, trying every possible trick he's learned to revive me.

Aya comes back into the room.  She's in hysterics.

"What's happening?  Why isn't she breathing?  How did this happen?  We only left her for a minute.  I knew I should've checked on her befo-"

"Shut up," Hiroshi mutters.

I get up and go over to Aya, hugging her.

"Just go and sit in the living room.  Don't watch this.  I don't want you to see it."

She doesn't feel or hear me.

She continues to watch, tears starting to form in her eyes.

Stop watching.  I love you too much to let you see this.

An eternity passes and a knock comes at the door.  Aya rushes to it, and the paramedics run in.  They force Hiroshi and Aya out of the room and start to do the exact same thing Hiroshi just did.

To no avail.

Hiroshi and Aya stand at the doorway trying to peer in, but they're shut out.

"Please, have a seat," says one paramedic.

Offering Aya a seat in her own home.  Now that's funny.

Time passes.  I don't watch the resuscitation attempts.  I watch Hiroshi and Aya.  I reminisce over the memories we have together.  I hope that they can reconcile whatever differences they may have between them.  I wonder how Hiroshi got into contact with Aya, although I guess there are lots of ways to come across people.  He must've come to Tokyo to search for me.  Well, he found me.

I watch them as one of the paramedics comes and tells them I didn't make it.  I start to cry as they both cry.  I watch my body being wheeled away.  Aya tries to follow me, but Hiroshi holds her back, and she turns and sobs into his chest.

Hey, watch it there, buddy.

He'd better not be trying to make a move on her.

I sigh and laugh it off.  Death has given me quite the attitude.  I can laugh at my death and make light of the reactions of my friends.  Cold, but what else can I do?  I can't go back to life.  I have to make death easier for myself with humour and jokes.

They spend the day together.  They don't say a word.  They just sit there.  I sit in between them on the couch.  There's just enough room for the three of us.  I look from one to the other and I wonder for the billionth time how I can love two people who are so different.

Hiroshi finally gets up to leave.

"Where are you going?" Aya asks desperately.

"I have to go," he mumbles blankly.  "I need to go back home and tell everyone."

Where is he going to get a plane ticket at this hour?  Silly boy.  He should spend the night and go back tomorrow.  But he's not thinking straight, and that's understandable.

"Don't go," Aya begs him, but he's made up his mind.

"I have to."

"But I don't want to be alone," Aya whispers in a terrified voice.

He gives her a look.  A kind of "well, that's life" look.  Maybe he's thinking that she doesn't deserve his help.  After all, she took me away from him and left him all alone.  Although that's a little different.  There was no death involved in that.

"Thank you.  Goodbye," Hiroshi says, and he walks out.

At least he's polite.  Saying thank you for the stay.

Aya sits back down and hugs a pillow, crying softly.

I know what's going to happen before the idea even starts to form in her mind.

"No, don't," I mutter, but it's too late.

She gets up and rummages around her closet.  She finds painkillers and alcohol.

"Don't be an idiot, Aya.  Don't be an idiot.  Don't don't don't don't..."

She tips a bottle of painkillers into her mouth and chases it down with whiskey.

I don't know why Aya has whiskey in her apartment.  She doesn't even like it.  Maybe it was a gift.

She rummages around for more pills while looking like she's going to be sick.  She finds other sorts of medicines and takes all of them.  She grimaces as they go down, and soon enough, she's consumed the entire fifth of whiskey.

"You idiot.  This isn't going to solve anything.  Don't do this."

I start to cry a little.  I can't help her.  If she dies, all I can do is watch.

She starts to sway around.

"Miki... if I... you can't be alive... then in death... we're together... yeah..."

She falls over, hitting her head on the corner of a table.  She's out cold.  I kneel down beside her and cry.

"Why'd you do this, Aya?  Why?"

In death, we are also given knowledge.  Knowledge about the workings of death.  My knowledge is this: Aya and I won't meet in death.  Because she has willingly taken her own life, she - or her ghost, if you prefer - will exist in a different plane.  In short, we'll wander the same places, but we'll be invisible to each other.  No psychics.  No pennies.  No communication.

I sit and wait.  I listen for Aya's breathing.  I can't hear any.

I sigh and touch her forehead.

"Stupid," I say gently.  "But at least you loved with all your heart."

I sit on the floor and wait.  In death, I've turned into a patient person.  I wait a day and a half before someone notices that Aya's incapacitated.

Fittingly, it's Shibata that makes the discovery.  She comes to the door one day and eventually gets in.  I guess that means she has the other spare key.

She sees Aya lying on the floor and freaks out.  She can tell, though, right away that Aya's not alive.  She calls the police, and the same process is repeated.  They come in, poke and prod at her body, and then announce to Shibata that there's nothing they can do.  There are lots of questions, and I feel sorry for Shibata to have gotten involved in all this.  I decide to follow her out.

Shibata has a good, smart head screwed onto her shoulders.  She doesn't off herself.  A truck takes care of that for her.  As she's walking home from the police station in a daze, she doesn't pay attention to the streets, and she walks right through a red light and right into a speeding truck.

I gasp and yell out her name, but of course she doesn't hear me.

The rules of death dictate that victims of car accidents will not meet those that die in the throes of sickness.  I will never speak to Shibata again.

Chaos ensues, and the next day, the three of us make headline news.

Three girls dead in series of tragic accidents.

Aya's death is not labelled a suicide.  Someone must've paid a lot of money to get information like that concealed.  I'm glad, though.  Nobody would understand that she did it because she loved me so much.  Also because she was stupid and crazy.  But mostly for love.

And so I'm left alone in Tokyo.  The rest of my death I shall spend all alone.

That is why we dead need a sense of humour.  For if you don't have one, you go insane.

Why?

Because death lasts slightly longer than your average life.

Death lasts for eternity.

===

This chapter has absolutely no weight in this story.  Please forget it happened.  I repeat, it is not part of my story.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #186 on: October 03, 2007, 12:26:36 PM »
Chapter 20 of 29

At some point while being roasted and frozen simultaneously, I woke up.  I opened my eyes, my vision clearer than it had been before.  I was only looking at a white ceiling, but there were no black spots on it.  My head pounded with the same intense headache, however, and my body felt useless.  It burned with pain.

I blinked a few times and turned my head slightly.  I felt something.  Someone was watching me.  I came eye to eye with a familiar face that often greeted me like this in the morning.

"Aya," I mumbled, my voice weak.

"How are you feeling?" she asked.

She was sitting on the bed looking down at me, hands folded in her lap patiently.

"What happened?" I asked, ignoring her question because I didn't want to tell her that I still felt like I was going to die any minute.

She explained to me slowly that Kuniko had called me early in the morning and had gotten scared by my answer.  She'd called Aya to find out what was going on after I didn't pick up any subsequent calls.  Aya had rushed down to the station, met with Kuniko (who had run from 7-Eleven), and found me.  They'd lugged me into a taxi cab, and had taken me back to Aya's place.

"Where'd Kuni-chan go?" I mumbled, looking around the room.

"She left right when we got here.  She had to work.  I told her I'd take care of you and call her with an update."

I tried to remember all this happening, but I couldn't.  I remembered a phone call and hanging up on someone.  I remembered someone dragging me into a car.  I remembered a shower.

"I had to almost physically kick her out of here.  She insisted that she wouldn't leave your side until you woke up.  That is one obsessively loyal girl."

"She's a Scorpio," I said offhandedly.

Aya mouthed an "oh".

So Kuniko had been that worried about me.  Worried enough to run over from work, where she had no doubt called from, and be willing to skip work to stay by my side.  But how genuine was it?  I didn't get to ask.

"Where did you sleep last night?" she asked.

"Where you found me."

I was too tired to make up stories or excuses.  She looked at me with a disapproving frown, but then it quickly melted into one of concern.

"You scared me."

I was still waking up and trying to figure out what this apprehensive feeling at the back of my mind was.  I had forgotten what had happened and needed to remember.

I had woken up by the station covered in snow this morning, and then I'd ended up here in this apartment.  Before that was last night.  What had I done last night?  Last night I'd gone to a family restaurant and had tea.  And before that... I had argued with Aya.  I had argued with her because...

Because she had used me.  Used me to replace some other person that was not me.

But it all seemed so trivial now.  All I wanted to do was lie down.  I wanted to give up.  I just wanted to not feel the way I did.  Trampled on and dragged through the mud.  I wanted to sleep until we grew two years older and no longer cared for each other so that we could part amiably and maybe keep in casual touch by going for coffee twice a year.

It suddenly hit me that it was Monday.  We both had to work.

"Why aren't you at work?" I asked weakly.

"I cancelled everything after I brought you here.  You're in no condition to be alone."

I tried to thank her.  Even if she had treated me badly in other respects, she had still somewhat saved my life, and I was a polite person.  However, I couldn't manage to get the word past my lips.  I felt weak from sickness and from relief.  Relief that I wasn't going to freeze to death outside.  Relief that Aya wasn't mad at me for storming out after calling her a crazy, perverted freak. 

I lay there with just enough energy to keep my eyes open to look at her.  Then, with no warning and no control over my actions, tears started to form and spill out of my eyes.  My face didn't change its expression much.  I cried like that because I was too tired to do anything else.

I was grateful that she had at least cared enough to come after me and bring me to her apartment.  I was upset because of what she'd done to me all these months.  I felt helpless because I didn't know what to do.  I couldn't move my body enough to take care of myself.  I couldn't figure out what exactly Aya had been thinking since she met me.

I blinked a few times, causing more tears to pour out.  Aya brushed some of my tears away with her fingers and then went out to fetch a tissue, gently wiping my cheeks and my ears with it.  I lay there without resisting, crying in front of her for the second time since I had met her.

My eyes stopped watering gradually, and I stared up almost blankly, my head spinning, my whole body feeling like my blood had been replaced by liquid lead.

"Aya-" I mumbled powerlessly.

I wanted her to take care of me.  My mother wasn't here to do it.  I had nobody.  Nobody but Aya.  I wanted to ask her to stay with me for a while until I got better.  Then I could storm off again.

She bent her head down, putting her ear to my mouth to listen to what I had to say, but I had no more energy to even think of how to phrase my request.  I closed my eyes and drifted off to sleep.

I alternated between sleep and semi-consciousness.  A few times when I was partially awake, I could hear Aya speaking.  Sometimes I heard and saw no sign of her.  Other times I could sense her sitting in the room and watching over me.  Sometimes I awoke shivering and others I awoke sweating.  I couldn't remember everything that happened when I was awake, though.  I had the feeling that I spoke a little, but maybe I didn't.

When I finally fully woke up, I felt sick to my stomach, and so I stood up, Aya nowhere in sight, walking to the washroom on wobbly legs that didn't feel like my own.  When I got there, I knelt down by the toilet and waited.

"Miki?" asked a voice from the darkness.

I looked up and out of the washroom to see Aya walking from the kitchen with a glass of some drink.

"What's the matter?"

I gave her one look of desperation and she understood.  She hurriedly put her glass down and came to stand by me.

"Don't worry," she comforted me.

In the end, nothing happened that time.  No violent regurgitation of the latest meal I'd eaten.  The nauseous feeling left me, replaced by the pain of my pounding headache.  Aya led me back to the bed and covered me with warm blankets until I thought my body would either roast to death in the heat or collapse from the weight.

"Do you need anything?" she asked, her voice sounding like it was in another section of the city.

I shook my head once and fell asleep.

I slept for seven hours and woke up the next morning.  I felt like I'd been run over with a truck, beaten with a stick, and chewed up by a giant dog.  However, I didn't feel nauseous, and my pounding headache had been reduced to an occasional dull throb.

I turned my head slightly and saw the top of Aya's head.  She was sitting on the floor, leaning up against the bed, her legs stretched straight in front of her, arms crossed.

"Hey," I croaked.

I was parched. 

She didn't hear me, and I moved a hand and tapped her.  Her head jerked up and she looked over her shoulder, her eyes bleary.  She must have fallen asleep some time ago.

"You're awake," she said in surprise.  "What's wrong?"

I shook my head once to tell her nothing was wrong.  She let out a small breath of relief.

"Do you want something to drink?"

I nodded once, and she got up quickly, getting me a glass of water.  I sat up in bed and drank the whole thing, holding it out for more.  She got me a refill, and I gulped all of that down, too.

"Thank you," I said, able to speak properly once again.

Aya felt my forehead.  I remembered that action from the day before.

"You still have a fever," she observed.

I felt my own cheeks.  They were hot.

"What happened?" I asked again, hoping for a more detailed update.

"You've been delirious for twenty-four hours," she explained.  "You kept mumbling in your sleep and crying on and off a lot."

I'd cried many times?  I only remembered crying once.

"I think some sort of virus was already in you, and sleeping out in the cold made you vulnerable.  I called your bosses and let them know you were sick."

I hoped they'd understand.

"What about your work?" I asked.

She had said the day before that she'd called in, but what about today?  She was supposed to go in again, was she not?

She waved it off.

"They were pretty lenient about it.  In addition to the two metres of snow out there, they felt bad about losing my recordings the other day.  I explained that you had nobody else to take care of you.  And, I, um, exaggerated your illness."

"Sorry."

"No, not at all."

We fell into a silence.  We were both thinking about the argument we'd had before I'd stormed out.  We had to broach the subject eventually.

"Two metres of snow?" I asked, forestalling the inevitable conversation.

"Well, not quite," came the admission.

She walked over to the window and drew open the curtain.  I got up and crawled on the bed over to the window.  Sure enough, the buildings and streets were covered in white.  Apparently it had snowed right through Monday.  It was nowhere near two metres, but it was beautiful.  And it looked cold.  Had I actually slept out there?  No wonder I'd felt like I was going to die.  Aya pulled the curtains shut again.

"It's chaos out there.  Lots of train lines have shut down and all flights are grounded.  I went to a store last night and only one person had made it for his shift."

I lay back down under the covers and issued the appropriate sounds to indicate I was listening.

"But you don't have to worry.  You're warm here.  We've got heating-"

I sighed and interrupted her.

"Why are you being so nice to me?" I asked.

"Why wouldn't I be?" she demanded back quickly as if she had been expecting that question from me.

"Well... because yesterday - no - the day before yesterday... I yelled at you, and... I'm supposed to be mad at you.  And I don't want you to treat me nicely just because you're thinking of someone else."

Her face turned serious.

"I meant what I said before.  You're not a replacement.  Not even close."

I closed my eyes, too weak to jump up and yell at her.

"You and that other person aren't separate people.  You're the same person, okay?  I figured it out.  It's not the person that's different.  It's just the circumstances.  The environment.  I let go of any expectations, though, that I had left of you by my last night up there.  I wouldn't have allowed myself to do anything to you until I was absolutely sure that you were the only person that I... I don't know.  That I really wanted," she said, her voice wavering.  "I may be crazy, but I'm not a liar."

I opened my eyes and tried to see the truth in her eyes.  They looked sincere.  Then again, they'd looked sincere the first night we'd met and I'd introduced myself to her.  She must have been lying then.  She'd already known my name, she claimed.  All those times she'd reacted to the things I told her, she hadn't really been surprised or learning something new about me.  She had been confirming things she already knew.

But there had been some genuine moments.  Like when I told her I'd missed my university entrance exam twice and how I was studying bookkeeping and economics.  She hadn't known about those things before.

"No matter who you are," she continued, "and no matter how much money you make and what kind of job you have, you'll always be Miki.  The one I know and love."

There was that genuine look in her eyes.  But was it really real?  Could I rely on it?  I just couldn't tell.

I started to feel dizzy again, and I brought a hand up to cover my eyes to try and make it stop.  I was at a loss over what to say.

"You believe me, don't you?" she asked softly.  "That I don't care whether you're rich and famous or not?"

I took my hand away from my eyes, my dizziness momentarily stopped.  I kind of nodded without meaning to.

Had I overreacted the other night?  I had every right to be angry - and I certainly still was - but maybe I hadn't been entirely correct in my assumptions.  Maybe she really did feel something for me, not that other me.

The other me.

It wasn't fair.  If what Aya was saying about there being another version of me, then the things she'd done - her accomplishments and her fame - would precede me wherever I went.  People would continue to make judgements about me before knowing me.  The other Miki's enemies would automatically become my enemies, while her friends - her Aya - would be drawn to the things about their friend that they saw in me.

I didn't want that.  Maybe Aya could convince me that she loved me and not someone else who looked like me.  She'd taken the time to get to know me.  But people like Tsuyoshi and Katherine, with whom Aya said the other Miki had gotten along... Would they have liked me as much if they'd met me without having that mysterious sense of familiarity?  Would I have had a chance to be on good terms with Ohashi and Kuniko the Lesser if there'd been no other Miki?

"You said you didn't expect anything from me," I said quietly.  "But when I got here, you expected me to do all these things.  You encouraged me to take that job at U-Con so that I'd get discovered by my boss..."

I wanted to believe her so badly when she said she didn't expect me to be like the other Miki, but there was too much. Too much...

Aya tilted her head to the side in thought.

"I won't lie and say that the thought of you being discovered never entered my mind.  But I was just trying to help you with your dream.  Besides, I knew that it would be a good place to work.  Tsuyoshi-kun and Katherine-san are good people.  I knew you'd like them."

Could I trust her when she said this?  I looked into her big eyes and saw not a hint of dishonesty or uncertainty.

I might not be able to forgive her completely.  Not yet.

But maybe I could take this as truth.  This little bit.

I smiled ever so faintly, but the echo of cheerfulness left me right away.

"So now what?  What do I do?  Will people keep thinking they know me?  Will I be pre-judged everywhere I go?"

Did she understand how unfair that was?  How utterly miserable I would be if I could have no opportunities to makes friends because of who I was?  Make no career advances based on my own merit?  I didn't want to live my life with one foot in the shoe of someone who shared my name, my face, and a few character traits, but who wasn't ultimately me.

"This is the life you're living now.  You can overcome those things if you try.  Make the most of it."

So those were Aya's words to me?  Just suck it up and deal with it?  Play your crappy hand because it's the only one you'll be dealt?

"But it's not fair," I insisted, growing stronger with my desperate anger at the world.  "Why do I have to deal with this problem?  God, it's not even a legitimate thing I can tell other people."

She stayed silent as I grew infuriated.

"It's not fair how if I tell my parents or Nakanoko-chan or even Hiroshi, they'll lock me in an insane asylum.  It's not fair, Aya!  It's not-"

"How do you think I feel about it?" Aya snapped sharply.  "I went through the same thing, but even worse.  I lost the person most important to me."

She didn't slap me, but she may as well have.  I shut up.  Of course.  Aya's world had changed, too.

"I didn't choose for it to happen to me either, and I sure as hell don't think it's fair, but I made do and tried to fix it, okay?  I put my job - my entire career – on the line to travel across the country to find you.  Stop being so selfish and spoiled.  You're not the only one with problems."

Shaken, I lay there staring at the ceiling, reflecting on my hasty complaints.  Aya had suffered a lot more.  At least I had had a choice whether to give Hiroshi up or not.  I had had choices in everything I'd gained or lost.  She had had no choice.  Her entire life had changed.

"Sorry," she said quickly, perhaps rattled by my silence.  "I've- it's been rough, okay?  Those two months.  Seeing you all the time while not being to tell you anything.  It was torture."

She'd done an amazing job of keeping it covered it up.

"No, I'm sorry," I mumbled.  "I didn't think about your feelings."

It must have killed her when she learned about Hiroshi and when she wished me bon voyage when I went to spend Christmas with him.

"So we've both been affected," Aya said, walking over to the window again and drawing the curtain, standing and looking out at the snowy landscape.  "Why can't we go through it together?  Don't you think that's what we're supposed to do?"

I looked at her looking out the window.  She had her arms crossed and the light from outside lit her whole front side up.  She looked like a bright angel.  I could see no weakness in her.  She was dealing with her problems like she said I should, and she was holding it together.

Everyone in her life had changed.  Even one of her best friends, Shibata, had changed.  Her family, too, would all be different.  Could I keep going if the change had been like that for me?  If I'd lost Hiroshi like that, what would I have done?  Would I have taken off to find him?  Would I have only told Nakanoko-chan while praying she didn't lock me up in the loony bin?  Would I have been able to be simply his friend if I'd found him in some far off city with another girl?

Probably not.  Aya was...

"Amazing," I murmured.

She turned her head to look at me.

"Pardon?" she asked.

I shook my head.

"Nothing."

I stared at her.  She stared back.

She was so strong.  How she managed to survive until this point, I didn't know.  I owed it to her to try.  She had given up the only thing left in her life that she loved - her career - to come and find me.  That was too much for me to deal with.  A love that strong...

"This is too much," I muttered, trying to get through everything.

I was still so confused.

"Are you scared?" she asked.

I laughed a little crazily at the question.

"Of course I'm scared!"

I was scared of not being strong enough to deal with everything now that I knew the truth.  I was scared of not finding my own, unique place in this world.  I was scared of doing something to break Aya, who had withstood so much until that point.  I didn't want to hurt her.  Even though she'd kept secrets from me, she'd never purposely tried to hurt me.  She deserved more.

Damnit, Aya.  Why do you have to be so perfect? I thought, a little angry that I couldn't be angry.  Why do you have to be so convincing?  So right?

I closed my eyes and took deep, calming breaths.

The truth was that if Aya wasn't there with me, I would have lost it after hearing all that.  I would have been terrified.  But her presence in particular automatically relaxed me.  She was right.  We were supposed to do this together.

"Hey, Aya," I said after a long pause.

"Hm?"

"I think you're right."

I heard her walk over beside me.  She patted my hand, although I didn't open my eyes.

"Me too."

We didn't know what the future held for us.  All I could do at that point was focus on getting better.  Once I was back to my healthy self, I could pursue this strange phenomenon with more vigour.  I could try and figure out what Aya and I meant to each other.  Her and me, not her and some look-alike.  The real me.

"I'm a bit tired," I informed her, and I felt her sit down beside me, keeping her hand on mine as I fell asleep again, weakened by all the excitement.

I thought I heard her say something to me.  Something about buying gloves for me.  Or maybe loving me.  It didn't matter.  She said a lot more by just being there to take care of me.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #187 on: October 03, 2007, 12:27:14 PM »
Chapter 21 of 29

I was in bed for two more days.  My fever got worse before it got better, and for a moment while I lay there agonising over the injustices of life, it crossed my mind that my sickness was all some sort of karmic revenge for having laughed at Hasegawa's infection with the bird flu.  Maybe I had it, too.

Aya took care of me those two days.  She had to go to work on the second day, but she made sure she returned home as early as possible.  She sat on the floor by my side, brought me light food and water, read to me (nothing deep), patted my back when I felt sick, and even talked or sang me to sleep in a voice softer than I had imagined her capable of.

There was no more talk of the situation between us or the tension I felt at the back of my mind when I thought about it.  Thoughts pertaining to this were swept away by silent looks between us whenever we saw each other and by the incredibly ill feeling that had taken up most of my attention.

I woke up after those two days, my head feeling clear and my body wanting to stand up.  There was no dull throb of pain from the constant headache that had haunted me, and I felt genuinely hungry for the first time in days. 

I could see that it was dark outside, but I wasn't sure if it was late night or early morning.  I was alone in the room, although judging from the sounds I could hear coming from the living room, it couldn't be too early in the morning or too late in the evening.  There were voices speaking.  I assumed one was Aya's.

I rolled up from bed slowly, careful not to get a head rush, and I slid the door open quietly.  Sitting at the kotatsu were Aya and Shibata, each with a cup of tea, both looking very warm and comfortable with their heater.

When Aya saw me, she looked alarmed and started to stand up, asking what was wrong, but I shook my head.

"Don't worry.  Don't get up," I said quickly.

I had a feeling I had interrupted Shibata in mid-sentence.  She was eying me carefully.  I gave her a tiny nod as a greeting, and I made my way over to the table, inviting myself to slip my legs under the blanket.  Delicious warmth spread up my body immediately and I felt happier than I'd been in days.  My fever had kept me an uncomfortable kind of warm, but this heat that came from outside of me made me feel as though I was one hundred percent better.

"How are you feeling?" Aya asked.

"A lot better," I told her.  "No more sick feeling."

"Aya-chan told me you've been down with some sort of flu for a while.  I was worried," Shibata said.

Shibata.  A girl I'd met once and that I hardly knew other than through stories from Aya.  Why was it, then, that when she said this, she sounded genuine?  She didn't sound like she was merely being polite.

"Sorry to have worried you," I apologised.  "And thank you."

I looked to my left at the DVD player to check the time.  Half past nine.

I felt very disoriented, unsure of what day it was.  I didn't ask, however, because that knowledge would be of no use to me at the moment.  Whether it was Thursday or Saturday made no difference to me.

The three of us sat in an awkward silence.  There was a lot that had to be said, but nobody was taking the first step.

"Do you want something to eat?  Drink?" Aya asked quickly, almost seeming oblivious to the tension in the air.

She was a good actor.

"Actually, I could use both," I said sheepishly, feeling my hunger and thirst grow tenfold at her suggestion of food and drink.

Before I could say a thing, she'd sprung up and gone to the kitchen to get me something.  I was about to follow and help, but Shibata spoke to me and kept me seated.

"I'm sorry if I made you feel uncomfortable last weekend.  I didn't mean to react that way to you.  I think Aya-chan explained why I did that..."

I felt like I was in a science fiction movie.  The topic we were about to get into - the topic I had decided from there on to push us deeper into - was the perfect subject for such a movie.

"I think I kind of get it," I said with a forgiving look.

Shibata took a sip of tea, pausing with her lips just grazing the rim of the cup.  I looked down at the surface of the table.  Aya started to heat something up in the microwave.

I pictured a photographer coming in silently and taking a photo of the scene.  Critics would call it his next great work.  They'd say things like "the way he's photographed it, you can see the tension - the awkwardness - in the air!"

No, it wasn't so much awkwardness as it was an uncertainty as to how to proceed.  Since there was no precedent, the three of us didn't know what was going on.  We didn't know how to talk about it.  Our brains required different methods to process the information.  If anything, Aya had the best chance of the three of us.  She'd been painfully aware of at least the first situation - the disappearance of her proper Miki - for months.  At least she was prepared to think in a different way.  The second situation was the fact that people in this city - people like Shibata - felt a strange familiarity when they saw me.  This one none of us had a grasp on.

"What about me do you find familiar?"

To say I was mildly interested would be an understatement.  I was wildly curious.  Shibata, on the other hand, couldn't keep a flash of discomfort from passing through her eyes.

"Why?" she asked me.

Why?  Wasn't it obvious?  I wanted to know just how similar we were.  Who was this other girl that shared my face and half of my history?

I was about to get this point across to her in fewer and more abrupt words when Aya came back with a bowl of food and tea for me.  Shibata and I hushed up as she set them both down in front of me, and I looked at her gratefully.

"Thanks, Aya-chaaaan," I said cutely, forgetting Shibata was there.

It wasn't a meal for kings.  It was rice and green beans.  Simple, but good for someone who hadn't eaten a proper meal in days.  I started to eat as slowly as possible, taking my time so that I wouldn't get that sick feeling one gets when one eats too quickly on an empty stomach.

"Well, now that she's awake, I should be going," Shibata said, standing up.

I paused with chopsticks in my mouth and Aya looked up in surprise.

"No, don't go," she said.  "You don't have to."

Shibata looked down at me quickly, and I nodded in agreement with Aya.  I still wanted an answer to my question.

"I should, though.  It's getting late."

Shibata would not accept the invitation to stay longer.  Aya got up to see her to the door as I sat and watched from the able.

"Once you recover fully, give me a call.  I'm sure we could find time to talk," Shibata said to me.

She then followed Aya to the door.  With a wave, she was gone.

Aya came back to the table and sat across from me.

"Are you sure you're feeling better?" she asked worriedly.

"Aya-chan, I'd be doing cartwheels around the living room right now if I wasn't afraid of crashing into your furniture," I reassured her.  "I'm fine."

She looked relieved.

"You had me worried.  One more day and I would've dragged you to the hospital."

I smiled at her while chewing.

"I'm fine," I repeated through a mouthful of rice.

Aya took the remote control and turned the television set on, setting it to some talk show for background noise.  I looked at the screen, and when I saw the newscaster, I was reminded of Nakanoko-chan.  The woman on the screen bore an uncanny resemblance to my friend, which reminded me that I'd called her a while ago and had heard no reply from her.  I'd become too busy with my life to follow up on my failed call to her, and I suddenly wondered if she was okay.

"But I need to make a phone call," I said quickly, getting up and trying to find my phone.

"Kuni-chan?" Aya asked.  "She called a couple of times to see how you were.  She'll be happy to hear from you."

"Oh, that troublemaker?  I'd forgotten about her," I joked.  "No, that's not who I'm calling.  A friend from back home."

I found my phone and settled back at the table.

"Are you finished with that?" Aya asked, pointing to my bowl.

I nodded.  She took it with the rest of the things from the table and went to do the dishes, giving me some privacy.  I found the correct number and pressed dial, waiting impatiently for a response.

Six rings later when I thought I'd be directed to the voicemail box, a tired voice answered.

"Hello?"

"Nakanoko-chan!" I exclaimed, although positive that something was wrong.

"Micchan, hi," she said, sounding relieved that it was me.

Who else could it be?  It's not like anyone else could be calling from this number.

"Are you all right?" I asked.

"Actually, I'm at the hospital right now," she said in a quiet voice.

My heart froze.

"What happened?" I demanded.

"I'm okay," she said quickly.  "I didn't tell you before, but my uncle was diagnosed with cancer.  It wasn't too serious, but his condition got worse two weeks ago.  I've been practically living here because he has nobody else.  The doctor says he doesn't have much longer."

I'd heard of this uncle.  He was a terror.  Nakanoko-chan had always told me horror stories about him back when we were younger, but over the years as she grew up and got to know him, he became less scary and more interesting.  Now he was on his deathbed...

"I'm sorry," I said.

"Don't be.  He's had a full life.  People might not like him much, but he's pretty satisfied with what he's accomplished.  Listen, I'm sorry for not returning your call before.  You sounded like you needed a friend."

"Hah," I said, remembering that terrible day.  "I'm fine now.  Just had a rough day."

I heard a noise on her end.

"Hang on a sec," she said quickly, and I heard her speak to someone before coming back on the line.  "Micchan, I'll contact you later.  There's been a change in his condition."

My heart went out to her.  It sounded like a change for the worse.  I said goodbye, and I wondered when the next time I'd talk to her would be.

"Everything okay?" Aya asked, coming back to sit with me.

I explained briefly the situation, and she stayed respectfully silent, and I compared my life in Hokkaido to my life in Kanto.  There was one thing that didn't make sense to me, and I changed our topic of conversation to reflect my curiosity.

"Why is it that none of this weirdness started until I came here to this city?" I asked.  "I lived the vast majority of my life without being mistaken for some non-existent celeb.  Then I met you, came here, and suddenly the entire city is bowing at my feet."

Aya looked just as puzzled about the question as I did.

"I don't know," she sighed.  "I don't understand any of it.  I haven't found any answers.  Trust me, I would have told you."

That was a mood dampener.  We sat silently watching the talk show.

Maybe we weren't supposed to meet, I thought suddenly.  Maybe things got messed up because of her coming to my hometown.

I shook my head.  What a ridiculous thought!

"What?" she asked.

I shook my head again.

"Nothing.  Are you tired?  Go to bed.  You've been working long shifts playing famous star and doctor."

"I'm not ti-" she started, but she interrupted herself with a yawn, followed by a sheepish look.  "I'm exhausted and I have to leave here at five-thirty tomorrow.  Do you mind if I go ahead?"

I pointed to her bedroom commandingly.

"Go sleep."

She saluted me and went off to get ready for bed.

I sat in the living room, not one bit tired, wondering what was going to happen from that moment on.  I turned to the television and watched talk shows well into the early morning, falling asleep under the kotatsu and having pleasant dreams that I couldn't remember the next morning.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #188 on: October 03, 2007, 12:27:48 PM »
Chapter 22 of 29

I woke up later in the morning around ten.  I was lying on the floor, boiling hot.  A pillow had been placed under my head, probably by Aya when she'd woken up to get ready for work.

I got up, testing my legs carefully.  Still weak but working.  I took a long bath so that my skin was squeaky clean when I got out.  Then I called my first boss.

Fukuda was exhilarated to speak with me.  He told me to come in next on Monday morning if I was certain I was all right.  I told him I could go in earlier than that, but he insisted I take the weekend to finish recovering.  He added in that on Monday morning Kuniko would be working a shift.

"She's been bothering me all week about wanting to work with you.  I told her it was out of my control, but she seems to think I'm a miracle doctor."

I got embarrassed by this and mumbled something half-hearted.  Fukuda sensed my mood, and without pushing that any further, he said he'd send an e-mail as soon as possible with a revised schedule for next week.  A schedule that included me.

We said goodbye, and I decided to wait before calling into my other job.  Once I knew one schedule, it would be easier to figure out the other one.

I didn't have to wait long.  Fifteen minutes later while I was rummaging for breakfast, Fukuda e-mailed me the revised schedule.

Fujimoto-sama-sama
Nice to have you back!


he wrote at the end of it.  I wondered briefly if in the other Miki's world, Fukuda had been someone in an inferior position to her and thus acted so nice to me without meaning to.

Or it could simply be that he was a really nice guy.

I had no idea.

I forgot about breakfast for a moment and wrote the schedule directly on my calendar, calling up U-Con immediately after finishing.  Tsuyoshi picked up the phone, and he shrieked when he heard my voice.

"You're alive!"

He sounded like a girl, that dork.  He quizzed me about my week, asking how I felt and so on.  I give him curt answers because I wanted to ask him questions instead.

"Sekiguchi!" I yelled over his monologue about good cold medicine.  "What's been going on there?"

I craved the gossip.  How disgustingly nosey of me.

"Oh, well, so much had happened while you've been gone."

He sounded like a hairdresser that used to work at the salon I went to get my hair done at.

"Kuniko started trouble with Katherine and got into a huge row with her.  Ohashi came by and joined Kuniko against Katherine.  They were coming down hard on her until Boss came out of his office and demanded to know what the commotion was.  Well, Kuniko and Ohashi sprinted away almost literally, saying Katherine had problems she needed to take up with him.  Of course she didn't, but she was left to explain the mess.  So she couldn't, except that I had heard the entire thing from down the hall 'cause I had been cleaning up Hiromi's desk.  Katherine was really angry, and she said to Boss..."

Wake me up when it's over, I thought, rolling my eyes, suddenly wondering why I'd asked.

"That's great, but how is everything now?"

There was a giant pause.  An embarrassed one.

"It's all okay.  They all apologised to each other.  Even Kuniko."

So then why did you bother telling me anything happened if nothing's changed?! I thought in my head, although not really angry.

"I think you're really bored, Tsuyoshi-kun.  Really bored."

He laughed nervously.

"Is it that obvious?"

"You need a life," I laughed.

He got offended, we argued playfully, and then we got down to business discussing schedules.  Tsuyoshi said he had things covered until the new week started, so I wouldn't have to go in until Monday afternoon if that was possible.  I told him the same thing I told Fukuda - I could go in sooner.  He insisted that I start Monday, so instead of looking a gift horse in the mouth, I accepted the free weekend, and we hung up satisfied to have been able to talk with one another after so long.

The rest of the day I spent watching television, unwilling to leave the warmth and comfort of such a luxurious apartment.  When Aya came home that evening, I was dozing on the couch and had been doing so for the past two hours.  I woke up to a savage jab in the temple.

"You lazy girl.  You're not even dressed," she scolded me.

I looked at her uninterestedly and then indicated my fully clothed self.

"What's this?" I asked her.

Her glare deepened when she saw the track pants I was wearing.

"You look like a yanki."

I continued to stare at her with a look of indifference, and she eventually moved off to put her things away.

"So where's my dinner?" she asked.

Dinner?!

I had completely forgotten about dinner.  How could I have missed the opportunity to cook?

I sprung up and hurried to the kitchen to look through the cupboards.  Aya followed me as I started to get the rice out.

"I was joking," she laughed.

I frowned.

"No, I should've made something."

I continued to prepare the rice, scooping some into a bowl and filling it with water.

"Have you ever thought of pursuing cooking?" she asked.

I stopped cleaning the rice, my hand submerged in the water.

"Huh?" I asked, not comprehending.

"I mean professionally."

"Why would you suggest that?" I asked, swishing the rice round and round in the bowl.

She came to stand right beside me and watch me clean.

"Because I think you would've gotten angry if I'd scolded you about anything else.  But I asked you to cook, and you seem to love it enough to feel obligated to prepare a meal."

I stopped cleaning and thought for a moment.

Me?  Become a chef?  Study the culinary arts?  That would be different from what I'd always dreamed of doing.  But spending all day cooking sounded nice.

"You could take a class and see if you like it..."

For a brief moment I thought this was Aya's way of overcompensating for her earlier high expectations.  However, when I looked at her, she seemed genuine.  The more I thought about it, the more it appealed to me.  I didn't say anything aloud, but my thoughts were probably etched clearly on my face.  I was making no attempt to hide them.

"I'll ask some people I know.  See if they can recommend a good class.  You can work it into your schedule," she offered.

I smiled.  It was nifty knowing someone with connections.

"Thanks," I said simply, returning to washing.  "Sounds fun."

She went off to do something else while I pondered my future as well as what to eat that night.  Cooking sounded much more interesting than bookkeeping.  Studying herbs and spices would be much more fascinating than analysing world economies.

Later on during dinner, we talked about a few winter festivals happening on the weekend.  We were wondering whether to go to one on Sunday when Aya seemed to receive a communiqué via a telepathic line.  She looked up abruptly from her soup, her eyes sharp and open widely.

"Are you free tomorrow?"

I nodded.  Of course!

"I'd like to take you somewhere to meet someone."

And that was it.  No further description.

"Okay.  Where?  Who?"

Aya gave me a mysteriously happy look.

"A very interesting woman who owns a café not too far away from here."

"Let me guess," I spoke with rising suspicions.  "A café that you and the other me went to often."

I didn't mean to speak darkly, but it just happened.  I couldn't control my discomfort.

She caught onto my mood quickly and tried to placate me.

"Just trust me about this one.  She's a unique woman.  I think she'll like you for you.  She's really aware of, um, things.  I'm not sure how to explain it."

"Like Shiba-chan?" I asked.

"Hm.  Probably the best comparison I can think of.  They're somewhat similar.  But Ochiai-san is waaaaay way out there."

I raised sceptical eyebrows.

"In a good way!" Aya quickly amended.

My sceptical eyebrows went down.

"How'd you meet her?"

Aya looked surprised by the question, and then she put down her glass of water to think.  Finally, she spoke.

"I can't say.  I don't remember," she laughed.

Is she being an airhead or was it just so long ago that she really can't remember?

Whichever it was, it didn't really matter.  I'd find out the next day who this woman was.

We spent our evening in.  We were very quiet.  I stayed up late again watching television because I wasn't one bit tired due to all the napping I'd done all day.  Aya went to bed at an early and uncool hour for a Friday night.  Once again, I fell asleep wedged under the kotatsu.

Very early in the morning, probably just before sunrise, I felt something touch me.  I jerked awake.  I hadn't been asleep for long.  My eyes snapped open and there was a figure standing over me.  I started to scramble up as the figure spoke.

"Get out from under there," Aya whispered.  "You're going to get sick again if you don't sleep properly."

She dragged me up and took me to her bedroom, where she pushed me on the bed.  I curled up against the wall and closed my eyes.  Aya left the room and then came back a few seconds later.  I turned around and saw her holding a glass of water and drinking.  She put the glass down on the bookcase and then got into bed.

"Goodnight," she whispered, pulling the blankets up to her chin and closing her eyes.

And so without any pomp and circumstance, I mumbled "Goodnight," and then promptly fell back asleep.


Aya woke me up again at ten.  She looked quite happy.

"Get up and get ready!"

She left, assuming I'd get up on my own.  She was horribly wrong.  I went right back to sleep and didn't move a muscle until she woke me up half an hour later.

"I've been waiting for you all this time!" she screeched, grabbing the sleeve of my pyjamas and hauling me out of bed, making me fall onto the floor with a loud thump.  "I thought you were getting ready!"

"I'm tired," I groaned

I felt a sting where my hip had taken the hit.  I was definitely going to get a bruise.

"Get dressed and hurry," she ordered me in a sharp tone, throwing a pair of socks at me.

I grabbed at the footwear and gave her a cold glare.  She left the room, and despite the need I felt to be rebellious and not listen to a single word she said, I remembered her scary personality and quickly got changed out of my night clothes.

"Breakfast?" I asked, walking out of the bedroom.

"None for you," she snickered from the sink as she washed some dishes.

While I thought she was joking, she proved that she wasn't.  She managed to keep me away from the kitchen with threats, and then eventually with physical violence.  The bruise on my hip became the least of my worries.  At least I forgot that I'd been sick for a week and that I was in a world that was, in short, messed up.

We left the apartment an hour later, my stomach growling.  We were heading to the café.

"Come to think of it, I haven't seen Occhiai-san in a long time.  Not since last year around August," Aya thought aloud.

"Was the other Miki with you?" I asked.

"The way I remember it, yeah," Aya replied with a frown.  "But who knows what version everyone in this world remembers.  Maybe I went alone, maybe with Shiba-chan, maybe with someone else..."

I guess I could always ask this Ochiai woman who Aya had come with.  A strange question to a stranger, but what had to be done had to be done.

We hopped on a train and found ourselves at the café in a matter of minutes. 

When we were about to step through the front door, however, I felt a wave of apprehension pass through me.

"What is it?" Aya asked, pausing with her hand on the door.

What if things got weird in there?  What if I heard something I didn't want to?  What if I was expected to say or do something and I said or did neither?  Was Ochiai going to have any expectations?  Was I going to mess everything up?

"Nothing," I said with a warm smile, sweeping my worries under the carpet.  "Let's go in.  I'm cold."

A wind chime rang out as Aya pushed the door open.  The inside of the coffee shop was peaceful and immediately calming.  It felt like home, which was what I thought the owner was probably going for.  It was designed to look like a clean, neat, upper-middle class European home, but not in an overwhelming way.

We were met by a server who gave Aya a surprised look but said nothing other than her greetings.  It was a look that said "long time no see!" but that had to be kept behind a professional mask.

We sat at a table by the window and had menus placed before us.  Before the server left, Aya made a quick "stay" hand gesture.

"Is your manager around?"

I didn't think it would happen, but the girl smiled.

"Am I in trouble again?" she asked.

"Big trouble," Aya said with a straight face, which made the server laugh quietly.

Some inside joke I obviously didn't get.

"Yes, let me go get her."

The girl went off and disappeared into the kitchen.

"Friend?" I asked.

"No," Aya replied, lifting the stone expression from her face and smiling.  "I just know her from here."

I still didn't get the joke, but oh well.

I had no time to ask about it.  From the kitchen emerged a woman who looked like she was in her thirties.  She was one of those women that didn't try to hide her age, but managed to not look older because of it.  She was wearing casual business clothes, her outfit topped off with a dark blue apron.  She spotted us, and with a face that displayed some sort of emotion that I couldn't read, she walked over to us quickly.

"Oh, thank god," said the woman when she reached us, heaving out a breath of relief and looking right at me.  "You exist."

Aya and I exchanged wide-eyed, puzzled looks.

My life was turning out to be very strange.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #189 on: October 03, 2007, 12:28:59 PM »
 Chapter 23 of 29

I don't know exactly what happened in the thirty seconds that followed Ochiai's statement.  Aya and I looked at each other, looked at Ochiai, and then back at each other in an involuntary imitation of a silly cartoon scene.

Aya was the first to react verbally.

"Excuse me?" she asked politely.

The manager of the café - who, with her simple statement, had just freaked me out in a way worse than Aya and Shibata had combined - invited herself to the third chair at our table and sat very straight, her hands folded on the table in front of her in an attempt to demonstrate the calm she had regained.  She looked directly at me, and I found myself squirming under her gaze.   She began to narrate her story.

"About four months ago, I realised everything had changed.  I don't know exactly when it happened, but when you two didn't come here as usual, I began to pry.  I checked up some sources and discovered that your histories had changed.  Well, yours had," she said, looking at Aya and then looking at me, "but yours didn't even exist."

"Wait," I interrupted.  "You actually know me?"

The woman nodded.

"And it's not just that you kind of recognise me or think you know me?" I asked, perhaps feeling a bit desperate.

I wanted her to just recognise me, not know me.  That way nothing would be different from the current norm.  We were already aware of people recognising me, and we were  trying to deal with it.  If this woman actually knew who I was, then we'd have to figure yet another thing out.

Ochiai frowned, and I lost hope.

"Yes, I know you."

"Ochiai-san," Aya said quietly.  "The same thing happened to me."

Ochiai looked at her.

"I woke up in a changed world where Miki-chan didn't appear to exist."

"Hey, I exist," I butted in, getting a little annoyed at my existence being brushed aside.

"Sorry," Aya apologised.  "I mean the one that I knew didn't exist."

"So who is this?" Ochiai asked, looking at me again with a slight frown.

"Who do you think I am?  Didn't you just say you knew me?" I retorted in an exasperated way.

Ochiai and Aya both paused and looked at me.  They must have known how painful it was to sit there and be talked about like that.  They must have realised they were being rude and confusing.  Or something.

"I mean," Ochiai continued slowly, "you're obviously different from the Fujimoto-san that I knew four months ago, but you're also obviously the same person.  I want to know how you got here.  How you met her."

She gestured towards Aya.

"That's Aya's story to tell," I mumbled, hoping that some light would be shed after everything was explained.

Aya looked at me as if getting permission to speak, and I gave her the go ahead: a blank look and a small nod. 

"I woke up one day and she had disappeared.  Nobody here - none of our friends or co-workers - knew who she was.  Only I seemed to have a memory of her.  When I realised she had been erased from the world, I went up to Hokaido to see if I could find her," she explained.  "When I found her, she didn't know who I was.  Not a single memory."

"And yet you still managed to convince her to come here?" Ochiai asked.

Aya appeared flustered at the question, and I, too, wanted to tell this lady to stop being so nosey.  Not that I cared.  But wait.  I did.

"Yeah, but that's not the point," I interrupted, and Ochiai let it be.

"All right.  So what's happened since coming here?"

Aya took another deep breath.

"She got here at the beginning of January, and at first it was okay, but-"

"It was never okay," I continued for her, wanting to tell my side of the story.  "From the moment I stepped off the train to go to Aya's place, people started to react strangely to me.  I've had people coming up to me and then apologising because they thought I was someone else.  I've had people staring at me with strange looks on their faces.  I've also had inexplicable encounters with people who had already judged me and have certain expectations of me.  I've made enemies with people I've never met before in my life.  I've probably received special treatment, too, because of who this other Miki is."

Aya jumped in and quickly explained the situation with Shibata, and by the end of it, I thought Ochiai would think we were crazy and leave.

She didn't, however.  She stayed and continued to talk.

"I'd like to confirm some things if that's okay with you.  Just bear with me."

Aya nodded.

"You've been patronising this shop for many years now."

Aya nodded again.

"At least once a week, sometimes more.  At the end of October, you stopped coming here, and I had a bad feeling about it.  It took me a month to turn to the gossip magazines and see what was happening with you.  What I saw were the usual ridiculous rumours, but what caught my eye was an odd reference.  You and your friend Shibata-san having done a tour together.  I don't consider myself an expert on your life, but I knew that had never happened.  Am I right?"

"Right.  It never happened!"

Aya sounded thankful.

"Well, at least what we know seems to match up."

"It does," Aya mumbled, the relief clearly showing on her face.

Silence for a beat.

"Why do you think this happened?" Aya asked.

Ochiai didn't appear to notice she was being addressed.  She sat in silence for a long time staring at the table, her face expressionless.  I was about to repeat Aya's question when she spoke up.

"I don't know," she started.  "I have no experience with supernatural phenomena.  Excuse me."

With surprising speed, Ochiai got up and walked over to the kitchen where a distressed man in an apron was waving her over.  Maybe there was a cookie emergency.  She went through the door, and Aya and I were left alone again in the empty café.

"I can't believe she knows who you are," Aya said to me in awe.

I shifted uncomfortably.

"I think it's creepy.  Who is she?"

Aya eyed me with a smile.

"See?  I told you she was an interesting character.  Do you believe me now?"

I nodded grudgingly.  Creepy or not, she had my attention.

"So what should we do now?  What if there are more people who know the other Miki?"

"I somehow doubt there's anyone else."

She sounded positive.  I chose to believe her.  The alternative was frightening.  Or at least a fraction more frightening than reality.

"I-" she started to continue, but Ochiai popped out of the kitchen and came back to our table.

"Apologies.  Cake emergency."

Well, I'd been close enough in my guess.

"Frankly, at first when you didn't come here for a few weeks," Ochiai continued as though there had been no interruption, "I thought things had broken down between you two.  Nothing was quite the same since that debacle a few years ago."

Of course I had no idea what she was talking about, but I was extremely curious as to what this "debacle" had been, and I was also a bit put off by the fact that Ochiai knew a little more about me and Aya than most people did.

I looked over at Aya questioningly, but she was looking at Ochiai with a pleasant but clueless face.

"What debacle?" she asked.

Ochiai looked at me and then back at Aya.

"The magazine article..." she said slowly, trying to jog Aya's memory.

Aya now looked confused.

"What magazine article?"

Ochiai looked at her, and then for the first time I saw a look of discomfort appear on her face.

"About Fujimoto-san's indiscretion."

My indiscretion?  Or more like the other Miki's indiscretion?  What had the other Miki done?

Aya's look turned slightly towards the negative side.

"What are you talking about?" she demanded.

What was going on?  Had Aya forgotten about something the other Miki had done?  Or did she not want to talk about it and was trying to convey that to Ochiai?

Ochiai looked at me again and then spoke.

"Tell me you don't remember about three or four years ago when Fujimoto-san appeared in Friday magazine and was revealed to be dating Shouji-san, the comedian, for quite a few months."

"Huh?!?"

Aya's outburst surprised me.  She yelled so loudly that the chef who had called Ochiai over earlier poked his head out of the kitchen door to make sure a robbery wasn't in progress.

"What the hell are you talking about?"

Indeed, I thought.

What had happened?  A comedian?  A betrayal?  A scandal?

Ochiai frowned deeply and then related to us an interesting tale.  Apparently the other Miki had been caught up in a dating scandal and had been fired because of it.  It all sounded ridiculous to me.  Why fire a girl for having a boyfriend?  I began to wonder why I had ever wanted to be an idol so badly in my youth.

"After that happened, you two met here and fought like vultures.  You both eventually stormed off.  I thought that was it.  I thought it was over for you two.  But about a month after Fujimoto-san had been fired, she came to me for help and advice.  Somehow you two started talking again and you repaired whatever had been broken."

Aya stared at Ochiai.  I wanted to reach over and shut her mouth for her.  It was hanging open like she was waiting to catch insects for lunch.

"You don't remember any of that?"

Aya managed a nod.

"Shouji-san?" Ochiai tried.

Aya shook her head.

"Doesn't ring a bell," she rasped out.

It didn't ring a bell in my mind either, but that was to be expected.

"Then I think our problem is a bit bigger than I originally thought," Ochiai muttered.

She sounded almost perversely happy about that.  I wished she wouldn't derive excitement from this situation.  This was my life being screwed up.  It wasn't a game or a TV programme.

A hundred questions ran through my head, most of them starting with "what the" and then descending into foul language.  Aya just sat there looking stunned.

"That never happened.  Miki never did that to me.  She never would.  Never.  Right?"

She looked at me as though I was supposed to know the answer.  I shrugged, which I think did no good to ease her mind.

"Forgive me for sounding strange," Ochiai said quietly, "but I think the three of us are from very different places."

By that she meant different worlds?  Dimensions?  Because that was a whacked out theory, but nothing explained it better.  Aya was from a world where we were happy together until she had to go on a three month business trip and Miki disappeared.  Ochiai was from a world where Miki cheated, Aya forgave, and things were put back together until Miki disappeared.  I was from a world where I'd met neither of these people - nor any comedian.

"How could this have happened?" I asked, taking charge.

Aya looked like she was going through some huge inner turmoil.  She wasn't looking at either of us.

"I can't even begin to guess," was Ochiai's unhelpful answer.

"Ochiai-san, how did we meet?" Aya asked suddenly, interrupting us.

"Here in the café.  You've been a regular for quite a few years now."

"And did we talk much?"

Ochiai tilted her head to the side in thought.

"Not until after the scandal.  Up until then, we chatted about the weather."

Aya nodded, pensiveness etched into every crease in the skin of her face.

"I just thought of something, Ochiai-san."

We both looked at her, but she kept her eyes trained on Ochiai only, not sparing me a single glance.  It made my stomach sink just a bit as an impending sense of doom came over me.

"How did I know your name?"

"Huh?" I couldn't help but say.

"You never learned it?" Ochiai asked curiously.

Aya nodded.

"I've chatted with you occasionally - enough to get a sense of your personality - but I never learned your name.  So how did I know your name?"

Aya and Ochiai stared at each other and I watched.

If Aya had no memory of learning Ochiai's name, then how had she been able to use it the night before to describe to me who we were going to meet?  It was knowledge that she didn't know she had.  Knowledge placed in her mind.

I had a thought.

"Could it be that, like, um..." I trailed off stupidly, unable to express myself coherently.

Ochiai eyed me with the same curious look that had been on her face the past minute.  Aya eyed me with a neutral expression.  I wanted to sink into the ground.

"Could it be like how everyone's been recognising me?  Somehow, somewhere, wires have been crossed and people like Shibata have had this information put into their brains without knowing it?"

What had seemed like a good theory in my mind sounded so stupid spoken aloud that I couldn't believe I've been the one to say it.  However, Ochiai seemed to like the idea.

"That's one way to think of it," she said thoughtfully.  "But the question of how it came to be still stands, as well as why the three of us seem to be a little different."

Nobody knew.  Nobody knew because it was a messed up, impossible situation that only belonged on television and in dreams.

"Hey Aya-chan," I said softly.

She looked at me.

"What do you think?" I asked her, seeking her opinion.

I had come to rely on it.  On what she thought.  Now we needed her thoughts more than ever.

"I think..." she mumbled.  "I think I want to go home."

I blinked.

"Okay," I said.

Ochiai took out a pen and wrote her name, phone number, and e-mail address on a pad of paper that she took out of nowhere.  She slid it over to us.

"I think we'll need to talk some more later."

Aya nodded blankly, took the paper, and put it in her purse.

"Let's go," I said, standing up.

She stood up quietly and we said goodbye to Ochiai.  I told her we'd come back soon.  She saw us off to the door.

The train ride home was deathly silent.  Aya looked concentrated, and I didn't want to say anything out of fear.  We got back to Aya's apartment, and I sat on the couch while Aya went off to her room to do something.  When she came back, she saw me just sitting here and then went to the kitchen.

"You hungry?" she asked.

Surprised that she was talking to me, I turned around.

"Yes."

She asked nothing else and went about preparing lunch.  I didn't dare offer to help.  I could tell she was in a foul mood.  I didn't criticise her cooking technique when she handed me a plate of lopsided onigiri.  I smiled, took a bite, and said it tasted good.

She remained seated on the floor and gave me no reply.

What the hell?  What did I do?  Why was she angry with me?  I suspected she was angry at me about what she'd found out from Ochiai, but that wasn't fair.  That wasn't me in the magazine.  That wasn't me.

"Hey, Aya," I said with a bit of an edge in my voice.  "Why the silent treatment?"

She put her food down and looked up at me.

"I'm just thinking, okay?"

She spoke so defensively that it was obvious something was wrong. 

"You know, the stuff that Ochiai-san told us about was about someone else.  Not me," I reminded her.

I detected a bit of a twitch in one of her eyebrows.

"That other Miki - or other other Miki from Ochiai-san's world - is not me.  Okay?  She's another person."

I spoke maybe a tad too angrily, but I'd had enough of being associated with other people whether consciously or unconsciously.

Aya sighed and picked up a half-eaten onigiri and studied it for thirty seconds.

"Do you think you could give me some time alone?"

She may as well have started chanting in Yiddish.  I might have been less surprised. 

Time alone?  That meant "get out" in a polite way.

I had done nothing wrong.  Absolutely nothing wrong.  And I was being kicked out of the only place I had to stay.  Out into the cold of the streets.

I considered my possibilities.  I could start arguing with her, but then where would that leave us?  I probably wouldn't want to stick around afterwards if we argued viciously.  I could beg for forgiveness, but I couldn't bring myself to do that when I'd done absolutely nothing wrong.  I could try and talk to her in a level-headed way... but if the person I was talking to was being unreasonable, I'd turn unreasonable, too.  I could do as she asked and just walk out.  Find somewhere to stay.

I chose the last option.  Without finishing my lunch, I stood up, grabbed a few things of mine, and walked to the door.

"I can't believe you," I said quietly.

I slipped on my shoes and jacket and walked out.  I hadn't seen or heard her move from her seat.  Obviously I'd interpreted her words correctly.

Stupid idiot Aya! I screamed in my mind.

Why was she such a child?  Why would she blame something like that on me?  Why did she have to keep thinking I was that other girl?  She'd promised me that that's not what she'd been doing, but she was.  She was doing it now as I walked down the hallway, my anger showering me like buckets of water poured from a balcony.

Once I got out of the building, I pulled my phone out.  It was past one o'clock.  It was cold.  I was miserable and pissed off.

I dialled up Kuniko.

She answered the phone screaming my name.

"Fujimocchan!!!"

I held the device a metre away from my head until the screaming died down.

"Are you busy now?" I asked before she could start with any pleasantries.

"You're so rude!" she scolded me.  "You could at least ask how I've been the past week."

"Are you busy now?" I repeated.

"No," she huffed.

"Where are you?"

"I'm shopping in Shibuya," she replied.

She was out in public and answering her phone like that?  How embarrassing.

"Are you alone?"

There was an excited pause for breath.

"Actually, I met this guy on Wednesday at a club and he promised he'd prove that he could go on a shopping date with a girl without falling asleep, so he-"

"Oh," I said, trying to keep the dismay out of my voice.

So much for hanging out with her.

She didn't carry on, however.  She stopped her ramble.

"Are you okay?" she asked quietly, turning serious.

I laughed bitterly in my mind.

"I've been better," I replied truthfully.

"Wait," she said, and I heard her speak to someone before coming back on the line.  "Come and meet me.  I just sent him home."

Now there was friendship.

"Thanks, Kuni-chan," I said gratefully.

"How long will you be?"

I looked at my watch.  I had to get to the station first.

"Twenty minutes."

"Good.  Meet me at the south exit."

I made a sound of consent, hung up, and picked up my pace, walking further away from the source of all my troubles and towards a person that at least didn't purposely blame me for someone else's idiotic mistakes.

The whole short trip to Shibuya I went through bouts of anger, sadness, and even guilt.  I couldn't believe I actually felt bad about something I'd never done.  I would never do something like that on purpose.  Maybe the other Miki had been sleepdating.  Maybe she hadn't been aware that she was going out with that guy...

I shook my brain free of such thoughts.  Why was I justifying some non-existent girl's unfaithful actions with such silly suggestions?  And why was she so important anyway?  It seemed the whole universe revolved around her.  Or around me.  Us.  Each world was defined in terms of what its Fujimoto Miki had done.  That sent shivers down my back.

Kuniko was standing right by the exit of the station when I got there.  She was holding three or four shopping bags and her cell phone and looking cold.  She was easy to spot because of it, and I smiled in relief as I walked over to her.  She watched me the whole time, studying my face and not reacting in any way until I stopped in front of her.  She gave me a knowing nod.

"Ice cream," she said as though a doctor prescribing medicine.

I nodded back with definite gusto.  Four degrees centigrade weather be damned.

"Ice cream."

And so we went for the time-honoured medicine for matters of the heart: chocolate ice cream.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #190 on: October 03, 2007, 12:29:35 PM »
Chapter 24 of 29

The ice cream was rich and creamy.  We sat and ate for a few minutes without talking and simply enjoying the heavenly taste of chocolate rolling off our tongues.  At almost eight hundred yen, there was no choice but to enjoy every bite uninterrupted by conversation of any sort, pleasant or otherwise.

I ate about half of my ice cream without a single negative thought, but when I put my spoon down, I began to worry about what to tell Kuniko.  There was no doubt that she was going to question me.  I couldn't very well tell her that her world was being invaded by extra-dimensional people who remembered history differently.  I needed a good story, but not a lie.

Kuniko finished three quarters of her ice cream and then joined me in putting her spoon down.  She put her hands flat on the table and looked at me.  I knew what was coming.

"Let's start from the beginning.  What happened last week?"

I sighed.  It was going to be an interesting journey.

"And no cutting corners.  Last time I saw you, I was helping Aya-chan drag your delirious butt from in front of a train station where you'd slept in a snowstorm.  Now I know you're not the brightest girl in the world," she said, and I glared at her, "but that's a really stupid thing to do."

"I was confused and sick," I mumbled in my defence.

"Sick in the head?"

"No!" I snapped.  "I was upset and didn't want to go home, but I missed the last train that would get me out of there.  I wanted to wait till the morning, but I kind of... fell asleep..."

She was right.  It had been very stupid of me to do that.

"So why were you out there?  What kind of fight did you get into?"

Here we go...

"I got upset because, uh, Aya-chan had these expectations of me.  She was trying to... I don't know.  Project her expectations on me by leading me around and making me do things she thought would give me her ideal final result.

"What kind of expectations?"

"Um," I started, taking another breath, "what to do with my life.  Where to go.  What to become."

Kuniko nodded and urged me to go on.

"She thought I'd move here and become some famous celebrity like her.  Or something like that..."

Kuniko let out a dry chuckle.

"Anyway, I got a little angry because I overheard her talking about me to a friend on the phone."

"What kind of stuff did she say?" she asked, now completely engrossed in my story.

I pushed a piece of hair away from my eyes and checked the backs of my hands for no particular reason.  The overheard phone conversation with Shibata had been strange.  It had scared me, but not as much as it had scared me when I had been told the full story.

"Just, um, about the way I could've turned out if things had gone differently in my life.  Not important.  The point is that she pissed me off, I stormed off, I slept outside, and I got sick."

"But you guys settled everything, right?" Kuniko asked, looking a bit confused.

Who could blame her for being puzzled?  Dispute after dispute.  One settled, another started.  That one settled, and then on to the next one.  It was becoming clear that there was something special and highly dysfunctional between me and Aya.

"Yeah, she explained everything, and I listened for once.  We sorted it out.  But I was sick in bed until a couple of days ago."

Kuniko made a sound of surprise.

"And you're already eating rich chocolate ice cream?"

I looked down at my ice cream and then at her with a blank expression.

"Yeah.  So?"

What did it matter?

"Never mind," she brushed it off.  "Now tell me what happened today before you called me."

This would be the tricky one.

"It's hard to explain," I said hesitantly.

"Try me," Kuniko smiled.

"No, really.  You won't get it."

"No, really.  Try me."

"Kuni-chan, I can't explain it to you," I said firmly.

"And if you don't try, I'll leave right now and make you pick up the bill," she informed me in an equally hard voice.

"Fine," I said in a clipped, polite tone.  "You see, Aya-chan is from a different dimension where I'm a celebrity.  This morning we went to an acquaintance of hers, who also happens to be from an alternate dimension, but different from the one Aya-chan's from.  In this acquaintance's dimension, the Miki there was a very bad girl who cheated on Aya-chan.  It was even on the news, although that was because in her line of work, she wasn't allowed to have a boyfriend.  So when this world's Aya-chan found out about the other Miki betraying the other Aya-chan, she got upset with me, and she asked me to give her some time alone, which meant to get out of her face."

Kuniko looked at me with a concentrated expression, ate a spoonful of ice cream, and then pushed her bowl away so that she could lean forward.

"So that other dimension's Fujimoto is a metaphor for... Aya-chan's expectations?  And this acquaintance of hers is someone who planted the ideas in Aya-chan's head?"

Not quite, Kuni-chan.  Not quite.

"Kind of."

"And so now Aya-chan - with all these ideas in her head - doubts just how good a girl you are?"

That part was fairly accurate.

"Uh huh."

She thought it through.

"You know, you could've explained it to me without the fancy sci-fi metaphor.  What are you?  Some kind of geek?"

"You're the one who plays that Pokemon game on her DS for three hours a day," I bit back, and she reached out and stabbed her nails into my forearm.

"Sh!" she hissed with an alarmed expression on her face.  "Everybody doesn't need to know that!"

I winced in pain and then smirked.

"So Koda-kun was telling the truth."

Kuniko's jaw dropped.

"What?  That bastard!  That was mean, Fujimoto.  Really, really mean."

"Hey, he seems to know a lot about you.  Have you guys ever thought of-"

"Yes," Kuniko interrupted quickly.  "And we tried, but we're totally not made for each other like that.  He's totally like my brother."

I nodded, glad about the change of subject.

"Wait," I said slowly, a smile spreading across my lips.  "Could it be that Koda-kun is one of the guys that you've-"

"Yes!" Kuniko cried out forcefully to shut me up.  "And never ever mention that again.  I've tried to repress that memory.  Siblings shouldn't do that kind of thing together, and I learned that he and I shouldn't either."

My worries forgotten, I sat there with a sly smirk on my face.  Now this was good gossip.

"And don't you dare tell anyone.  So help me if you do," she threatened.

Since she had a lot she could hold against me, I decided not to push her too much.  Who knew when she could snap and go nuts from the amount of teasing I did.

"But what about that guy you were with up until now?  You met him at a club, you said."

Kuniko's attitude changed quickly from frighteningly menacing to stupidly cheerful.

"I think I've found a good one," she gushed.  "We fell into this comfortable zone all morning.  No awkwardness at all."

"Then why'd you say you weren't busy when I called?" I asked with a puzzled frown and a laugh.

"Well, I always have time for you!"

Oh please, I groaned in my head.

"That's because you haven't been able to harass me for a whole week, right?"

She shrugged.

"Pretty much."

I rolled my eyes. 

"So what's he like?"

"Tall, handsome, cool," she replied with a sparkle in her eye.

"I bet he's a real geek who's into trains, or something," I snickered.

Kuniko turned her nose up at me.

"Believe what you want."

I smiled warmly and made amends.

"He must be pretty cool if you don't even need to defend him."

"But weren't we talking about you?" Kuniko interrupted our line of conversation, giving me a pointed look.

Oh, yes.  We had been.  But I didn't want to talk about it anymore.  I was having a good time trying to forget that Aya now hated me for something I hadn't done and had never thought of doing.  The distraction was exactly what I needed.

"How long are you supposed to stay out of her hair?"

I snorted.

"Who knows.  An hour?  A week?  Forever?"

"It's not fair," Kuniko huffed angrily.  "You haven't done anything wrong."

She could say it a million times over, and all I would be able to do was agree a million times over.

I nodded.

"... have you?" she tagged on timidly.

"Of course not!" I exclaimed immediately, offended.  "I've done absolutely nothing even close to wrong.  It's all in her head.  She's a crazy lady."

"I'll say," Kuniko nodded.  "Do you want me to call her and reason with her?"

I shook my head vigorously as she pulled her cell phone out.

"It won't do any good."

And then her cell phone rang.  It made Kuniko almost jump up from her chair.  It made me blink, but hardly anything could rattle me anymore.  Not with my mind being inundated with stories of alternate universes and celebrity Mikis that slept around.

Kuniko looked at the display screen and then looked at me nervously.

"Um, it's her."

Aya was calling Kuniko.  Just great.  She knew how to trace me anywhere.  I was too predictable.

"I won't answer if you don't want me to," Kuniko offered.

"Nah, you'd better pick up."

It would accomplish nothing for Kuniko to ignore her.

"It might not be about me anyway," I added quickly.

Of course it was going to be about me.  The timing was right.  She was probably going to ask Kuniko if she knew where I was.  Then she probably would want to know if I'd told her anything, and then maybe try to glean some information about me.  About how I acted when I went out with my friends.  About anything suspicious I did.  Stupid questions.

"Hello?" Kuniko spoke into the phone.

She waited a few beats.

"Have I talked to Miki-chan?" she repeated the question back to Aya while looking at me for guidance.

I shook my head and mouthed the word "no".

"No, I have not," Kuniko said as though reading a script in an obvious and exaggerated way.

I shot her a glare and she tried to fix it.

"Is she out and about?  I'm so glad to hear she's better!  I was so worried!"

You're overdoing it, I groaned in my head.

She stopped talking and listened

"So why didn't you just call her directly?"

She adjusted her reaction so that she sounded authentically puzzled.  She listened some more.

"Oh."

She listened some more.

"I'm sure if you just call her-"

But she got cut off.  Aya spoke some more.

"Ah, that is true.  This is hot-headed Miki we're talking about," she laughed.

The traitor!  I slapped her on the arm and she let out a sound of pain that she quickly muffled, but not before it had been heard.

"Oh, no," she laughed nervously into the phone.  "Just bumped into a blunt object.  I'm okay."

I continued to stare at her with an expression that told her I was not amused.

"Yeah...  No, I'm sure you can...  Good idea to wait, but not too long.... Yup... Bye bye."

She hung up and I waited for her report impatiently.

"She wants to talk to you."

"And?" I asked in exasperation when she didn't say anything more.

"Why am I caught in the middle of this?  Ah!" Kuniko cried.

"Stop being foolish.  What'd she say?"

"She just told me that you two got into an argument and that she wants to talk to you.  Since you're so irascible, she figured she'd wait for you to cool down a bit."

"Oh wonderful," I ranted.  "She's the one who acted all unreasonably angry, and then I'm not allowed to be pissed off.  It's an unfair double standard, I tell you.  Don't you think?  When she calls I'm going to give her a piece of my mind."

I looked to Kuniko for support, but she had sat back in her chair and was holding her ice cream, eating the last bits slowly.

"Well?  Don't you think?"

Kuniko looked up at me.

"I think you just proven her right."

Gah!  I wanted to grab a plastic hammer and rap her and Aya on their respective heads with it.

"Why are you taking her side?  You're my friend!"

Kuniko started to hum a tune.

"I don't know you.  La la la la."

"Kuniko," I groaned.

"Never met this person before in my life," she said, speaking to a waiter who was walking by us.

He was too professional to look at us oddly, but I'm sure he was wondering how much whiskey we'd had before coming over to his shop for ice cream.

"Come on," I whined, dropping my anger and turning desperate.

"Fujimocchan, when she calls, just give her a chance, okay?"

She spoke so seriously that I stopped playing around and nodded, mirroring her seriousness.  While I nodded, though, I wondered why I was receiving the "be nice" lecture.  Was my temper really that bad?  I supposed storming off into heavy snowfall and sleeping outdoors in the cold was rash and demonstrated a kind of pride that could be dangerous to my health.  But I hadn't done anything violent.  I hadn't hit anybody.  I hadn't wished death upon anything.  Although I was feeling at the moment that I wouldn't mind if Aya got hit on the head repeatedly with that imaginary plastic hammer.

I ate the remains of my ice cream in the silence we'd created and wondered when Aya would call, what I'd say to her, and, most importantly, what she'd say to me.

"What do you want to do after this?"  Kuniko asked.  "Retail therapy?  It solves all problems!"

I shook my head.  I'd taken up enough of her day.  It was time for me to do some more thinking, not shopping.

"No.  Why don't you call your date back?  I think I'll take off on my own."

"You're not going to sleep in a malaria-infested ditch tonight, are you?"

She gave me a scathing look that told me I should know better.  But stupid Kuniko.  Everybody knew that we didn't have malaria in Japan.

"If you don't have a place to stay, I've got room at mine."

"No, I don't plan on staying outdoors again.  Thanks for the offer," I replied warmly.  "I'll let you know later."

I had learned my lesson.  Feeling that burning coldness again was not something I wanted to do.

We paid for our ice cream and left the restaurant, shivering as the chilly wind nipped at our ears and cheeks.

"Mail me if anything interesting happens," I said with a wink as I saw Kuniko writing an e-mail to her date.

She laughed.

"Same with you."

I thanked her again for taking time out of her schedule to see me, and we said goodbye and parted.  She headed in the direction of the station while I wandered down a busy street heading away from the hub of Shibuya.  On the way down the street, a tall woman standing in front of a ramen shop eyed me curiously.  She seemed to be waiting for someone.  I shuffled by quickly.  I wondered if the other Miki had known her.

I reached a crossroad after ten minutes and took the emptiest looking of the streets.  I walked down it and turned on to an even emptier street.  I found myself in an unfamiliar residential area, but I kept walking.  If I stopped, I'd get cold.  I continued for forty minutes through rows of streets I'd never been to before.  It was after I walked by a police box when my phone rang.  It was Aya sending me a message.

Is it all right to call you now?

Oh, how much I wanted to ignore her.  But I couldn't do that.  If anything, I needed a place to stay that night.  I could get that with this phone call. Then again, she could have been calling to kick me out completely.  In that case, there was nothing I could do anyway and may as well answer to find out if that was true.

I sighed and sent back a thumbs up emoticon.  My phone rang soon after that.

"Mmhm?" I asked when I picked up.

"I'm sorry," she said.

I kept walking, my pace slowing down as the silence between us grew longer.

"That's it?" I asked eventually.

Oops.  A little too rude.  Oh well.  She deserved it.

"I shouldn't have thought those things."

"Yeah, it was a little..." I trailed off.

"A lot.  A lot stupid and unreasonable," she finished for me.

I said nothing, meaning I agreed.

"Come home?" she asked.

I stopped walking, turned around in the direction of the place I imagined her to be in, and waited a beat before answering.

"Okay."

Another few beats went by during which we hung up without another word passed between us.  I began to walk back to the police box to check the map and find the nearest train station.

When I got back to the apartment, I rang the doorbell instead of opening it with the key I still had.  Aya let me in and hugged me, apologising for treating me like I'd done something wrong.  She said that it had been a shock, and learning that Ochiai was from a different world, too, had exacerbated her confusion.  She had needed some time to come to the terms with everything.

Of course I forgave her.  Maybe because I wasn't able to stay angry at her for long.  She cast a magic spell on me that weakened me in front of her.  Maybe because I was just plain stupid and didn't mind being hurt over and over again.  I took care to reassure her that I was smarter than the Miki of Ochiai's world and that I would never do something so careless and insensitive (if I was awake, but I didn't remind Aya about that).

One could not say that I wasn't relieved that I'd been cleared of all crimes.  But I wasn't completely at ease.  Would this happen again?  How many more times?  And with whom?  I wasn't just concerned about Aya, but also about everyone around me.  I would be so miserable if I got fired for something someone else did.  If I lost my friends for no good reason.

Down in my stomach, at the bottom of my heart, and at the back of my mind, I just didn't know how much more of it I could take.  This world.  This situation.  It was becoming too much for me, and my strength was starting to break.  I tried to remind myself about how I felt when Aya had told me about all her troubles, discovering her Miki didn't exist and putting her career on the line to go searching.  I tried to steel myself against all the strangeness and do like Aya had done by plunging forward into the unknown.  But I couldn't.  Not when she was being so unreliable.  Not when I'd given up life with my family to move to a city of strangers.  Even my closest friends couldn't help me because they didn't know my problems.  It sometimes felt like I had nobody I could trust implicitly.

I had no choice at the moment, however, but to keep on going and try to make sense of my life.  So with that in mind, I told Aya it was all okay and that I wouldn't hold this against her.  We tried to return to our normal lives, but something remained askew in my mind.  I wanted to fix it, but try as I might, I couldn't think of a way.  I would have to think a little harder.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #191 on: October 03, 2007, 12:29:59 PM »
Chapter 25 of 29

I went back to work with joy.  Anything to keep me busy and distracted was deemed okay by me.  For those few hours I could chat with whoever shared my shift at the convenience store, I forgot that the world was screwed up.  Even working at U-Con had become easier.  Ohashi and Kuniko the Lesser had taken to avoiding me, something I did not mind at all.  Katherine had also been coming by my desk to chat more often, and she started dragging me down to the studio for twenty or thirty minutes when we both had spare time, giving me dancing lessons and offering me encouraging words.

I went out with Kuniko and some other friends twice, but both times I was recognised by people in the club and was a bit put off because of it.  One man insisted that he'd met me somewhere before.  When he couldn't place it, he'd sat down in confusion and tried to figure it out.  I had almost wanted to comfort him and tell him the whole story, but of course that would have been a preposterous thing to do.

Kuniko started dating the guy she'd met at the club.  She was tight-lipped about details, though, although we had not had much time to talk.  That was fine by me.  I'd crack her soon enough.  Besides, she promised she'd bring him along to the next gathering, so I waited patiently for that day.

Aya pulled through for me with the cooking course, and through a friend of hers, she got me enrolled free of charge in a cooking class that was held on Tuesday nights.  I had never taken a lesson in cooking, and found it to be very strict.  I had a feeling that I did everything wrong and angered everyone.  However, after class, our teacher, a middle-aged man by the name of Arai, came and praised me for doing an excellent job on my first day when the class had started a month ago.  I heard afterwards that he rarely paid any compliments to anyone, so part of me felt smug and proud.  The other part felt like a compliment hadn't been necessary and I would have stayed in the class regardless.

I hadn't gone back to see Ochiai since our first meeting.  I honestly felt a little too nervous going back to see that woman.  She was nice and helpful, but her power scared me.  She seemed to know too much about everything.  Aya went to the café several times, but I made up excuses so that I wouldn't have to go. 

And as for Aya... She tread softly around me for those two weeks, being quite a bit nicer than she usually was, especially on my birthday.  I didn't get teased as much as before.  I didn't have to do her many pointless favours that usually annoyed me (like getting the salt for her when she was sitting more closely to it).  She smiled a lot, let me do what I wanted, and didn't complain.

I almost would have loved this new change in character, but there was something off about it.  First, I couldn't help but think about why she was acting so nicely.  It was obviously because she had offended me and was trying to make amends.  Second, I didn't like being treated like I was a precious doll.  I liked when I got teased or in trouble.  It bothered me to hell and back, but I loved to get attention from her.  Now I got a different kind of attention, and it seemed a little hollower than the kind I'd enjoyed before.  I also couldn't help but feel inside that I'd disappointed her a little.  I was following her own suggestion by taking a cooking course, but she must have wanted me to do something else.  Something more glamorous.  No matter how many times she reassured me that she just wanted me to be me and to be happy, a slight bitter taste lingered in my mouth from our previous confrontations.  As a result, I spent a lot of time out.

And then one day I woke up and decided that I had to do something about it all.  I was doing nothing but going about my life trying to avoid my problems and repress my worries, and they were starting to fester in my mind.  I was second guessing everything I was doing and doubting all my decisions.  Doubting everybody's words, whether of praise or not, to me.

I had nobody I could turn to, though.  I couldn't talk to Aya about it because she was part of the problem.  I couldn't talk to Kuniko about it because that would require me to explain that the "sci-fi metaphor" I'd used before was in fact reality.  I couldn't talk to Shibata about it because she was first and foremost Aya's friend, not mine.  That left only one person that I could go and see.  One person I didn't really want to see.

"I have to go to this meeting at eleven, but why don't you join me and Shiba-chan for lunch afterwards?  She just got back from Thailand," Aya called out from her bedroom, surprising me.

I was sitting at the computer and wasting time.  It was Tuesday and I had no work because I'd worked all through weekend.  I thought quickly.

"Oh, I can't," I replied as she walked out of the bedroom holding a pair of pyjamas to throw into the laundry basket.  "I've got to meet someone at lunch."

She didn't ask who and didn't suspect that the person I intended to meet didn't know I was going to meet her.  She went on to chat, telling me that she'd see me later, and then going on to talk about nail polish.  I waited for her to leave the apartment before getting dressed. 

At one-thirty, I left the apartment and wandered around outside.  I was slowly gathering the courage to go to the café, but it was taking a lot of effort.  An hour passed until I finally got up the nerve to get onto a train and head over.  I walked slowly and reached the front door, taking a deep gulp of air and pushing it open.

Apart from two men sitting at the far end of the room, there were no other customers.  The waitress greeted me and let me choose a place to sit.  I ordered a hot coffee and waited.  As I suspected, it didn't take long for Ochiai to become aware of my presence.  She came out from the kitchen as though she had some sort of sixth sense that let her know a Miki was nearby.  She walked over and sat across from me.

"Alone?" she asked.

I nodded.

"I see."

Doctor Ochiai had found her first piece of evidence that something was up.

"Aya-chan's busy," I filled her in.

"And you came here to enjoy our expensive coffee?"

I smiled at her particular sense of humour.  She spoke with a completely serious tone, but she was far too smart to actually believe that I was there for the coffee.

"And to talk," I said before she could say it herself.

"What can I do for you?"

She'd just become my personal counsellor.  My free psychiatrist.

"What should I do, Ochiai-san?  Things are getting worse," I said, the words tumbling out of my mouth all of a sudden contrary to all the short, clipped sentences I'd practiced in my mind earlier.  "Isn't there some way to reverse all of this?  Go back in time and stop the world from getting so messed up?"

Ochiai kept her expression neutral.

"You realise that if you erased the past four and a half months, it would mean you would never have met Matsuura-san, don't you?"

The thought had occurred to me.

"I know," I rasped out, scared that by saying those words I'd somehow forsaken Aya.  "But it's just not right.  I'm not happy with the way my life is unfolding.  I can't live with the pressure.  It's like I have to continually be on alert for something that's going jump out at me from behind a piece of furniture."

Ochiai stayed quiet.

"And then there's Aya-chan.  I mean, I'm not angry at her because I know she's a really good person, but I get into these situations where I feel so uncomfortable being myself because I don't want to disappoint her.  And even though she says she's not disappointed, I think she is sometimes.  There's nothing I'd like more than to just have a normal life with her in it, but it doesn't seem possible."

I quieted down, and we sat and looked at each other.

"I can't help you change things back to how they're supposed to be," Ochiai said.

That was it?  That was all her advice?

"But what do I do?  How do I get through this?  I think I'm going crazy."

She shook her head.

"I have no clue."

If Ochiai had no clue, how was I supposed to have one?

"The thing is that you're absolutely right, Fujimoto-san.  It shouldn't be like this.  Maybe whatever set it off will get fixed.  Maybe it won't.  We can only sit and wait."

"Yeah," I said in an unconvinced voice.

I sipped my coffee with her sitting there and thinking.

If things were fixed, then would people stop recognising me?  Would Aya stop comparing me to the other Miki?  Would our histories all become one again?  I just didn't see how that was possible.  If things were fixed, I'd never see her again.

Maybe taking off in the middle of the night would be a good idea.  Leave Tokyo.  Leave everything I knew and try to find the source of all my problems.  That would surely hurt less than the pain causes by what could potentially come.

I drained the last drops of my coffee and stood up.

"I have to go now," I said without any explanation.

Ochiai stood up quickly before I could rush off.

"If you just leave, she'll be upset, you know.  Don't disappear on her.  Don't just go back to your hometown or some other place.  Give the world some time.  A big place like this needs time."

I couldn't believe she'd read my mind like that. 

"I won't leave.  I'll give it time," I promised.

But I didn't know how much more time I could take.

I paid and left.  I didn't want to go back to the apartment in case Aya was there, so I went to the convenience store.  Kuniko and Koda were on duty.  Before I walked in, I could see them through the glass door chattering away at the front and laughing.

I wondered what it must have been like those few weeks after they'd tried hooking up.  It must have been awkward.  But I looked more closely at them and re-thought my position.  They got along so well that maybe there had been no awkwardness.  Maybe just a lot of temporary disgust and then a heartfelt agreement never to look at each other like that again.  I wanted to know if I was right.  But as strong as that desire was, I respected Kuniko's wish to not speak of her experience.

I pushed the door open and they straightened up when they heard the little chime announced my arrival.  Seeing it was me, they loosened up and greeted me.

"What are you doing here when you don't have to work?!" Kuniko cried out.

Koda nodded his head at me and then moved off to give us girls room to talk.

"I was bored and all my friends are busy," I declared in mock annoyance.

"Fine, then you can sit here and read out loud to me.  I have to finish reading a three-hundred page book by tomorrow so I can start working on my paper."

I scrunched my nose up.

"When I dropped out of school, I swore not to read another dry book again.  You're on your own."

Koda manoeuvred his way back to his previous position and into our conversation.  The three of us started talking about the trials and tribulations of school.  Customers came and went.  After a very busy period, I took my leave.  It was almost time to go to my cooking lesson.

I was the first to arrive at the kitchen that was our classroom.  I put my apron on, took my notebook out, and washed my hands, wondering what we were going to work on.

Inevitably, my thoughts turned to Aya, Ochiai, and then the other two versions of me.  One was a good girl.  The other had done something stupid but had been forgiven.  What was I compared to them?  Did I fall on the good or the bad side of the Miki evaluation system?

Maybe good.  I hadn't done anything too wrong besides my brief sleepwalking encounter.  But I also didn't amount to that much.  Maybe I could be a famous chef.  Since I estimated I had about a one percent chance of achieving that, though, I went with the train of thought that assumed I wouldn't make it big in the culinary arts.  That left me where?  University dropout who worked in a convenience store and an office and who lived in someone else's apartment, ate someone else's food, and took free cooking lessons that normally would have cost any student a fortune.  Nothing had changed from my life with my parents.  I was still a moocher, only now I was mooching off of Aya and her contacts, not my parents.  At least she was more fun to live with.

The first of the students started to filter in.  The mediocre ones always came first.  They were the ones obsessed with the need to improve their skills because they were right at the threshold where mediocre crossed into good, and they could taste the other side.  They thought that coming in earlier than everyone else would somehow help them cook better.  I wished someone would tell them that it didn't matter if you came two hours or two minutes before class.  As long as your power of concentration in the kitchen was solid, you would be able to do well.

I greeted them and watched them get ready.  They were like runners before a race, but instead of stretching and slapping their muscles to get the blood flowing, these folks were reviewing last week's lecture notes and trying to memorise obscure spice names with concentrated expressions.

Our teacher Arai walked in one minute before class started.  He looked exhausted, and I knew by the expression on his face that it was going to be a tough lesson.

"Today we're going to learn about pasta," he announced.

Some students looked pleased.  Some looked horrified.  I didn't care either way.  I liked pasta as much as I liked any other dish.  Anything would have satisfied me.

Arai began explaining the intricacies of boiling the perfect fettuccini, making the perfect sauce, and, as usual, lecturing us for fifteen minutes about presentation alone. 

"It's a bit of a backward method, but cook as if you're making plastic models for a store front," he told us.

That was backwards.  They were supposed to copy us, the chefs.  Not the other way around.  We weren't trying to recreate plastic models.

We had to form groups, each group having a different kind of pasta and sauce.  My group of four was saddled with a spicy eggplant tomato sauce.  To start, our group leader (a girl who should not have been leader because she could barely speak above a shy whisper) assigned us tasks.  I was in charge of the eggplant.  Chopping, dicing, slicing, and frying.

We discussed our method and then began.  I found my little space and started chopping, letting my mind wander as usual.

A few months ago, I'd been doing this in my hometown with Aya and Baachan.  We'd cooked in very close quarters and then enjoyed our meal together.  We usually talked when we cooked, but when I had to chop something, I disappeared from the world and let my mind drift.

What had I been thinking about those two months when I'd been at the cutting board?  I continued to chop as I went back in time in my mind.

School.  I'd been a bit worried about school.  I never complained about school, but it could sometimes be tough.  I understood the material, but there was so much to get through that sometimes I didn't think I could make it. 

I'd also been thinking about Hiroshi.  Back in the middle of November, he'd pulled this disappearing act on me.  Not that I cared too much.  I trusted him to be a good boy, but I had needed to talk to him about something that week, and he'd simply not been home.

I'd also been thinking about how nice it was to have Aya around.  Ever since Nakanoko had moved to Asahikawa at the beginning of last spring, things had been quiet in my life in my little town.  I had other friends, but none I liked to hang out with as much as I did with Nakanoko.  Aya filled that void in my life quite nicely.  I'd been able to show her around town and I'd realised that we could be best friends, too.  We had the ability to create conversation from nothing.  And if we had nothing to say to each other, it was okay.  Our silence was not uncomfortable.

I picked up an uncut eggplant.

But what now?  We lived together and everything went haywire.  Now silence made me squirm.  I felt that if I didn't fill that silence with something, everything would go wrong.  It almost had several times.

I shouldn't think like that, I thought to myself logically.  We're each doing the best we can under the circumstances.  There are bound to be some points of misunderstanding and miscommunication, but we can get through those.

But the other side of me didn't want to.

It's too difficult, that side whined.  I can't have my own life.  Not one that isn't in the shadow of someone who had such fame.

Funny.  Most people would have been worried about the Aya-type person in his or her life.  About living in her shadow, she being a superstar.  But no.  I didn't care about that.  I was concerned about living in the shadow of someone who never existed to me.

"Is there something distressing about that eggplant?" I heard Arai's voice drift into my ears.

I snapped out of my thoughts and realised I was standing at the counter still holding the uncut eggplant in my hand.  I didn't know how long I'd been frozen like that, but probably longer than was normal.  My group mates were staring at me, even Shy Girl the leader.

"No," I said quickly, putting the eggplant on the cutting board and starting to slice it up.

"Fujimoto-san, is there something bothering you?"

I put down my knife and stared down at the eggplant.  His voice was tight and controlled.  He was angry.

"No, Arai-sensei.  Nothing," I said.

I'd sooner spend an entire afternoon trying to teach Shy Girl how to yell than tell Arai my problems.

"Then please concentrate on your task.  A cooking group is only as good as its weakest member."

I kept my eyes down on the cutting board, and when he left, I was overwhelmed with humiliation.  To be called the weakest link in the chain wasn't exactly heart-warming.  I took my knife again and continued to chop, praying that everyone would stop staring at me.

They did, of course, and we managed to finish our eggplant and tomato sauce fettuccini dish within the given time.

Arai tried each of our dishes, but he wouldn't tell us which of the five groups' was the best.  I was learning that he liked to keep us on our toes like that.  We'd be so teeming with curiosity that we'd try harder and harder in hopes that we'd make something so delicious that Arai would simply have to comment on it to the entire class.

After finishing the tasting, we sat down for an hour lecture on our errors (and the few things we'd done correctly).  I zoned out again, and was interrupted by Arai yelling at me.  He had been asking a question about our eggplant technique.  Trying not to flush red, I asked him to repeat the question.  He did so irritably, and I pulled out an appropriate answer.  I tried to pay attention for the last portion of the class.

When everyone was leaving, Arai called me back to him.

"Are you uninterested in being here?" he asked me bluntly.

"No, sir, that's not it," I said quickly, shaking my head.

"Then please leave your distracting personal problems at the door when you come to my class."

I nodded.

"I know what it's like to be your age and just starting."

His tone had changed from cross to nostalgic.

"My age?" I asked curiously.

"Well, it's not a secret," he sighed, "but I don't usually go around advertising that I majored in physics and didn't start taking cooking lessons until I was twenty-five.  Some would say that's a bit late and too big of a jump of interests, but I think it's acceptable."

So he'd started late.  But he must've cooked since a young age.  I didn't want to ask, however, because I'd done enough to anger him.  Prying into his personal life might offend him.

"I've cooked since I was five," he said, providing me with the information I had been too reluctant to ask him for.  "With my family.  So when I first started classes, I thought they were a load of - well, you know."

I nodded and smiled at his words.

"My teachers were always so dispassionate.  No emotions allowed in the kitchen.  I complied and never brought my personal problems into the kitchen."

So that was where it was leading to.  Now he was going to lecture me about how he discovered it was a good idea to keep that detached attitude when cooking.  It was a contradiction to me because that's what cooking was for me - a way to connect emotionally with friends and family.  If I didn't have that, then what was the point?

"I learned amazing discipline at that school, but when I left to go into the real world of cooking, I realised I couldn't make it without feeling anything."

That was something I could agree with.

"What I'd learned in that class was that in order to gain that good discipline, I had to be logical.  Reasonable.  But to actually perfect the art side of it, I had to be passionate.  Angry, happy, sad, and everything in between."

I nodded.  I understood his story and his reasoning, but I wasn't sure what it had to do with me.  I'd brought my worries to class and he'd scolded me.

"So my special advice to you," he said with a smile, "is to listen to me and to realise what you are doing, but not to repress it."

I looked at him, incomprehension showing in my eyes, I hoped.

"You are the top student in this class.  I can tell after only three lessons.  You're mature enough to be passionate in the kitchen and get good results.  However, you must also learn how to manage your thoughts and worries so that they don't hinder you but help you.  Learn to channel it in the right way so that you don't stand there with an eggplant for two minutes looking like a fool."

I flushed, but nodded my head in understanding.

"I understand, Arai-sensei.  Thank you.  Next time I'll make sure to keep a better check on my problems."

He smiled warmly at me.

"Good.  Now get home.  It's late and you need rest."

I thanked him again and ran off to the apartment focusing on his face and words.  I could draw a lot of inspiration from this man.

When I got home, Aya had company over.  It was Shibata, and they were playing some sort of video game on the TV.  I frowned because it didn't fit the image I had of them.  Aya spared me a brief glance when she heard me walk in and then looked right back at the screen.

"Hi!  Good game," she said with alarming exactness as though she had allotted a certain amount of time and energy to greet me in order to return immediately to the important task of her game.

"Evening.  How are you?" Shibata chimed in as a mere perfunctory courtesy.

She didn't really want an answer.

"Dandy," I murmured half-heartedly.

I stood there waiting for them to say something else - ask me how my day was or explain the game - but they focused all of their attention on the game.  I went to Aya's room, dropped some of my things off, and then ventured back out into the living room.  The two were still engrossed and didn't seem to notice me.  Amused, I sat on the couch behind them and watched.

They each operated one character.  One looked like a Super Mario mushroom, and the other looked like a triangular chunk of green cheese with arms, legs, and big eyes.  They were going around shooting assorted animate and inanimate objects on the screen that would explode into multi-coloured stardust.  That they had to collect this stardust.  It looked fun to play.  Too bad there was no third controller.  Maybe if I expressed interest...

"It looks cool," I said.

Neither Aya nor Shibata made an attempt to respond.  All that could be heard in the room was the silly background music of the game punctuated by "oh!"s, "ah!"s, and "get him get him get him!"s from the two players.

"Hey, Aya-chan.  Are you the mushroom thingy or the deformed Sponge Bob?" I asked.

"It's a tree!" she snapped back, offended.

I pulled back in alarm and decided not to say anything more.

"It's a green piece of cheese," Shibata tossed out in a breathless voice.

They were far too into it.  I rested back, crossed my arms, and watched.  My last conscious thought was: That's not a tree.  It's a mushroom.  Definitely a mushroom.


I was pulled out of a dream by a voice calling my name.  At first, the giant mushroom chasing me started to speak in a low tone.

"Miki... Miki..."

Then the green Sponge Bob accompanying him spoke in a much more highly pitched voice.

"Miki!  Miki!"

Sponge Bob grabbed me by the legs and lifted me up.

The two voices melded into one very familiar one, and I opened my eyes, sucking in a deep breath of air.  Aya's face filled my vision, and I choked on my air in surprise.  I tried to jump up, and that's when I realised she was sitting on me.  As a result, I couldn't move.

"Have a nice nap?" Aya snickered at me, not moving.

I turned my head to look at the TV.  It was dark.  I looked for Shibata.  She wasn't in the room.

"Shiba-chan just went home," Aya informed me, reading the searching - perhaps nervous - look in my eyes.

"Oh," I said, my voice raspy with sleep.

I relaxed a bit.

"Did we bore you?"

I shook my head.  It didn't hurt to be polite sometimes.

"Liar.  I bet we did," she laughed.  "Sorry, but Shiba-chan just bought the game in Thailand and we got hooked this afternoon."

"Were you playing all afternoon?" I asked.

"Since we got back from lunch," she confirmed sheepishly.

"Aya," I groaned.  "You have no life."

"Yeah, but that's because you've been so distant the past few weeks," Aya said, starting off strongly defensive and ending quietly.

I sighed in exhaustion, fear, disappointment.  She was right.

"Yeah, well," I mumbled.  "It hasn't been easy for me."

The look on her face suggested she regretted having brought it up, and I tried to give her a reassuring look.  I pushed her off me and stretched out on the couch, patting the space beside me so that she'd join me.  She did.

"Sometimes I just feel lonely," I admitted, scared of what she'd think, what she'd say, and what she would only think and not say.

"Lonely?" she asked with a frown.  "You're not alone.  You've got me."

But that was exactly what the problem was.

"But still," I said, shifting uncomfortably.  "When stuff like before happens, I've got nobody."

Aya knew I was talking about what happened after our meeting with Ochiai.

"Yeah, okay," she conceded.  "But even when I'm acting like a superbitch from hell, you've got your other friends."

"That's still not enough.  I can't tell them the truth.  I've only really got you," I insisted.

First came the sympathetic look.  Then the worried look.  Then the guilty look. 

"I haven't been very nice to you, have I."

"No no no!" I cried in horror.  "You have.  I mean, there've been times when I've wanted to smack you, but the rest of the time you've been so good to me."

Silence dominated.  She closed her eyes.

"I'm just worried.  You're obviously not completely happy," she said.

How could I sit there and agree?  When I was in someone else's house, on someone else's couch.  I'd sound ungrateful.  Like I was incapable of looking on the bright side or showing a bit of respect.

"That's not true."

She opened an eye.

"It's not?" came her disbelieving reply.

I didn't try to lie again, and she closed her eye.

"Remember how much easier it was when we met?" I chuckled.

"Are you kidding me?" she muttered.

That's right.  It was tougher for her.  But still, it seemed that on the whole, it would have been easier to stay in Hokkaido.

"But if you want to go back, I won't stop you."

Frankly, to hear those words made me woozy.  My ears rang, or so I thought they did.  She'd let me go back.  She either no longer believed in me and wouldn't mind getting rid of me, or she loved me so much that the only important thing to her was my happiness and she was willing to let me go so I could find it.  It would have made everything easier if it had been the first one.  It was the second one, though, and as long as that remained true, there was no way I could leave without regret.

I shook my head, and then realising that her eyes were closed and that she couldn't see, I spoke.

"I won't."

She opened her eyes.

"So what do you want?" she asked.

She didn't sound testy or rude, impatient or expectant.  But she wanted to send me a message.  A message to tell me to figure out the answer, because I was the only person who could answer it.

She closed her eyes again, and I mulled over the question.  Five minutes passed.  Her breathing became slow.  She'd fallen asleep, probably mentally exhausted from playing that stupid game all afternoon.

"Aya?" I asked

No reply.

"Aya?" I asked a little more loudly.

Still no reply.

I sighed and closed my eyes.

"I don't know what I want," I said.

But, I'd sacrifice my own happiness for her, and she would do the same for me.  I'd stay here for her and she'd willingly let me go if I wasn't happy in this place.

We had passed the final test.

I let myself fall asleep.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #192 on: October 03, 2007, 12:30:22 PM »
Chapter 26 of 29

Everything has returned to normal.  We've all gone back to our proper dimensions.

I don't know how I learn about the accident, but it's shocking.  I just look up at the ceiling and suddenly know that Aya has died in some kind of accident.  A tragic, painful way to go.  I sit up and start to cry.  I haven't received a phone call.  I haven't read the newspaper.  I just know that she's gone.

And when I've cried enough to soak sleeves of my shirt, I stand up and get my phone.  I call Shibata.

"Shiba-chan," I say in a strangely calm voice.

"Miki-chan," she replies in a quiet one.

"Aya-chan," say I.

"I know," says she.

How she knows, I do not know.  I still do not know how I know.

"By the way, turn on the TV to channel twelve.  NHK news."

I do as Shibata asks, and there is footage of the remains of a riot.  I hang up the phone without saying goodbye.

"...the head of the government has been usurped by disgruntled social activists who claim all rich people should be shot.  Once considered one of the richest and safest countries in the world, Switzerland has fallen victim to a radical group that has operated underground for, some say, the past ten years.  Amidst gunfire an hour ago, it was unknown whether all the members of the federal council were still alive or not.  More on this story later.  Now, we turn back to the latest address from the new fascist government of the Kingdom of Shikoku, where sovereignty was declared two and half hours ago. It is in keeping with tradition that..."

I watch the seven o'clock news on television in shock.  How could all this have happened?  I could have sworn that Switzerland had been peaceful just a few minutes ago and that Shikoku still belonged to Japan.

A more pressing matter comes to my attention, and that is the incessant pounding at the door.  It sounds desperate, so without thinking, I get up to go and open the door.

When I do, a tall man pushes his way in, puts a gun up to my chest, and pulls the trigger.


I woke up just as the bullet pierced my sternum.

I was breathing hard and sweating.  I'd somehow turned around and was facing the back rest of the couch.  I whipped my head around to look behind me.  Aya was still there, still sleeping, still alive.  I let out the breath I'd been holding and turned around again, trying not to move the couch too much.

Was that what would happen if we all returned to our worlds?  Utter chaos and our deaths?

Ludicrous.

There was no reason for the world to descend into such pandemonium.  We weren't that important in the grand scheme of things.

But something about the thought bothered me.  Maybe my dream meant something more than what it seemed to on the surface.  I would bet that in most worlds, Switzerland would remain peaceful, happy, and out of NHK news flashes.  But maybe there was a world out there where a revolt like the one I'd seen on the news in my dream would occur.  If so, coupled with the fact that I was seeing it in my dream, then something... strange was happening...

... and I started to laugh.  What a stupid idea!  I laughed so hard that Aya woke up.

"What are you doing...?" she murmured, rubbing her eyes.

"I'm sorry.  I just had a really funny dream," I giggled.

I felt like I was losing it.  Slowly losing it in a comical way.

"Well, at least one of us did.  I dreamt about some country in Europe being overrun by crazy revolutionaries, and then I was somehow killed in a crash just before I woke up."

I stopped laughing and froze. 

"Switzerland?" I asked in a frightened tone.

She shook her head.

"No.  The UK, I think.  Why did you think Switzerland?"

Could it just have been a coincidence that we'd both dreamt about countries falling?  That we'd both been killed?

It had to have been.  I didn't believe in things like shared dreams, prophetic dreams, and those sorts of mystical phenomena.  They were plot devices in badly written novels.  They were scary stories made up by people who wanted attention on TV.  They were not things of this world.  I didn't care if people went dimension travelling.  People simply could not share dreams.

"No reason.  Just that my dream was about Switzerland," I said nonchalantly.

She looked mildly curious, but I didn't share.

"Miki," she said after a while of lying there contemplating our own dreams.

"Mhmm?"

"I feel like I haven't seen you in weeks."

She spoke in a sad tone.  One that asked me for many things.  She inched closer and I looked at the ceiling resolutely, trying to control my breathing so that I wouldn't give off a sigh that sounded frustrated.  She held onto my arm and put her chin on my shoulder.

"I've been busy," I said carefully.  "So have you."

I turned my face to look at her and give her a small smile.  She didn't smile back.  Just stared and tightened her grip on me.

"I'm here now," I tried.

That just seemed to make her appear antsy, and I looked back at the ceiling, feeling tired and just wanting to go back to sleep but without the unpleasant dreams.

"But I'm sleepy."

I closed my eyes.

"Then go back to sleep," she said lightly.

This surprised me and made me open my eyes.  I thought for sure that she'd get angry at me for wanting to sleep when we finally had a moment of time longer than one hour to ourselves.

"But I'll be waiting for you right here when you wake up," she tagged on saucily.

Oh, you crazy lady.  Always knowing what you want, I thought to myself amusedly, considering not taking a nap.

Then the strangest sensation came over me.  It was like somebody had injected a sedative directly into my bloodstream, because I became inexplicably exhausted.  So much so that I couldn't keep my eyes open for a second longer.  I needed to fall into a deep sleep that moment or I would die of weariness.

I saw Aya's eyes looking droopy, too, and her hold loosened completely.

Maybe... she's sleepy... too...

Sleep came a little too instantly.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #193 on: October 03, 2007, 12:30:52 PM »
Chapter 27 of 29

I was back in the same dream I'd been in moments before.  I was sitting on the floor watching the TV.  On the screen was footage of war.  Peruvian citizens being ambushed by Norwegian soldiers, then a quick cut to Egyptian air forces bombing Beijing.

"What's going on?" I demanded out loud.

I posed the question to the TV, to the world, and to anyone who cared to try and answer.

"Miki?" a voice asked from behind me.

I turned around and saw Aya sitting on the couch.  She looked like the one I knew, but who knew what she would do.  In dreams - or at least mine - people rarely acted like their true selves.

This Aya, however, reacted in a very Aya way.  She stood up looking concerned.

"What's going on here?" she asked.  "Why did all these world problems start?"

I stood up as well.

"You mean you don't know?"

"Huh?  How would I know?" she asked with a frown.  "You're the dream.  You should know."

Me?  I was the dream?  No I wasn't.  She was the dream.  Unless...

I reached a hand over and touched her arm.  It felt very real.  I pinched it a few times, making Aya brush my hand away with a frown.

This Aya wasn't some dream.  She was real.  Very real, and I could feel her arm as clearly as the sun shone in the sky on a fair day.

"Wait.  Aya?  You're real?" I asked.

"Yeah.  So are you...?" she trailed off, looking confused.  "Are we in a dream together?"

"No!" I scoffed.  "That's stupid!"

She looked at me in awe.

"Oh my god.  We are."

"But I just said-"

"But why?" she cut in, not letting me continue protesting.  "How?"

As if in response to her questions, the room melted away.  I had never seen a room melt away, never thought it possible, but that's exactly what it did.  Like paint washed away by rain, the features of the room ran down, down, down and left us in a black void of emptiness.  As the colours of our previous setting faded, so did the light.  It grew darker and darker, and a claustrophobic kind of fear gripped my heart when we were plunged into total darkness.  I couldn't see a single thing.  I felt like I'd been buried in dirt and would disintegrate from existence.

"Aya," I rasped out, frightened.

She couldn't reply.  All she did was let out a squeak of terror that was probably supposed to be my name.  I reached out with my arms and groped around blindly in the dark until I found her hands.  I held onto them tightly and shut my eyes.

It's all in my head, I told myself.  It's all in my head.

"It's just a dream," I reassured her in a trembling voice that could hardly be said to be comforting.  "We'll wake up eventually.  Just a dream.  You're okay.  Okay?  You're all right."

I could hear her trying to keep a check on her breath and I could feel her shaking.  Or maybe that was me shaking.

Who knows how long we stood there.  It felt like forever and a half.

And then we saw it.  One of Aya's hands tightened on mine and she brought her other hand up to turn my head in the direction in which she must have been looking.  In what appeared to be "the distance" was a faint light.  It was moving towards us.  I turned my body so that I could keep an eye on the approaching light source.  It grew bright enough to be able to see my immediate surroundings, and I saw Aya looking paler than usual.  I tried to smile at her, but it must have come out as a grimace of fear because her hand squeezed mine in such a painful way that I wanted to cry.

The light grew brighter and brighter as we watched.  There was nothing else we could do.  Whether what came with the light was helpful or malicious, we had nowhere to go and no way to move.  We were in the middle of nothing.

I noticed something after a few seconds.  There was something in front of the light.  A silhouette.  It drew closer as though it were walking.  Walking on air?  I couldn't tell.  It came closer and closer as it got brighter and brighter.

This person... This person will know what's going on.  He has to.  Maybe we'll even know him.  Maybe he'll be... Tsuyoshi-kun.  Now that would be funny!

I began to giggle to myself and Aya looked over, all fear erased from her face and replaced by disbelief.

"What are you laughing about?" she asked in a strong voice.

I cleared my throat and settled down.

"I was thinking about Tsuyoshi-kun," I said, still grinning stupidly.

"You're thinking about some nineteen year old kid at a time like this?"

"Eh..."

My face fell as I tried to explain.

"I just thought it would be funny if-"

The approaching person interrupted me.  No, not the approaching person.  He had finished approaching and now stood before us.  No, not he.  She.

"There has been a mistake," the woman said.  "This was never supposed to happen."

She spoke in a soft voice, but one that commanded attention.  Her face, like her voice, was lovely and gentle-looking, yet its perfectly symmetrical beauty couldn't call attention away from the incredible hardness in her eyes.  They were eyes that belonged to one much older than the twenty-five years she looked.

She was tall, or at least she appeared to be.  Maybe it was an illusion.  It was hard to judge height when we all seemed to be floating in nothingness.  She had dark black hair that fell as far as the middle of her back.  Perhaps, however, the strangest thing about her was the absolute lack of whacky clothing.  I had imagined someone wearing a cloak and holding a staff, but this woman was dressed in a fashionable skirt suit that looked like it had just been ironed and put on.  She looked like a model for an office lady recruitment poster.  The only thing that was off about her professional attire was a set of four ear piercings, two in each earlobe.  Nothing extreme.

For an insane moment where I lost all sense of perspective and purpose, I focused on the meaning behind keeping those earrings in.  Why hadn't she removed them?  She would have looked like the perfect OL if she had.  Instead, she kept them in.  Maybe to make those around her question her moves.  Maybe she was making a statement.  A rebellious statement.

And as I stared at this woman's ears, Aya poked me.

"Say something," she hissed.

"Wha...?" I asked, startled out of my contemplation.

"She's not talking.  You're not talking.  It got awkwardly quiet for a minute."

I looked at the newly arrived woman's face.  She was watching us with an air of interest, but she was making no move to explain herself or her statement.

"What's going on?" I asked abruptly.

The woman blinked once calmly.

"I'm here to explain.  Things are not supposed to be like this.  Time has gone wrong."

Great.  We were stuck in a nightmare-ish dream with a woman who wanted to get her enigmatic game on and confuse the hell out of us.  Nothing could have sparked more irritation in me than that at the moment.

"Who are you?  Father Time?" I asked sarcastically.

The woman did not look amused.  She pierced me with a glare that made me shudder and re-evaluate my first impression of her.  Not so kind.

"I'm here doing you a favour," she said icily.  "I've brought you to this dream world to try and fix what's gone wrong."

Ashamed to have snapped at someone claiming to help us, I broke eye contact and looked at Aya, who was still squeezing my hand.  We shared a look.  We both didn't know what was happening.  We both didn't understand this woman or this situation.  Was she real like us?  Or part of the dream?  Maybe if we could touch her we would be able to tell.  We could try touching her ears.

Stop it with the ears, I scolded myself.

Fear brought out the most irrational fixations.

"What's gone wrong?" Aya asked, sounding a lot calmer than expected.

Now that we had light and we could see who we were dealing with, she must have gotten over her initial fear enough to start searching for answers.

"The fabric between the worlds has been chafed, worn down.  Holes have appeared and caused incredible flow between all realities.  One incident set it off."

She didn't seem willing to share any more information with us.  Any warmth that I had seen in her face before was gone.  She was all business now.

"Well?" I asked impatiently.  "What was it?"

Aya put a hand on my arm to calm me down.  It worked somewhat, but the woman standing in front of us was starting to rub me the wrong way.  Where had she come from?  What was she going to do?  Was she going to separate me and Aya?

"In your terms of measuring time, it would have been about four and a half months ago."

Four and a half months ago... Four and a half months ago... Four and a half months ago was...

"When we met?" I asked her and pointing between me and Aya.

The woman nodded sternly.

"We weren't supposed to meet?" Aya asked in a frightened tone.

The woman said nothing.

"What was it?" I pressed again.

"I don't wish to cause any more harm to this stream of time," she said resolutely.

That meant "no".

"I'd say it's messed up just as badly whether you tell us or not," I muttered.

She looked surprised and then thoughtful.  For a moment I felt enormous pride for having made a useful point.  Also, for a moment I thought she was going to tell us.  Alas, she still refused.

"All I can tell you is that something terrible and inexcusable happened in the main dimension four and a half months ago."

"The main dimension?" Aya asked.

The woman nodded and took a breath and pointed to Aya.

"You are from the main dimension."

That certainly didn't explain anything.

"But what do you mean by main dimension?" Aya asked as I stayed silent and listened, trying to form a theory of my own.

"A term I use to help me define dimensions.  You don't have to understand completely.  All you need to know is that there is one dimension that is considered the most likely and ideal.  It takes the most-likely-to-happen possibilities and moves forward in that way."

"Huh?  Like a paradise?" I asked.

If Aya was from some paradise-like dimension, I wondered if humankind's literary interpretation of paradise had been a little skewed.  It didn't sound like everything was dandy in her world.  There was still war and hunger and poverty...

"Oh, no," the woman chuckled (was that a condescending chuckle or was she amused by something else?).  "Perhaps for you, 'ideal' means 'joyous', but in greater terms, 'ideal' comes to mean something more inclusive of other feelings and outcomes.  There may be death and misery, but it is ideal for the dimension to experience those things as opposed to some other courses of action that may lead to the destruction of that world.  Do you follow me?"

"In Japanese, please," a nonplussed Aya said.

This dream was turning into a university seminar.

"She's saying that perfect doesn't necessarily equal happy," I summarised for her, and she nodded in understanding.

"If she's from the main dimension, what am I from?" I asked, feeling a little offended that my world wasn't considered one hundred percent "correct" by... whoever this cold lady with the ears was.

"You're from one of the infinite branches.  The main dimension takes the main road, and at each junction - that is to say at every single moment of time - the infinite number of decisions that can be made are made.  They occur uninhibited along paths that branch off from the main road.  They may run parallel to the main road at some points or they may twist away wildly and become completely different.  You are from one that runs fairly parallel to the main one."

Geez, seriously.  Next time I dream about this lady, remind me to bring a gun with me.  First to shoot her and then myself..

"Then what happened?  Why did we meet?" Aya asked, pointing to me.

Why did we meet?

Her question echoed in my head. 

Why did we meet?

So it all came down to this most important question: Why in the world would we have met?  Because we weren't supposed to have met.  So why did we?

I had secretly wanted to believe all of Aya's silly "it's destiny!" statements, but now I knew that I had been right in brushing them off.  Unfortunately.  Our meeting was not fated, but a big mistake.

A mistake.

So that meant that I'd never had a chance.  Not since we met.  All the decisions I had made from the moment I met Aya had all been based on a mistake.  None of it was supposed to have happened.  It was all a waste.

"Something happened four and a half months ago in the main dimension because of the eroded walls.  It caused you," the woman nodded at Aya, "to be thrown into the present Fujimoto's world just before the event occurred again for the first time - and don't bother trying to figure that sentence out.  That action was that world's natural defence mechanism against the situation from worsening.  Unfortunately, the situation proved very difficult to find, so up until now, the passageway between worlds has been widening."

"But if this is my world then why are my people reacting to me like freaks?" I demanded.

Even if this woman was telling the truth, it made no sense.

"The present Matsuura was not the only person to be moved or affected," the woman said matter of factly, making me feel stupid.  "I'm aware that you have met with another dimension's Ochiai.  As for the people of your world, they were affected by the flow of ideas between worlds.  It's not simply a physical problem.  Ideas and beliefs have been circulating through realities by way of these holes.  People have suddenly been coming to know things that they have not in fact learned.

"So that's why," I mumbled, feeling enlightened and depressed simultaneously.

"Yes.  There was a large spill of knowledge, which, I have come understand, has caused you great distress, no?"

I didn't answer her question because all present knew what the answer was.  I had a feeling she was just trying to irritate me further.  Make me blow up so that she could take the moral high ground and treat me like a rambunctious child, putting me in my place with condescension.  I wouldn't let her.

"What was it that happened in my world?" Aya asked, probably hoping to stop a round of abuse from me to the self-proclaimed guardian of time.

The woman fixed Aya with a stoic look that scared me.

"You don't need to know that."

The nerve of this horrid woman.  Scaring us half to death in the darkness and then coming with her lifesaving light, telling us bits and pieces while making us scramble around for the rest.

What could have happened that would have gotten Aya thrown out as part of a natural defence mechanism?  It must have been something terrible.

I suddenly had a bad feeling that I knew what it might be.

"She was going to die, wasn't she," I stated.  "Aya-chan was going to die."

The woman didn't acknowledge my words.

"Why would you say that?" Aya asked, sounding hurt, sounding scared.

"I don't know," I said quietly.  "I just get this feeling.  And those dreams we had before coming here.  Mine also, um, had you dying in it."

There was silence.

"But didn't you say you had a funny dream?" Aya asked in a dangerous tone.

I gulped.

"Uh, yeah, but not that part.  No, that part was not funny," I said quickly.

She glared at me.

Way to inject humour into the situation, I thought.  There we were being told that the entire universe was out of balance and she was scolding me for laughing at her death (which was a misunderstanding seeing as how I'd never laugh at the idea of her dying).

"But am I right?" I asked my nemesis.

She didn't answer my question.

"I'm in charge of fixing things.  Restoring everything and everybody, repairing the holes, and making sure none of this ever happens again," she stated.

That wasn't what I had asked.  That did not answer my-

Wait, I thought, timidly working through my idea in my mind.  If lady with the ears here is in charge of fixing everything, that means she'll return everyone and everything - like ideas - to their proper worlds.  If she does, then she'll probably restore everything back to the time just before everything went wrong.  That would place us in... hmmm, late October.  That would mean that winter would not have started yet and that I would not have met...

"Wait!" I yelled.

The woman had raised a hand.  Aya looked at me, startled.

"Miki, what is it?" she asked in an alarmed voice.

"You can't!" I yelled at the lady, who was tracing something I couldn't see in the air.

"Can't what?  Fix it?" Aya asked.

I grabbed her shoulders, turning her to face me squarely.

"She's taking you away," I said through grit teeth.  "I'm not gonna meet you."

I dug my fingers into her flesh, holding on in fear that she'd suddenly disappear.

"But she has to restore everything back to normal," Aya said calmly.

Of course.  She had her own world and her own Miki.  Her perfect, ideal world where she had the best of everything.  She had another me, another set of friends, a dream job...  She wouldn't miss anything. 

But me?  I would miss out on everything.  I had no Aya of my own.  At least not one that I knew.  I'd be back where I started in my crummy town where I was forced to live my parents' life and become the wife of a farmer.

"How can you stand there and say that?!" I screamed at her, shaking her.

I looked up desperately at the lady.  Some sort of green light had started to trail behind her finger's movements.  She was tracing words, but not words in any language I knew.

"At least you have something that you're going back to.  I've got nothing!"

Angry tears dripped down my cheeks one by one.  Aya's face turned sympathetic.

But I didn't want her sympathy.  I just wanted her to stay.  Or say she would miss me.  Or help me stop the nasty woman who was going to tear us apart.

"You won't remember me," she said confidentially.

No!  I could never forget her.  Never ever ever.  Not in a million years.

"Don't say that," I bit back.  "That's a lie."

"Miki, let go.  You're hurting me."

But I didn't pay attention.  I hugged her tightly so that she couldn't get away.

"So this is how it ends?" I asked.  "Role reversal?  I'm the one that needs you more?  And you don't care?  Aren't you going to miss me?"

I felt her squirm at my bombardment of questions, but then she miraculously stopped and hugged me back.  Tightly.

"Of course I'm going to miss you," she said, her voice finally cracking.  "But I'm trying to be strong for both of us.  We have to let go."

I pulled away and looked at the woman.  Her earrings had started to glow a light violet.  A strong wind started up.  I looked back at Aya and noticed a thin, wet trail going down her cheeks.  Tears.

"I don't wanna leave you," I stammered.  "I can't.  I can't go back to living that way.  Don't let her take you away."

I looked at the woman who was now writing furiously in the air, green characters appearing and disappearing and appearing again.

"Stop it!  Stop what you're doing!" I screamed.

I lunged for her, but Aya caught me and held me back.  I struggled to get to the woman, screaming profanities at her while at the same time begging for her to stop and let us wake up.  I was thinking of all the things in the past four and half months that I'd experienced.  The good and the bad.  The moments I'd shared with Aya, with Kuniko, with Tsuyoshi, with Katherine. The things Aya and I had overcome and the times when we'd been at our happiest.  All of that would be stolen away from me by this woman.  It would be like dying.  Worse than dying.

"You don't know what you're doing!" I sobbed, clutching Aya's shirt in my hands, burying my face in it, gritting my teeth.  "You're going to ruin everything.  My life..."

The wind picked up.  I looked up and saw Aya looking down at me, tears in her eyes.

"I'm sorry, Miki.  I really am."

I could barely hear her voice.  It was so soft, so apologetic.

"You know that thing they say about it b-being better to have loved and lost than to-to never have loved at all?" I stammered, the noise from the wind almost swallowing my words.

She nodded and I almost couldn't go on because I found it hard to breathe through my crying.  I opened my mouth to tell her what I thought about that phrase when suddenly there was an impossibly bright flash of white light that made me close my eyes.

I lost consciousness.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #194 on: October 03, 2007, 12:31:36 PM »
Chapter 28 of 29

My eyes crack open a fraction of a centimetre.  I let out a cranky groan and open them all the way.  I roll up to sit and stretch my arms above my head.  My back cracks in a few places and makes me wince.  I stand up and go to my window, pulling the curtain aside just a tad.

"First frost," I mumble sleepily but happily.

The ground and plants outside are covered in a barely visible layer of white frost.

I get dressed quickly and go downstairs.

"Good morning," my mom greets me.

"Morning," I reply.

I pour myself a cup of tea and go to sit in front of the TV in the living room.

"... though there are still two months to go before Christmas, some people have already started ordering their cakes from this famous bakery..."

The news doesn't interest me at all.  I finish my tea and decide to skip breakfast.  I'm not feeling hungry.  I go upstairs, brush my teeth, and put the finishing touches on my face.  I head out, saying goodbye to my mother on the way out the door.

I walk down the street.  At the back of my mind, I think I hear someone call out my name.  It sounds like Nakanoko-chan.  I turn around but see a group of children playing off in the distance.  Maybe I just heard them yelling something that sounded like my name.  I shrug and keeping walking.

I reach the outskirts of the town and keep going, walking up a hill, descending, and then walking up the next.  I reach a point where I can see my whole town.

I feel rejuvenated.  It must be the fresh air.  I'm bored in this town, but I know that there's a lot more out there in the world.  I'm filled with hope.  Maybe I'll suggest to Hiroshi that we move in together in Sapporo when we finish school.  There's more to do there in the big city.  There are far more opportunities than in this crumbling town.  I'll bring up the subject with him soon.

I look up at the cloudy sky.  The first snowfall will be coming soon.  I can tell.  One of these days I'll wake up and the ground will be covered in a beautiful blanket of white fluff.

Bring it on, I think with a smile.

I picture Hiroshi's face grinning back at me, and I'm filled with that amazing tingly feeling that one usually feels during the first stages of a relationship.  I get that often with Hiroshi even though we've been going out for two years.  That's how I know that everything's still okay.

I spend a long time looking up at the sky.  It makes me feel small but free. 

Life is grand.

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page]
« Reply #195 on: October 03, 2007, 12:41:24 PM »
Chapter 29 of 29

My eyes crack open a fraction of a centimetre.  I let out a cranky groan and open them all the way.  I roll up to sit and stretch my arms above my head.  My back cracks in a few places and makes me wince.  I touch my jaw.  It hurts.  What the...

Oh.  Right.  I look beside me.  I'm alone.

What?  Where's Miki?

I stand up and shuffle out of my bedroom.  I look in the living room and the kitchen, but there's no sign of Miki.  I frown.  Where has she gone?

I hear running water, and I smile, walking over to the washroom.  I poke my head in and see Miki washing her face.

"Morning."

"Morning."

I join her at the sink and clean my own face.

"So," I say conversationally.  "Today I leave."

Miki nods stoically.

"Will you miss me?"

She says nothing.  She cups her hands under the water and suddenly splashes it in my face.  I gasp in surprise.

"Yes," she says in a sweet and innocent voice.  "You'd better bring me back some cool souvenir."

I wipe my face with an annoyed look.

"I will," I deadpan.

The nerve of the girl!

"Hey, I forgot to tell you yesterday, but Shige-san e-mailed and asked me to pass on a heartfelt good luck.  She's in Saipan now, but she's thinking of you."

"Thanks," I smile.

My heart warmed, I go off to get dressed.  Miki joins me a second later.  Her attitude has changed entirely, and she drapes herself onto my back.

"Do you have to go?" she whines.

But under the bratty act that she's putting on, there's a genuine plea for me to stay.

"I think it'll be good for me, Miki-chan," I tell her, trying to retain my calm.

If she tempts and pushes me too much, I'll end up quitting my job.  I'm this close to doing it.

She knows it because she smiles, gives me a kiss on the nose, and speaks of it no more.  She would never want to come in the way of what I love to do, even if I have to go somewhere far away.

We say goodbye that evening.  It's a tearless farewell like we earlier agreed to do.  Three months isn't too long.  At least Italy is still on the same planet as Japan.

I go downstairs.  As I'm riding the elevator down, there's a moment where I think I can't do it.  I want to stop the elevator and go back up, lock myself in my apartment and not let my boss get me.

The moment passes, and soon enough I'm loading my things into the taxi.  Just before we go, I look up at my apartment window and see Miki standing there and watching.  I wave cheerfully, and then we drive off. 

See you in three months, I think as we head to the airport.

A the airport, I meet up with my manager and a helper.  We go through all the motions of taking an international flight.

As we're walking to the gate, a girl drops her passport holder and doesn't notice.

"Excuse me!" I call out, rushing forward to pick the valuable item up.

The girl doesn't notice my voice in the din of the busy airport.  She keeps walking.  I look at the holder and see her given name written on it.

"Naomi-san!" I call out.

She turns around, and I wave the passport at her.  She smiles brilliantly and walks to me, taking her passport back.

"Thank you so much!" she says with a grateful bow and the smile.

"You're welcome," I say, returning the smile.

We part, but a few minutes later, I notice that she's also taking the same flight as me.  We smile knowingly at each other when I walk by her sitting at our departure gate.

As I sit and wait for boarding to start, I write Miki a last message.  I'm not sure what to say.  I've never really been tongue tied around this girl until now.  At least not when we're on good terms.  I don't know what's appropriate, so I stick to light.

Just wanted to say thank you for helping me pack all my things. My plane takes off soon.  This is the last chance to contact you before I get to Milan.  Behave yourself.  I promise to call you tomorrow.

I insert the meanest little face I can find into the message.

And water my plants!!  Goodnight, Miki.  Talk to you tomorrow.

I finish it with a red heart and press send, closing my eyes and leaning back.

A reply comes soon.  I read it and try to imagine Miki's voice speaking the words.

I'll be good if you send me cool souvenirs.  Take care.  I look forward to your call tomorrow.  Call at four am if you want to.  No matter how grumpy I get, you know I still kind of like you.  Later.

Big red heart.

What a joker.  I giggle to myself and turn off my phone just as the first boarding announcement is made.

We board the plane and we take off.  I watch two movies and then fall asleep when I can no longer resist.

Bad turbulence wakes me up.  The seatbelt sign is turned on, and I double check to make sure that I'm wearing mine.  I look out the window.  It's cloudy and I can't see a thing.   No, wait.  I can.  Poking out from the clouds below us, I see peaks.  Mountain peaks.  They are all capped with ice.  It's a breathtakingly beautiful sight.

The plan gives a few terrifying jerks, and the co-pilot comes on the air with an announcement, reassuring us that we're going through a patch of stormy weather but that it will pass.  The turbulence, however, gets worse, and my knuckles are now white from gripping my blanket in my hand.  My manager looks rather pale-faced, too.

Then as soon as it started, it's over.  The rest of the flight is smooth.  We land without incident.  I step only Italian soil for the first time in my life.

I take a deep breath in.  I'll be here for three months.  I'd better get used to everything quickly.

I go through customs, pick up my luggage, and am whisked away to my hotel before I can have a moment to take in this new, foreign land. 

A million things happen at the hotel, but it ends with me being escorted to my (very large!) room and shown how to place international calls.  Once everyone leaves my room, the first thing I do is pick up the phone and dial.  It takes me three tries to get it right, but once the phone starts ringing, I feel so excited that I can barely contain myself.

Five rings later, a sleepy voice answers.

"...'lo?"

"Miki?" I ask.

"Hey!" she exclaims, perking up.  "Took you long enough."

I laugh.

"Sorry for waking you up," I apologise.

She brushes it off quickly.  For once, I'm deemed more important than her favourite pastime - sleeping.

"Everything okay over there?" she asks.

"Mmhmm," I say with a nod she can't see.  "The people seem pleasant, but I haven't had much time to talk to anyone.  Everything okay over there?"

"Hmmm," she hums cheerily.  "Work is work.  Busy, but it's all good."

"That's good," I say with a smile.

There's a knock at my door.  That's my manager coming to pick me up.

"I have to go, Miki.  My reception..."

She snickers through a yawn.  I say goodnight, and she mumbles back quickly that she misses me, hanging up before I can reply.  I smirk at her shyness.

I go and open the door.  There's my manager as predicted.  She's looking just as sleepy as I feel.  I can't help but laugh at her.

"Ready to go and pretend you're awake and aware?" she asks me.

"Yeah, sure," I drawl.

Then together we head to the elevator in the hotel in a city in a foreign country that is thousands of kilometres away from my home.

But despite the distance, I've never felt so close to Miki.  Maybe something has been awakened in me, but I feel like I have to treasure every second that I know her.  I guess distance really does make you appreciate the things you have. 

I can't help but let a big smile take its place on my face.  I ignore Keiko's inquisitive look while I lean back and realise how good my life is.


The end of story 12 and of the entire series. 

Questions, comments, criticisms, and corrections are always welcome.

Congratulations (and apologies) if you managed to read all of this.  A million thank yous to everyone.

~OTN

Offline capap

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page] Complete
« Reply #196 on: June 19, 2008, 08:39:29 AM »
I register just to comment here! GJ writing this story! I enjoyed it very much. Took me a week to finish it all but so worth it.  :muffin:

Offline OTN1

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page] Complete
« Reply #197 on: June 19, 2008, 03:23:05 PM »
Thanks!  Hahaha, it feels so long since I finished this story.  It's hard to believe that people are still reading it!  I'm glad you enjoyed it.

Offline JFC

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page] Complete
« Reply #198 on: June 20, 2008, 12:50:54 AM »
Dang, I was wondering what bumped up the most epic fanfic here. :lol:

JPH!P :heart:'s kuro808, Fushigidane, ChrNo, Jab & marimari. Always.

Offline ayase909

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Re: Love x 2 (the entire series) [easy navigation on 1st page] Complete
« Reply #199 on: July 27, 2008, 10:45:28 AM »
 :dizzy: it took me a long time to finish reading this story............................ it's amazing! but i did a bit confused a little but the thing is.................WOW! really!


but you know......dont you have a plan continuing the story???? how about the other miki who havent given the chance to meet aya,,,,the one with hiroshi???? the one who is begging not to reverse all that happened??? dont you think its a bit unfair???? a world of miki without aya but........??? :badluck: :OMG: :depressed: :fainted: :err: :frustrated: :pleeease: :scared: :tantrum: that would descibed how i felt right now.....poor miki -the other one without aya-

the bottom line is that.......YOU ARE AMAZING ONE! haha :luvluv1:




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