Innocent World: Chapter 3
"Sir, we've arrived," the driver said, waking Yamamura
from his deep sleep in the back seat.
"Get out first," he muttered.
Even after speaking to him, Hirokuni didn’t move. He was looking
straight at him, so he had to have heard, but there was no reaction.
"I said, go!"
Yamamura added some hand gestures, and Hirokuni finally stepped out
of the car. Yamamura paid the fare and followed him outside, running towards
the apartment. The rain was heavier than it looked. Once he was under the
awning, he turned around and saw Hirokuni standing in the rain, even though
there had been plenty of time to follow him.
A drop of water fell from the plastic bag Hirokuni was holding in
his right hand. He hadn’t been able to salvage anything from the burned-down
house, so all he had were a few changes of clothes and underwear that Arisawa
had bought for him.
"This way."
Yamamura called out and started climbing the metal stairs. A loud clanging
echoed behind him at regular intervals. Even when Yamamura reached the top and
stood in front of his door, the noisy footsteps continued. When he looked back,
he saw Hirokuni standing in the middle of the stairwell, stomping both feet
like a child.
"What the hell are you doing?"
The glee on Hirokuni's face made it clear he was playing. Yamamura
couldn’t shake the creepy feeling that something was wrong with this guy’s
head.
"Stop messing around and get over here."
But Hirokuni ignored him and kept stomping, even adding a weird song
to his antics. People walking down the street below turned to stare, throwing
curious and suspicious glances their way. Embarrassed beyond words, Yamamura
rushed halfway down the stairs.
"Cut it out already!"
He grabbed the arm of the man who was completely absorbed in his
little game and dragged him up the rest of the stairs.
"Don’t play on the stairs. It’s annoying!"
Even though Yamamura raised his voice in anger, Hirokuni just
smiled, his expression completely different from the blank look he had at the
hotel. The smile felt mocking, and it irritated Yamamura.
If Hirokuni kept this up every time they went up or down the stairs,
it would be unbearable. Yamamura crouched down in front of Hirokuni and smacked
his legs below the knees. He’d once heard from a guy he used to date that when
dealing with a dog or cat, you had to scold them right then and there so they’d
learn it was bad behavior.
"Don’t ever play on the stairs again."
Hirokuni just stood there, wide-eyed and confused. Yamamura snorted,
pulled out his keys from his bag, and unlocked the door. Then, from beside him,
he heard the faint sound of stomping. Hirokuni was stomping his feet again and
occasionally slapping his legs, probably mimicking Yamamura’s earlier action.
This idiot didn’t think he was being scolded at all. He didn’t understand
anything. Worse than a dog or cat.
Yamamura dragged the still-stomping Hirokuni inside the apartment.
If the nosy old hag next door noticed him, she’d be a nuisance later.
Yamamura kicked off his shoes and stepped inside. As he scratched
his head, the neat hairstyle he’d kept to look good for Arisawa became
disheveled in an instant. He waded through the mess of old magazines, plastic
bags, and dirty clothes, tossed his fake glasses onto the table, and sat on the
bed without even bothering to take off his suit jacket.
He let out a long sigh. If things were like this from the start, the
future didn’t look promising. He had thought that as long as Hirokuni didn’t
talk and wasn’t in the way, everything would be fine, but now he wasn’t so
sure. Maybe he had acted too rashly… Yamamura was already starting to regret
his decision.
He heard the creak of the tatami mats. When Yamamura opened his eyes
and looked at Hirokuni’s feet, he was shocked.
"Take off your damn shoes!"
Hirokuni was standing in the middle of the room, still wearing his
soaked sneakers. Yamamura pointed at his feet, and Hirokuni seemed to
understand, staring down at them. Then, for some reason, he started stomping
again, shoes still on, right on top of the tatami. Anger bubbled up from deep
inside Yamamura.
"I told you to take them off! What the hell have you been doing
since you came to Japan? Isn’t it common sense to take off your shoes when you
enter someone’s home? Didn’t anyone teach you that?"
Even though Yamamura was shouting, Hirokuni showed no sign of
removing his shoes. Furious, Yamamura stomped over to him, making loud, heavy
steps of his own.
"Sit."
Perhaps understanding single words, Hirokuni sat down on the spot,
hugging his knees. Yamamura grabbed Hirokuni by the ankles, pulled off his
sneakers one by one, and theatrically hurled them toward the entrance. The
front door echoed with a loud thud, thud as the shoes hit it.
"Take your shoes off at the entrance."
Yamamura spat the words out. Hirokuni stared at the shoes lying by
the door, then suddenly got up and started kicking around plastic bags and
scraps of paper that were scattered on the floor.
"Don’t kick stuff, idiot!"
Hirokuni wandered around the room aimlessly before heading to the
kitchen and opening the fridge without asking. He peered inside, showing no
restraint. This was the worst.
Yamamura pulled a lighter and cigarettes from his jacket and lit
one. The nicotine slightly dulled his irritation, rising as white smoke.
Hirokuni closed the fridge door, holding two eggs in his right hand.
Yamamura hadn’t even known they were there, nor could he remember when he
bought them. They might have been from last year. Hirokuni cracked one egg on
the edge of the sink, gulping down the contents in one swift motion. He did the
same with the second egg, then licked his lips with satisfaction.
"Hope you get food poisoning and die," Yamamura muttered
under his breath.
By the time it was past 5 PM, a fierce hunger hit Yamamura as he
woke from his nap. Why am I this hungry? he wondered, tilting his head,
before remembering he hadn’t eaten all day. He’d overslept in the morning, and
during the afternoon, he was so infuriated by Hirokuni’s idiocy that he’d
sulked and gone back to sleep.
…When he returned from the convenience store, Hirokuni was stirring
from between the bed and the clothes rack. His upper body was bare. Though he
had been wearing a shirt during the trip, he’d discarded it at some point.
Yamamura swept the magazines and pens off the table onto the tatami,
clearing a space to set down two bento boxes. Hirokuni got a cheap nori bento, while Yamamura had a Makunouchi bento. The obvious difference in quality was meant as a blatant dig, but
Hirokuni didn’t seem to care. He eagerly tore off the packaging and started
devouring the food with his hands. His eating was more beastly than hearty.
Yamamura found himself staring, captivated by the sheer wildness of it,
forgetting his own meal in the process.
Hirokuni took a sip from a plastic bottle of tea, grimaced, and
never touched it again. In about three minutes, he finished eating, then
meticulously licked his dirty hands clean before sticking his mouth under the
faucet to drink water. Once he was done, he lay down on his side, avoiding the
trash scattered on the tatami, and closed his eyes. He attacked his food the
moment he saw it, and now, full, he was going to sleep—just like an animal.
Though Yamamura found Hirokuni’s shaved head exasperating, when he
was silent and still, he didn’t look like the kind of guy who’d eat with his
hands. He looked like any ordinary twenty-two-year-old man sleeping.
The sound of rain grew louder. Through the window, still open and
without curtains drawn, Yamamura could see raindrops pelting against the glass.
He went to the fridge and pulled out a beer.
From above, Yamamura could see Hirokuni's small nipples, hard and
pointed, and he gulped down his saliva. Even knowing what lay underneath,
feeling aroused was inevitable. It was a natural reaction, just like getting
turned on by gravure idols or adult videos. If it had been some kid who hadn’t
even hit puberty yet, or a middle-aged man with a flabby belly, it would’ve
been completely out of the question. But Hirokuni, at least in terms of
appearance, was within range. He was skinny, but his body was firm, and his
butt was well-shaped.
Realizing he had been staring at Hirokuni’s body like he was
devouring it with his eyes, Yamamura walked over to the window and sat down
with his back against the wall. He took a sip of beer while staring off into
the distance, his gaze unfocused like looking at a gravure model from afar.
He had become aware of his own sexual preferences back in middle
school. Like the majority of others with the same inclination, he naturally
became conscious of men, and naturally, he began wanting to have sex with men.
Of course, he never told anyone. There was one effeminate boy in his grade who
was relentlessly bullied for all three years. Watching that kid being dragged
to the corner of the schoolyard, Yamamura thought to himself, If I say anything, I’ll probably end up just
like him.
At seventeen, he slept with a man for the first time. There was a
gay guy at his part-time job who easily saw through his preferences. Once the
guy realized Yamamura was inexperienced, he took him to his usual bar. That
night, Yamamura hooked up with the first guy who approached him, doing it in
the bathroom of the bar. He’d forgotten the guy’s face and name, but the raspy
moans and the musky smell of sweat from the man’s neck were still vividly
imprinted in his memory.
Once he had a taste of men, something clicked inside him. Whenever
he felt the urge, he went to the bar. Being young meant never having trouble
finding a partner. Sometimes, guys even approached him and asked for a
relationship, and he went out with a few of them, but none of the relationships
lasted long. He quickly grew bored of the same person. He always wanted to try
someone new. Looking around, he realized everyone else was the same. Short
cycles were the norm, and he wasn’t the only one.
From his late teens to his early twenties, he was so obsessed with
sex that it felt like he might wear himself out. But around twenty-five, his
sexual desire sharply declined. When he absolutely needed it, he’d still go to
the bar, but the frequency dropped. He found that gambling on horse races was
more exciting than sex, and pachinko was more fun.
Gambling came with both joy and sorrow. When you win, you feel on
top of the world, but losing sends you into a deep depression. Watching
middle-aged men angrily throwing things around in the stands as their losing
tickets scattered like confetti, Yamamura felt a chill run down his spine, as
if catching a glimpse of his own future. He didn’t want to end up like that,
yet he couldn’t stop buying tickets.
Feeling the need to occupy his mouth, he lit a cigarette and pulled
the ashtray closer. Once he got a decent amount of money, he’d clear his debts
and live it up for a while. He'd finally be free from his current life—saying
goodbye to all the sales talk where he had to constantly gauge people's
reactions just to sell water filters.
Hirokuni shifted restlessly and rolled over. The soles of his feet,
now facing Yamamura, were grimy and blackened.
Yamamura’s uncle had been smart enough to teach at a university, so
he must’ve been much more intelligent than Yamamura’s father. If Hirokuni
inherited those genes, he might be pretty smart too. Unfortunately, growing up
in the jungle hadn’t given him any chances to use that intellect.
Yamamura had long thought of himself as unlucky—abandoned by his
good-for-nothing father and irresponsible mother. But now, after a long time,
he’d finally come across someone who seemed even more unfortunate than himself.
He thought, What a miserable life,
but didn’t feel any sympathy. Even if he did sympathize, it wouldn’t make any
difference. Saying "poor thing" and then forgetting all about it a
few hours later—that kind of emotion was nothing more than the
self-satisfaction of someone looking down on others from above.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
The next morning, Yamamura woke up at 8:30 AM, teetering on the
brink of being late. He hurriedly changed into his suit, shoving his tie into
his bag. As he dashed back and forth across the room, he almost trampled
Hirokuni, who was sprawled out on the tatami floor, further irritating him.
Just as he was about to leave the room, he hesitated over what to do
about the lock. Would someone who barged into his house with their shoes on
even know how to lock a door? Sure, there wasn't anything particularly valuable
inside, but leaving the door wide open seemed risky. The fridge still had some
bananas and old eggs. There was a toilet and running water too. Locking him in
wouldn’t cause any real problems.
Yamamura firmly locked the door from the outside and sprinted to the
subway station. It took him ten minutes on the express train, followed by
another five minutes of running after he got off. At exactly 8:57, he slid into
the office building. There were only three minutes left before the morning
cleaning and meeting started. Yamamura washed his face and brushed his teeth in
the restroom. He always kept a stash of essentials like a toothbrush and razor
in his desk for moments like this.
At exactly 9:00 AM, he left his hair and shaving for later and
returned to the office. After the morning greetings, they split up for fifteen
minutes of cleaning. The cleaning assignments were based on sales performance.
If you’d closed a lot of deals, you got desk duty. If you hadn’t, you were
stuck with cleaning the toilets and their surroundings. Once cleaning was done,
the meeting began. Participation in both was mandatory for everyone. Skipping
out would earn you an after-hours lecture from the section chief and a grueling
double dose of role-playing exercises. Yamamura, who was frequently late, had
been subjected to this so-called “detention room” many times. Thanks to this
hellish system, his tardiness hadn’t disappeared entirely, but it had dropped
significantly.
In the twelve-tatami-sized office, fifteen salesmen gathered around
the section chief’s desk after cleaning. Yamamura was the last one to join.
Nishida spotted him and gave a small wave, as if to say, “Hurry up!” Yamamura,
keeping his head low, snuck over to the back and stood there quietly. Just as
he thought he’d made it, the section chief’s voice boomed, “Yamamura!”
“Are you planning to go out and meet clients with that scruffy
beard?”
He always had a keen eye for this sort of thing. Yamamura scratched
at his rough cheek.
“Sorry, I’ll shave before heading out.”
“Your slack attitude is showing in your appearance. May is ending in
three days, and you haven’t even hit two-thirds of last month’s sales.”
The section chief, who was in his fifties, had a perfectly bald spot
at the top of his head, which would turn bright red when he got worked up. Some
of the ruder guys even called him "Bald Spot" behind his back.
“Really, I’m sorry.”
There was no point in arguing, so he just kept apologizing. The
chief, seemingly satisfied after getting his apology, grumbled a bit more but
didn’t press further. After about twenty minutes, the meeting wrapped up, and
everyone headed out to their sales areas by car. Yamamura shaved in the
restroom, fixed his hair, and returned to the office. By then, the only person
left was Nishida. The other salesmen, including the section chief, were all
gone.
“Man, you’re slow,” Yamamura said.
Nishida shrugged and replied, “I was talking to the chief.” Though a
bit blunt, Nishida had a smooth way with words and had earned the chief’s
favor. Apparently, they even went out drinking together and played golf on
occasion. He was all smiles in front of the chief, but behind his back, he’d
say things like, “That old guy’s a real pain.” Then he’d laugh it off, saying,
“Well, dealing with him is just another part of the job.” Nishida wasn’t
exactly what you’d call a nice guy, but his level of social maneuvering wasn’t
unusual. Besides, he wasn’t the type to nitpick or make a fuss, which made him
easy to get along with.
"By the way, Yamamura-san, you’d better be careful. The section
chief might throw some weird appointments your way. He was grumbling to me,
saying stuff like, ‘That guy’s getting lazy,’" Nishida warned casually.
Each company has its own approach to door-to-door sales, and at
"Eureka," where Yamamura worked, the system was set up so that a
woman from the upstairs call center would make appointments for the salesmen to
visit.
"We’re currently running a special campaign and would love for
you to try out our latest water purifier as a trial monitor. Of course, it’s
completely free. We’ll visit you at your convenience."
In her gentle voice, the caller would use the word "free"
as her shield, securing appointments. While it wasn’t truly free, this created
a foothold to get inside the house. It was far more efficient than wandering
from door to door asking, "Would you like to buy a water purifier?"
and the chances of closing a deal were much higher.
The section chief’s job was to assign the appointments that the
female employees gathered to the salesmen. As Nishida had pointed out, if you
rubbed the chief the wrong way, you’d get stuck with the difficult customers.
"Doesn't really matter to me. I’m not particularly good at
this, but I’m not bad either," Yamamura replied.
"Is that so..." Nishida mumbled, shoving pamphlets into
his bag. Each salesman had their strengths. Some excelled with housewives,
while others had an uncanny knack for charming elderly ladies living alone,
boasting a deal-closing rate of over seventy percent. Yamamura didn’t have any
particular strength, but he didn’t have any glaring weaknesses either.
"Well, Yamamura-san, you always manage to close contracts
without much fuss. The section chief said you’ve only hit two-thirds of last
month’s numbers, but everyone’s having a rough month. Still, you’re in the top
three this month, right? Teach me the secret to closing deals."
Yamamura tilted his head back and gazed at the ceiling. "I
guess... just believe that it’s a good product. You know, sincerity gets
through to people."
"Sincerity? If they’re signing a contract for a water purifier
that’s almost ten times the market price, I’d say sincerity’s out the window at
that point."
"That’s why sincerity lasts only until they stamp the
contract," Yamamura said with a smirk.
In an industry where employee turnover was high, Nishida had stuck
with it for a year, proving he was suited for the job. His way with words
wasn’t bad, either. As for Yamamura, who’d somehow managed to keep drifting
along for four years, well, he was just another nobody.
Yamamura climbed into his sales car and headed toward his assigned
area. As he waited near a park, his cellphone rang with a call from the section
chief, assigning him his next appointment.
"Yes, I’m ready to take notes. Please go ahead... The address
is... got it. The name is... okay. A housewife in her forties... right. She’s
been using her current water purifier for about three years? A bit impatient,
huh? Ah, yeah, there are plenty of women like that. Alright, alright...
understood."
After hanging up, Yamamura checked the address on his residential
map. It was nearby. He started the car, turned on the indicator, and drove off
in the assigned direction.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
Yamamura returned to the office just before 7 PM. Checking the time
cards, he noticed no one else had come back yet. Most of the salesmen finished
up between 7 and 8 PM, so he was a little early. Today, he’d secured two
contracts—one in the morning and one in the afternoon. He was on a roll. After
reporting the second contract, he called the section chief from his car,
asking, “Hey, can I head home early today?” The chief hadn’t said no.
As he was quickly packing up to leave, Nishida walked in.
“Oh? You’re early, Yamamura-san.”
“Yeah, I closed two contracts today.”
“Wow, no way. You’re on fire!”
“See you around,” Yamamura said, picking up his bag.
“You heading out? I’m almost done here too. Wanna grab some food somewhere?”
“Sorry, I’ve got some stuff to do tonight.”
Nishida grinned slyly. “Let me guess, a woman?”
“Technically... well, he's got a dick, so I guess that makes him
male.”
Nishida frowned in confusion, and Yamamura chuckled.
“My dog. Ever since I got him, it’s been a headache. He’s not the
brightest, you know.”
“Oh, really?” Nishida responded lazily, dragging out the words.
“I can’t picture you playing with a dog, Yamamura-san.”
“‘Playing,’ huh? Didn’t know you knew such fancy words.”
“Well, it’s not like you’d be... ‘messing around’ with a dog, right?
And wait, can you even keep a dog in that apartment?”
With a meaningful chuckle, Yamamura patted Nishida’s shoulder and
said, “See you tomorrow,” before walking out of the office.
Outside, a light drizzle was falling, but it wasn’t enough to
warrant using an umbrella. Yamamura walked briskly to the station. The subway
was just crowded enough that there were no seats available. A group of high
school girls chatting loudly near the door annoyed him, so he moved toward the
middle of the car and grabbed a handrail.
Across from him, a high school boy in a short-sleeve shirt sat
staring intently at a study guide. His jet-black hair and glasses gave him a
serious look, but overall, he seemed a bit out of touch with the world. Definitely
a virgin, Yamamura decided, judging him on the spot.
The two contracts he closed today were with a housewife in her
forties and another in her thirties. The one in her forties, just as the
pre-appointment info suggested, was short-tempered but easygoing enough that
once she was hooked, the deal went smoothly. The younger housewife, whose child
had atopic dermatitis, had been eager from the start and listened intently to
Yamamura’s pitch. Together, the two contracts totaled ¥1,060,000.
People are idiots, Yamamura thought, not
for the first time. I’m an idiot for selling this stuff, but the people who
buy it are even dumber. Every day, dealing with idiots was exhausting. For
your health, to avoid cancer, for your family... It was the same lines over
and over again. After repeating them endlessly, Yamamura began to lose track of
what he was doing. The more he thought about it, the more tedious it became,
until eventually, he gave up thinking altogether. As long as he could get the
customer’s stamp on the contract, that was all that mattered. It was a simple
answer he gave to himself.
What would I be doing now if I hadn’t dropped out of high school...? Yamamura mused as he looked down at the serious, virginal kid. Would
I have landed a better job? When it came to salary alone, his current
company was pretty good. Even if he’d graduated high school—or even
college—getting a job that paid as well as this one might have been tough. Of
course, what he was doing now was practically a scam.
Though his pay fluctuated due to commission-based work, he made a
decent income. Yet his lifestyle was always scraping by. When he complained
about this to Nishida, his colleague had shrugged and said, “Well, that’s
because you spend as much as you earn. On pachinko and horse races, right?”
It was true that Yamamura loved gambling. If someone told him that
pachinko and horse racing would disappear tomorrow, he wouldn’t know what to
look forward to in life anymore. He knew it was hopeless, but a lot of guys
around him were like that too.
Despite having closed two deals and feeling on top of the world, his
mood began to sink. He gripped the handrail and sighed, his body swaying as the
train started to move again.
I feel like grabbing a drink. It had
been a while since he’d had a proper night out. If he got off at the next
station, he could go to his usual gay bar. It was early, so there’d be few
customers, and he could take his time. He hadn’t hooked up with anyone in a
while. It had been two months since he’d broken up with his last guy. One day,
the guy had suddenly said, “I don’t want to see you anymore,” and that was the
end of it. They hadn’t been particularly close anyway, and Yamamura had found
the guy’s constant clinginess annoying. He had no lingering feelings.
Maybe I’d feel better if I drank and got laid. But experience told him that the rush and pleasure of sex were as
fleeting as his libido. More often than not, after the moment passed, he was
left with an even deeper sense of emptiness. Sure, he’d feel better down there,
but up here, in his head, the fog would still linger.
As Yamamura was debating whether or not to go, he suddenly
remembered the crucial thing: the reason he had turned down Nishida’s dinner
invitation and planned to head home early was because Hirokuni was there. He
needed to buy dinner on the way back.
Now that he realized he couldn’t go out, the desire to go to the bar
surged even stronger. He hated dealing with that brute. Sure, he was getting
around 200,000 yen a month and a good word from the lawyer, but he regretted
ever taking Hirokuni in. He regretted it every moment since—the time Hirokuni
danced on the stairs, when he ate with his hands… It had been nothing but
regret.
When Yamamura reached the sidewalk where he could see his apartment,
he noticed there were no lights on. Hirokuni was probably asleep.
Standing in front of the door, Yamamura reached for his key but
realized something was off—the door was ajar, about three centimeters. Although
he had locked it earlier, Hirokuni apparently had enough sense to unlock it
from the inside and get out.
Whether he was still inside or had gone out, leaving the door
unlocked was reckless. If Yamamura didn’t scold him, it would just happen
again. But explaining everything to someone who barely understood him was
exhausting.
With a sigh, Yamamura grabbed the doorknob, and immediately
exclaimed, “What the—?”
The doorknob stuck to his hand.
“What the hell is this?”
He slipped his hand through the gap in the door and pushed it open.
Right there in the entrance, the half of the doorknob that had come off was
lying next to a box about ten centimeters thick. Yamamura bent down to inspect
it—an old DVD player. The corners were crushed, and the plastic around the disc
slot was shattered. A bad feeling crept up his spine. Did he break the
doorknob with this thing?
When Yamamura turned on the lights, the sight before him left him
speechless. His room had always been messy, but this wasn’t just a mess—it had
been destroyed. The curtains were torn and dangling haphazardly, the table was
knocked over, the TV was upside down, and DVDs and game discs were scattered
everywhere.
“Why the hell did he wreck the place like this!?”
Yamamura hurled the broken doorknob against the wall and stormed
into the room. If Hirokuni wasn’t hiding in the bathroom, there was nowhere
else he could be. He must have trashed the room and left, as if it were some
twisted form of revenge.
“Goddammit, you bastard!”
Yamamura kicked the overturned table, only to have pain shoot up his
leg, making him even angrier. He didn’t care where Hirokuni had gone—he could
do whatever he wanted. Go die in a ditch for all I care. It’s got nothing to
do with me.
But before he did, he had better pay for the curtains, the doorknob,
and the damn DVD player.
Since there was no way Hirokuni could pay for the damages, Yamamura
would have to bill Arisawa for it. Arisawa wouldn’t refuse—after all, Yamamura
was the victim here. From the still-open door, Yamamura noticed the nosy old hag
next door peeking in. No matter how many times he tried to close the door, it
would slowly drift open again, and Yamamura found himself developing a
meaningless rage toward the inanimate thing.
He fashioned a makeshift latch using a wire hanger, hooking it into
the hole where the doorknob used to be, and somehow managed to get the door
shut. With a deep sigh, he slumped down on the entryway floor.
After sitting there for a while, Yamamura stood up with a weary
shuffle. Grabbing only his wallet and phone, he stepped outside. He needed to
track down his collateral. As worthless as Hirokuni might be, without him,
Yamamura wouldn’t be able to get any more money advanced. He wandered aimlessly
through the streets. Honestly, he had no idea where Hirokuni might have gone.
He circled the nearby park, visited a bookstore with its lights
still on, a supermarket, and a convenience store. By the time he’d finished,
Yamamura was thoroughly exhausted. Why am I, after working all day, stuck
doing this at night too? The sheer unfairness of it gnawed at him.
On his way back, after checking the convenience store across the
river, Yamamura retraced his steps to his apartment. As he passed by the
drugstore, he suddenly noticed the police box, which he normally just walked by
without a second thought. Even if I can’t find him, I could still tell the
lawyer I filed a missing person’s report. That would be a decent excuse.
He entered the police box and mentioned wanting to file a report for
a runaway. The officer told him he had to go to the main police station and
handed him a map. The process of filing the report was surprisingly quick and
anticlimactic. The clerk who accepted the paperwork offered no sympathy or even
a hint of interest. It was all strictly business, which, while understandable,
still irritated Yamamura. He wasn’t particularly serious about finding
Hirokuni, but the indifference stung, so he found himself pressing further.
“He can’t speak Japanese at all. If he gets picked up, will I still
get notified properly?”
The man at the desk, who seemed to be in his fifties and looked a
little too thin, raised an eyebrow.
“He’s Japanese, right? What do you mean he can’t speak the
language?”
“He lived abroad for a long time, so he’s not fluent in Japanese.”
“I see. So, what language does he speak?”
“It’s some Indigenous language from Brazil... um, I think I’ve heard
the name before, but I can’t quite remember…”
The officer shrugged in exasperation.
“You don’t even know? How are we supposed to help with that? I mean,
come on.”
At that moment, someone called for the officer’s attention. He
turned around, responding with a quick “Yeah, yeah, I’m coming.”
“Anyway, we’ve got your report, so that’s that,” he said coldly
before walking off. Yamamura felt irritated—he’d only come to file a report,
yet they left him in a foul mood. You guys live off our taxes, so at least
do your damn job properly, he cursed inwardly as he left the police
station.
He hadn’t walked more than a few meters when his phone rang. The
number was unfamiliar. When he answered, the same indifferent officer’s voice
came through the line.
“Is this Yamamura Hitoshi? This is Kuga Police Station.”
Yamamura instinctively glanced back at the station he had just left.
“We’ve apprehended a man at a supermarket in Tachikawa for
dine-and-dash. He can’t speak Japanese, and we can’t figure out what language
he’s speaking. The description matches the cousin you reported missing—same age
and appearance...”
💀what a handful. That’s what you get for trying to take advantage of people 😂
ReplyDeleteI’m enjoying Yamamura getting into all sorts of trouble because of Hiro lol he deserves it for being so greedy 😂
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