Chapter 1 River's End - part 2
Tokame woke up at 7 a.m. He washed his face,
changed his clothes, folded the futon, and sat on top of it, waiting for
Ninomiya to wake up. But Ninomiya showed no signs of stirring. Worried about
the time, Tokame checked the clock and saw that the alarm was set for 7:30.
“Mmm… Mom… it’s fine… yeah…”
Still clutching his pillow, Ninomiya mumbled
and wriggled around in bed. Finally, the alarm started ringing. He tried to
ignore it for a bit but eventually gave in, sitting up with a sour expression,
like he’d just eaten something bitter. Then, noticing Tokame sitting next to
him, he blurted out, “Whoa! Why are you sitting there?”
“Is it a problem?”
“Well… yeah, it’s kinda creepy.”
Ninomiya got up, shuffled out of the room, and
came back with damp bangs, presumably after washing his face. He took off his
pajamas.
“See ya,” Tokame said as he headed for the
door, but Ninomiya stopped him, buttoning his shirt.
“Where are you going? It’s still early for
school. It’s only a ten-minute bike ride from here. Or are you heading home
first?”
“…Nah.”
“Wanna grab some breakfast?”
Ninomiya yawned as he pulled on his pants,
tugging them down a bit at the waist. He motioned for Tokame to follow him to
the kitchen.
In the kitchen, there was a small table for
four. Ninomiya pulled out a bag of sliced bread and placed it on the table
along with two glasses of milk. He opened the bag, making a crinkling sound,
grabbed a slice, and took a big bite before tossing the bag toward Tokame.
“Eat as much as you want.”
Tokame grabbed a slice, finishing it in a few
bites. He reached for another, then another, eating slice after slice. When he
glanced up, he saw Ninomiya staring at him, wide-eyed.
“Did I eat too much?”
“Oh… no. If you’re still hungry, you can have
the rest.”
With permission granted, Tokame ate the
remaining two slices. Ninomiya crumpled up the now-empty bag and tossed it into
the trash.
“Yorozu, you sure can eat a lot first thing in
the morning.”
“Didn’t eat dinner last night.”
Ninomiya raised an eyebrow. “Huh?”
“Why didn’t you say something sooner? I
would’ve made you instant ramen or something! But why didn’t you eat dinner?”
“No money,” Tokame replied, finishing off the
last of his milk.
“Running low on allowance? Or did you just
leave your wallet at home?”
Tokame felt laughter bubbling up. He’d never
received an allowance and didn’t even own a wallet. Ninomiya kept listing off
things he’d never had.
When Tokame chuckled, Ninomiya frowned, mouth
twisting. “Wh-why are you laughing?”
Tokame stood, wiping his mouth with his hand.
“The night was warm, and the bread was good… You were loud, though.”
He considered saying “thanks” but ultimately
decided against it. Instead, he walked out, leaving Ninomiya calling after him,
“Hey, wait up!” Outside, everything was blanketed in snow.
As he passed the park, he noticed his cardboard
shelter by the wall, covered in a fresh, white layer of snow—the bed he’d never
used.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
Koharu
called Tokame’s part-time job at the gas station. The manager passed along the
message: “She said to tell you she’s sorry and to please come home.” Since they
didn’t have a phone at home, she must have called from a pay phone.
The snow
from the morning hadn’t melted, and by night, it was snowing again. Tokame had
been planning to ask the manager if he could stay overnight in the break room,
so he was genuinely relieved that the misunderstanding was cleared up.
When he got
home, the sound of the sliding door must have alerted Koharu, as he heard quick
footsteps coming from the back. She greeted him with a slightly embarrassed
expression and a quiet “Welcome home.” After being called a thief and kicked
out on a snowy day, he still felt a faint trace of irritation. He stepped
inside without responding, but Koharu stopped him. “Wait. Stay there.” She
disappeared into the back room and returned with her coat and wallet.
“Let’s go
outside for a bit.”
It was
freezing, with snow falling outside. He had no desire to take a casual stroll.
He started to protest but then realized it might be something she didn’t want
Shunsuke overhearing.
“…Where are
we going?” Shunsuke peeked out from the living room.
Tokame
thought Koharu might answer, but she stayed silent.
“We’re just
going out for a bit,” Tokame told him instead, though Shunsuke still looked at
him anxiously.
“You’re
coming back, right?”
After
spending the night away, Shunsuke seemed a little worried.
“Of course
I am.”
As they
spoke, Koharu grabbed his arm and pulled him along, saying, “Let’s go.”
Outside, they walked through the biting cold and snow. Koharu didn’t say where
they were headed. Midway, they stopped at a convenience store, and she offered,
“I’ll treat you. Meat bun or sweet bean bun?”
Koharu was
usually frugal, so this gesture felt unusually generous. Perhaps it was her way
of apologizing for what happened. Without hesitating, he said, “Meat bun.”
“What about
one for Shunsuke?”
But Koharu
didn’t respond and only bought enough for the two of them. They walked on, each
eating their meat buns. In the cold night, it was the perfect meal for his
empty stomach.
“Where did
you sleep last night?” she asked.
“At a
classmate’s house.”
Koharu
turned to him, surprised. “You have friends?”
“He’s not a
friend.”
“But he let
you stay over, so isn’t he? That’s good. At least it was warm, right? Last
night was so cold with the snow.”
She
reluctantly popped the last piece of her meat bun into her mouth and murmured
softly, “What a treat.” They wandered as they walked, eventually reaching the
bridge where she’d slapped him yesterday.
“I’m sorry
for calling you a thief yesterday,” Koharu finally apologized.
“You mean
it?”
“Yes… I’m
sorry.”
Leaning
back against the bridge railing, tears slipped down Koharu’s cheeks.
“Why are
you crying? You figured out it wasn’t me, right?”
“It wasn’t
you, but… the money really is gone. Thirty thousand yen.”
“So then…
who?”
Just as he
was about to finish his sentence, a terrible realization dawned on him. No way…
“Today,
when I got home from work, I was cleaning and found a game console box in the
trash. I wondered how it had gotten there… At first, I thought it might be
yours, but then I thought of Shunsuke and checked his school bag. Sure enough,
I found a game console inside. When I asked him about it, he got all flustered
and said he borrowed it from a friend. But when I pressed him, he admitted he’d
taken my money and bought it himself. He said he couldn’t keep up with his
friends or fit in without it. It’s just… the worst.”
Koharu
rubbed her red, freezing hands against her eyelids.
“That kid
doesn’t understand anything. He doesn’t get how poor we are or how hard it is
just to put food on the table. I understood when I was his age. I knew how poor
we were.”
“I think
Shunsuke understands too, in his way… it’s just—”
Koharu
shook her head. “He doesn’t. If he did, he wouldn’t have done it. We have so
many things to pay for—the debts, Dad’s hospital bills. I work every weekend at
the factory, even when it’s supposed to be my day off. You work after school
and on weekends, too. We do it for the family, not for ourselves. I haven’t
bought new clothes since I started working; everything I wear is hand-me-downs
from my coworkers. Because we don’t have the money… I…”
He hugged
her thin frame. As if she’d been waiting for this, Koharu clung tightly to
Tokame.
“No, no,
no! I trust my family. Because family is all I have to believe in. But what am
I supposed to do if even my family betrays me? Why am I working so hard if it’s
all for nothing…”
Koharu
cried for a while, clinging to Tokame, before finally pulling herself away.
“…I
understand how Shunsuke feels, I really do. I wanted to be a normal kid too, a
regular elementary or middle schooler. I wanted to have the same things as my
friends, to talk about the people I liked, to avoid being bullied or left out.
I wanted friends…”
She wiped
her tears and lowered her head.
“If Dad
hadn’t had all that debt, maybe we could’ve had a more normal life… enough food
to fill us up. Why weren’t we just normal? Why, no matter how hard I try, do we
have to keep living this miserable life? If Mom were still alive, maybe things
would be a little better…”
“It’ll
end,” Tokame said.
Koharu
looked up at him.
“This won’t
last forever. Once I start working, I’ll be able to pay off the debt in no
time.”
“Yeah,
that’d be nice,” Koharu replied, her tone ambiguous.
“If I
could, I’d just go work in a club or something. We’d pay it all back faster,
but I’ve been told straight up that someone like me isn’t good-looking enough
to make money. I look like Dad.”
Koharu
gripped the snow-covered railing of the bridge with both hands. She seemed so
close to letting go and plunging into the dark water that Tokame moved closer
to her side. Koharu’s small, intense eyes stared out at the dark water below.
“Looking at
the water makes me remember when Dad scattered Mom’s ashes into the sea.”
“…He dumped
them, you mean.”
“He
scattered them,” she said sharply. “It was better than burying her somewhere.
He didn’t have much going for him, but that moment was good.”
“He said he
was copying some movie scene, right? I haven’t seen it, but…”
“You did
see it with Mom, though. You were just too young to remember. It was called River’s
End…”
Her thin
fingers, gripping the railing, turned red and trembled from the cold. Tokame
took her hand and started walking.
“Where are
we going?”
“Home. It’s
freezing.”
“Yeah,
you’re right.”
She walked
beside him, her hand in his—so cold it was like holding a block of ice.
“…How much
would it cost, I wonder, to skip the funeral and just have a simple cremation?”
she asked.
“For Dad?”
“Yeah.
Because… it’ll probably happen soon.”
“…Yeah, it
will.”
Koharu’s
tense fingers tightened around his.
“I just
want to grieve normally,” she murmured. “When Dad dies, I want to feel sad. I
don’t want to have to think about funeral costs. I wanted to be normal. I
wanted to go to high school.”
Tokame
turned to look at her.
“I wanted
to go to high school, to talk with friends. I don’t like studying, but I wanted
to try it. After high school, I wanted to go to beauty school and maybe do
celebrity hair.”
“Once the
debt’s paid, go for it,” Tokame replied.
Koharu gave
a wobbly smile, almost a laugh.
“You’d
better stay in school. If you get held back because you skip, I’ll wring your
neck.”
Her pace
quickened a bit.
“And hey,
looks like you’ve even made a friend.”
“For the
last time, he’s not a friend.”
“...I’m
glad I have you,” she murmured.
“I’m glad
you’re here. I’m glad I have a little brother.”
…They
walked home, hand in hand. Come to think of it, the last time he’d held
Koharu’s hand was probably when they were still in elementary school.
When they
opened the sliding door, Shunsuke came rushing down the hallway toward them.
But when he saw them, he looked down at the floor. Tokame stepped inside,
grabbed Shunsuke by the collar, and gave him a slap on the cheek—though he held
back quite a bit. Shunsuke sank to the floor, bursting into tears as though
something inside him had finally cracked open.
“H-Hey,
stop it!” Koharu hurried over, pulling Shunsuke protectively into her arms.
“I’ve already scolded him. I’ve talked to him seriously about it.”
With his
face hidden in his hands, Shunsuke kept saying, “I’m sorry, I’m sorry.” Tokame
knelt down in front of him.
“We’re
poor, you know.”
“…I know,”
Shunsuke replied, voice trembling, head still down.
“I’m the
only one who always wears the same clothes. I’m the only one without any games.
I’ve only ever had snacks at other people’s houses.”
The words
hit him hard, a painful twist in his chest.
“Shunsuke,
do you feel embarrassed borrowing or accepting things from other people?”
His younger
brother nodded silently.
“I see. But
remember this: stealing from others is far more shameful than accepting help.
Don’t ever forget that.”
Holding his
sobbing little brother, who was crying like a kindergarten kid, Tokame
whispered, “If you do this again, you’re out of the house.” Shunsuke clung
tightly to Tokame’s neck, crying and repeating, “I won’t, I swear I won’t.”
The next
day at school, Tokame noticed something in his desk. When he reached in, there
was the crinkling of plastic and something soft. The sensation brought back
unpleasant memories of when classmates had stuffed garbage and leftover food
from school lunch into his desk back in elementary school. With a sense of
dread, he pulled it out.
It was a
loaf of bread. A six-slice bag of bread with four slices remaining. Though
someone had already opened it, the expiration date was still good. He could
guess who had put it there. He turned around, and sure enough, as soon as their
eyes met, Ninomiya quickly looked away.
At lunch,
Tokame headed up to the rooftop with the bread in hand. As he ate in a secluded
spot, he sensed a shadow moving toward him.
“Is that
any good?” Ninomiya asked.
Ignoring
him, Tokame took another bite. Ninomiya looked irritated.
“…I was the
one who put that bread in your desk, you know.”
Tokame
finished the last bite, crumpled up the plastic bag, and stuffed it into
Ninomiya’s pocket.
“Thanks for
the food.”
As he
turned to head back to the classroom, Ninomiya called after him, “Hey, hold
up!”
“You’re not
going to say anything else to me?”
“Thanks for
the food.”
“No, not
that. Aren’t you even a little grateful?”
“What, like
I’m some stray dog you tossed food to on the street?”
Ninomiya
frowned, his mouth tightening.
“I never
asked for it, and you’re the one doing it on your own.”
Tokame
squinted at him. “Don’t expect anything back from the dog.”
Leaving
Ninomiya behind, Tokame returned to the classroom and slumped over his desk,
closing his eyes. It was nice to have lunch today. Tomorrow would probably be
different. He doubted Ninomiya would put bread in his desk again. He’d never
been wrong about things like this before.
…But
contrary to his expectations, the next day he found more bread in his desk. He
ate it without hesitation. The next day, and the day after that, he kept
finding various kinds of bread stashed in his desk.
It became a
continuous, relentless supply. Although having lunch every day was nice, it
started to feel strange—like “just having a full stomach” wasn’t the end of it.
He couldn’t figure out what Ninomiya was thinking. If he was just feeding a
stray dog on a whim, it had gone on far too long.
After three
weeks, Tokame ate the bread on the rooftop and then returned to the classroom,
where Ninomiya’s usual group—Shibazaki, Itou, and Hamaguchi—were gathered
around him. When they saw Tokame standing there, they all looked up at him with
wary expressions.
“Come with
me.”
The three
other guys exchanged glances, unsure who Tokame was addressing.
“Ninomiya,
come with me.”
Ninomiya
stood up, and Shibazaki, looking concerned, asked, “Hey, are you gonna be
okay?” Ninomiya laughed it off, saying, “I’m fine, I’m fine,” and followed
Tokame. They ended up heading to the rooftop, a quiet place to talk.
“Stop
bringing me bread.”
Ninomiya
blinked, tilting his head thoughtfully.
“So… you’d
prefer rice instead?”
“I don’t
need anything.”
“But
without me bringing food, you don’t have lunch, right?”
“That’s
fine.”
“But aren’t
you hungry? Don’t worry about it; it’s just my leftover breakfast anyway. My
mom keeps saying, ‘You sure are going through a lot of bread lately.’”
“I don’t
want to get used to it.”
Tokame
shrugged. “I’m already used to skipping lunch. I’ve been doing it since middle
school. If I get used to eating lunch now, it’ll be tough to go back when it
stops. Mentally, it’s hard to go back to that.”
“It’s just
leftover bread; I can bring it every day.”
Ninomiya’s
face was blank, almost like he didn’t see a problem.
“If you
want, I’ll bring it until you graduate. I’m actually pretty good at keeping
things up. In elementary school, I fed our class goldfish every day for a whole
year.”
This didn’t
seem like the right issue, but Tokame couldn’t find the words to explain. An
awkward silence settled between them.
“Hey, where
do you get your hair cut?”
“My hair?”
Tokame was caught off guard by the sudden shift from talking about bread to
hair.
“I’ve
always thought your hairstyle was kinda cool.”
“My sister
cuts it.”
“Your
sister?”
“Yeah.”
“You’ve got
a sister?” Ninomiya looked genuinely surprised.
“Is that a problem?”
“Don’t get
all defensive. You just gave off total only-child vibes, that’s all.”
“Want some
gum?” Ninomiya asked. Tokame nodded, and Ninomiya tossed him a piece from his
pocket. It was a sweet grape-flavored gum, warm from being in his pocket.
Chewing
loudly, Ninomiya kept talking. “You know, I’ve kinda wanted to talk to you
about stuff. You’re tall, and you’ve got a pretty cool look going on.”
Tokame was
taken aback. In elementary school, he’d been bullied, ignored by everyone in
middle school, and now he was in a technical high school with a 90% male
student body. Nobody had ever complimented his appearance to his face before.
The unfamiliar praise made him squirm uncomfortably.
“You’re
always acting aloof. Sometimes I wondered if you were just looking down on us.
But then you’re eating stuff from the trash, and suddenly you’re homeless.
You’re honestly kind of impossible to figure out. You’ve got this huge attitude
whenever anyone tries to help you, but the second there’s food involved, you’re
all in.”
Even though
it wasn’t hot, Tokame felt a bead of sweat form on his forehead. If he was so
irritating, then why keep talking to him? He muttered it to himself silently.
“Think your
sister would cut my hair too?” Ninomiya asked.
“...Ask her
yourself.”
“Yeah, but
I don’t know her.”
Leaving
Ninomiya behind, Tokame walked off the rooftop. On the stairs, he heard
Ninomiya catching up.
“Hey, can I
come over to your place sometime? I’ll ask her myself if I do.”
“You’re so
annoying.”
When Tokame
snapped, Ninomiya looked down, mumbling, “Well, my mouth’s for talking, isn’t
it?”
◇:-:◆:-:◇
Tokame was working on a report due tomorrow,
seated at the low table in the living room, when he noticed Shunsuke come in
and sit down across from him. When he looked up, their eyes met.
“Hmm? What’s up?”
Shunsuke averted his gaze, mumbling
uncertainly, “Well… it’s sister. She’s acting weird.”
“What do you mean, ‘weird’?”
“She usually tells us to turn off the faucet
right away, but she’s leaving it running.”
“So why don’t you just turn it off yourself?”
Tokame scratched his temple with the end of his
mechanical pencil.
“But sister was just standing there by the
faucet. I asked if something was wrong, but she wouldn’t answer me.”
Seeing how worried Shunsuke looked, Tokame
sighed and went to the kitchen. There he found Koharu washing dishes, but her
hands were still, and the water was running.
“Hey,” he called, but she didn’t respond. He
walked closer and touched her shoulder.
“Ah! What?” She jumped as if startled out of a trance,
seemingly unaware that he was there behind her.
“Don’t sneak up on me like that—you scared me.”
“I’ve been calling you.”
“Huh? Really? I must have zoned out. I didn’t
notice,” she said, moving in an almost robotic way as she resumed washing
dishes.
“You okay? Did something happen?”
“What do you mean?” she replied, still not
meeting his eyes.
“Is it Dad? Is he doing worse? I’ve been
working so much that I haven’t had time to go see him.”
The clinking and clattering of dishes grew
louder.
“Dad’s the same as always. Just lying in bed,
yelling for us to bring him booze.”
Finishing up the dishes, she turned off the
faucet. As she dried her hands on her apron, she sighed, “Maybe I’m just
tired.”
She’d cut her hair again; now her sideburns
were trimmed short above her ears, almost boyish. Tokame tugged at his own
overgrown bangs.
“So, are you just cutting my hair randomly
every time?”
“Well… I guess it’s kind of random. Right now,
it’s styled like Nemoto-kun.”
“Who’s Nemoto?”
Koharu frowned. “You don’t know him? He’s a
rising actor. I really like his face.”
Tokame scratched his head. “Someone said this
hairstyle looked cool. He even said he wanted you to cut his hair…”
Koharu’s previously gloomy expression
brightened like a light had been switched on.
“Really! I thought I did a pretty good job on
your hair this time. I guess people who notice can really tell! Sure, bring him
over. I’ll cut his hair.”
“What? No way.” Tokame tried to step back, but
she grabbed his arm. Even through his shirt, her hand was as cold as ever.
“Oh, come on! I’d like to try cutting another
guy’s hair for a change. But I’m working all weekend, so… right, your gas
station’s closed the day after tomorrow, isn’t it? Let’s do it then, at night.
Tell him to eat before he comes, though—we don’t have extra rice to spare.”
Tokame stepped back slightly from the eager
Koharu and muttered under his breath, “Seriously…?”
◇:-:◆:-:◇
At eight in
the evening, Tokame met Ninomiya in front of the convenience store and brought
him home.
“Whoa, your
house is really run-down,” Ninomiya said bluntly as soon as he saw the full
extent of Tokame’s home illuminated by the streetlight.
“It’s
better than sleeping outside,” Tokame replied, unlocking the sliding door.
Ninomiya muttered, “You know, your comparisons are always so extreme.”
“What’s
that supposed to mean?”
“Exactly
what I said. Everything with you is all or nothing, like life or death.”
“Whatever.”
Tokame
opened the door, and Koharu appeared in the hallway to greet them.
“Welcome,
Ninomiya-kun. I’m Shunji’s
sister, Koharu.”
When she
smiled, Ninomiya’s face immediately turned red.
“Oh, uh…
n-nice to meet you. I mean, thanks for having me over. And, um, here… this is
for you.”
He handed
her a convenience store bag, which seemed to be a gift.
“Well, uh…
I can’t really pay for the haircut, so this is my offering.”
“Oh, you
didn’t need to bring anything!” Koharu, who had been oddly cheerful since
morning, seemed even more delighted by the snacks. She led Ninomiya to the
living room, where a temporary setup of newspapers and a chair awaited him.
“Well, um,
I was hoping for something like Tokame’s hairstyle…” Ninomiya explained. Koharu
frowned thoughtfully.
“Hmm… Shunji has more of
an inverted triangle face, which is why I gave him the ‘Nemoto-kun’ look, but
your face is longer. I think it would suit you better if we left the bangs a
bit longer and added volume on the sides. Kind of like Mihara-kun from RAYS,
for example.”
“Y-yes,
please do that.”
Koharu
smiled and began cutting Ninomiya’s hair. Ninomiya was so tense it was amusing,
so Tokame and Shunsuke sat nearby, watching the process. Locks of hair fell in
bundles onto the newspaper. Koharu had always cut Tokame’s hair, using an
ordinary pair of household scissors. But ever since she’d received an old pair
of professional scissors from a coworker at the factory, whose daughter was a
hairdresser, she had been thrilled and had even cut their father’s hair that
same day.
Koharu’s
expression was completely focused as she worked. Normally chatty, Ninomiya sat
as silent as a cat borrowed for the day while she cut his hair. In less than
thirty minutes, she’d given him a clean, stylish cut that suited his face. Even
from an outsider’s perspective, it looked great. To Ninomiya, who hadn’t been
allowed to look in the mirror, the final result was stunning.
“Wow…
Koharu-san, you’re amazing! It looks so professional! I actually feel… kinda
cool now.”
Listening
to his enthusiasm, Tokame thought he sounded foolish, but Ninomiya kept
repeating “Amazing!” in awe, clearly making Koharu happy.
After they
cleaned up, the four of them shared the snacks and juice Ninomiya had brought.
Since they rarely bought sweets, Shunsuke stuffed his cheeks with snacks,
looking like a chipmunk preparing for winter.
At first,
Ninomiya seemed nervous in front of Koharu, but he gradually got comfortable
and began chatting as usual.
“To be
honest, I was a little scared of Tokame at first. He never talked to anyone,
and with that expressionless face, I couldn’t tell what he was thinking.”
Koharu
laughed, and said, “The reason he doesn’t talk is because there’s nothing going
on in his head.”
“But I feel
like I’d go crazy if I didn’t talk, so I kind of envy Tokame. You know, quiet
guys seem cool, don’t they?”
“Cool?
Him?”
Tokame gave
a half-hearted nod to avoid further conversation.
“No, I’m
serious! It’s like his back just speaks for him or something.”
Koharu
burst out laughing and playfully slapped Tokame’s back.
“Hey, Shunji, did you
hear that? You’re apparently something amazing.”
Only Koharu
and Ninomiya were talking, but the atmosphere was good. Above all, Koharu
seemed happy, and that was what mattered most. When Ninomiya started imitating
their teacher, “Bald Tora,” Koharu laughed so hard she was holding her stomach,
even though she had never met him.
“Oh,
Ninomiya-kun, it’s getting late. Won’t your parents be worried?” Koharu said,
glancing at the clock. It was already past eleven.
“Oh, don’t
worry. My parents are both at work, so it’s fine for me to be out late,”
Ninomiya said.
Koharu put
her hands on her hips. “That’s not okay. You’re still a minor, Ninomiya-kun.
You shouldn’t be staying up so late.”
With a
reluctant sigh, Ninomiya finally stood up. “Alright, then…”
Koharu
walked him to the entryway. Smiling, she said, “I had a really great time
today. Come visit again sometime.”
Just before
stepping outside, Ninomiya shifted nervously and turned to Tokame. “Hey, could
you walk me part of the way?”
“What a
pain.”
“It doesn’t
have to be far, just a bit.”
With no
other choice, Tokame went out with him. Ninomiya walked beside him, pushing his
bike along.
“Today was
really fun,” he murmured.
“Seriously,
it was great. I don’t even want to go home. I’ll just be alone anyway… You’re
lucky, having siblings.”
“I could
let you have one.”
“Yeah,
coming from you, that doesn’t sound like a joke.”
Ninomiya
chuckled, shrugging his shoulders. His chuckles turned into quiet, fading
laughter.
“Can I come
over again? I’ll make sure my parents know next time, so let me stay over.”
“There’s no
extra futon.”
“Then I’ll
just sleep next to you.”
Despite
Tokame’s short replies, Ninomiya kept chatting. Before he realized it, the
familiar company housing building came into view. Noticing, Ninomiya let out a
satisfied “heh” and grinned, pleased with himself.
“Heh, got
you to walk me all the way home.”
With that,
he mounted his bike.
“See you at
school on Monday.”
Ninomiya
rode off, and Tokame turned to head back. The wind blowing on his way home felt
especially cold, much more than when he had walked out.
When he got
back, he found Koharu sitting at the low table, idly propping her chin in her
hand, watching TV.
“You’re
back. You were out pretty late.”
“He made me
walk him all the way home.”
Koharu
chuckled. “You two are getting along.”
“...Not
really.”
“Yet you
brought him all the way over here.”
“Only
because you told me to,” he muttered irritably. Koharu sighed. “You really
can’t be honest, huh?”
“Still,
Ninomiya-kun’s so upbeat and a good kid. Friends like him are worth keeping
around.”
Tokame
didn’t reply. He went to the kitchen and poured himself a glass of water. The
tap water had a faint taste of chlorine.
Lol idk why im getting anxious about Niniomiya having a crush on Koharu💀the illustration was so pretty! They all looked so cute together during the haircut! Seems like Ninomiya has food and a warm place to sleep but no family, he’s always alone at home. And Tokame has the opposite
ReplyDeletemaybe Niniomiya is just shy around girls 😬😬😬 that's an interesting observation, in that way they end up completing each other 😀
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