MUNDANE HURT: Chapter 1
While you may already be familiar with these terms, I’ve provided their English definitions for those who may not be. I’ve also changed the name order to First and Last, rather than the Last and First order used in the original Japanese text.
1. さん (san): This is a general, respectful suffix used to address or refer to someone. It's similar to "Mr.," "Mrs.," or "Ms." in English. It's commonly used for people of all ages and social statuses in both formal and informal contexts.
2. 君 (kun): This suffix is often used for addressing younger males, or in a more familiar or casual setting. It can be used with people of the same or lower status, and it's commonly used among friends, students, or in professional settings where there is a clear hierarchy (like between a superior and a subordinate).
3. ちゃん (chan): This suffix is used to express affection or endearment, typically towards children, pets, or close friends. It conveys a sense of familiarity and warmth, and is often used with people who are younger or of the same age but with whom one shares a close, informal relationship. While it can be used for both males and females, it is more commonly used for females and children.
Content warning: This novel contains descriptions of abuse, explicit sexual content, graphic violence, r*pe, and su*cide. I will not be adding a trigger warning to each chapter with graphic content, so please consider this a general warning.
Lying on
his back on the bed, Tatsunari Nishizaki let out a soft exhale of cigarette
smoke. Stretching his arms forward with his fingers interlaced, the sunlight
streaming through the gap in the curtains illuminated the pale, blue veins
beneath his skin. His long arms were so thin they looked like twigs. Maybe I
should work out a little. But that kind of thing is such a pain, he thought
as he brought the cigarette to his lips again—only for it to be deftly plucked
from between his fingers.
Mai,
holding it high like a toy she’d just confiscated, flashed it teasingly.
“Give it
back.”
“Nope.” She
placed the lit cigarette into the ashtray on the side table.
“No smoking
on the bed. I’ve told you that before.”
“I was
lonely,” he sulked. “You wouldn’t pay any attention to me.”
When he put
on an exaggeratedly sullen act, she cooed, “Aw, so cute,” and ruffled his hair
with her elegant fingers. Her wet, long hair swayed gently, and a droplet fell,
landing on Nishizaki’s cheek with a soft splash. “Ah, sorry,” she said, wiping
it off with the pad of her finger.
Her face
looked different than usual. Why does she look so different? Were her eyes
always this small? Was she always this plain? Puzzled, he tilted his head
and then realized—she wasn’t wearing makeup. Without it, her complexion looked
sickly, and she appeared older. She mentioned turning 27 last month. Women
really age quickly. Makeup is amazing.
“You’re
such a natural flirt,” she said. “The type women can’t leave alone.”
“I always
get dumped, though. So pitiful, right?”
“Yeah,
right,” she said, pinching his cheek lightly.
“It’s true.
That’s why you’d better not ditch me, Mai.”
With an
exasperated “Oh, stop,” she hugged him, smiling happily despite herself. Even
knowing it was just playful banter, Nishizaki couldn’t deny that women were
weak for words that made them feel special. He pushed her slender body down
onto the bed, lifting her camisole to reveal her voluminous H-cup breasts.
Pressing his face against the softness, he inhaled the sweet, fruity scent that
lingered there.
Heat
stirred in his groin, and he reached for her underwear, fully intending to go
for another round, but she gently pushed his shoulder back.
“It’s
almost three o’clock. Don’t you need to get back to school today?”
With a
sigh, he pulled himself away from her intoxicatingly sensual body. Getting off
the bed, he shuffled over to the sofa where his shirt hung, slowly threading
his arms through the sleeves. Mai, still in her underwear, lounged on the bed,
propping herself up on one elbow as she watched him.
“There’s
something I’ve been wondering,” she said, her lips, paler than usual, parting
to speak.
“What?”
“Today’s
the sports festival, right? Why are you wearing your blazer? Shouldn’t it be a
tracksuit?”
Nishizaki
shrugged, his shoulders twitching slightly.
“Like hell
I’m walking outside in that crappy tracksuit.”
“Really? I
love tracksuits. They’re so high-school-y and cute.”
She looked
completely serious. Does she really think I should wear that? What a weird
woman. Sometimes she said things so lame that it made him cringe. Learning
she came from the countryside had made a lot of her quirks suddenly make sense.
Still, he wasn’t about to say, “Your sense of style is awful.” Dealing with her
sulking afterward would be too much work.
Instead, he
leaned down and gave her a kiss before saying, “See you,” and leaving her
apartment.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
Though
October had arrived, the relentless heat showed no signs of letting up. A short
walk outside was enough to make sweat bead on Nishizaki's forehead. The sky was
brutally clear, without a single cloud in sight. Unable to endure it any
longer, he shrugged off his blazer. The breeze was cool, but the sunlight was
punishing. The contrast between the air-conditioned indoors and the blazing
heat outside made his skin feel like it was losing its grip on reality.
As he
walked, his thoughts drifted lazily to Mai. At first, he’d been thrilled by her
Adult-Video-level boobs, but lately, it felt unnecessarily oversized, and from
certain angles, the sagging made her breasts look like a cow’s udder, which
grossed him out. She’s getting older too. Sometimes, he’d catch himself
thinking he didn’t need her anymore. But her apartment, just a five-minute walk
from school and always open for sex, was too convenient to give up.
As he
neared the school, the chaotic blend of J-pop and Western pop music grew
louder. On the sidewalk, passersby paused, startled by the growing cheers and the
sharp crack of starting pistols coming from within the brick walls of the
campus.
After
making sure no one was around, Nishizaki slipped quietly through the back gate.
Once inside the school grounds, he felt a little more secure. There was no
evidence he’d left the premises, and he could come up with any number of
excuses if questioned. Sticking to the shadows along the school building, he
made his way toward the noise-filled courtyard, keeping his expression
nonchalant.
At Nishizaki’s
private school, Shirakashi East High School, the annual sports festival was surprisingly
elaborate for a private institution. Each grade had six classes, labeled A to
F, and teams were formed by grouping together the same letter classes from
first, second, and third years. The six teams competed for points. The cheering
contest and the final relay race were supposedly the highlights. Or so they
say..
He hadn’t
attended last year as a first-year, so he could only speculate. Despite friends
telling him it had been a blast, he couldn’t help but think, What kind of
idiot finds fun in sweating and exhausting themselves?
From
elementary school, Nishizaki had always been bad at sports. After he discovered
the magic of feigning illness, he’d successfully skipped every sports festival
and athletic event throughout elementary and junior high. This year, however,
his streak had come to an end.
The culprit
was Honda, an old-fashioned, stubborn P.E. teacher who took it upon himself to
declare that any student absent from the sports festival would be marked as
absent for the day. Some teachers had argued against it, pointing out that
students had their reasons, but Honda had the final word. The compromise was
this: students could only skip the festival by submitting a signed statement
from their parents detailing their reasons, and they’d still have to complete a
makeup session with the same athletic activities on a later date.
The sports
festival was bad enough, but the idea of a "makeup session" was
horrifying. The no-escape situation didn’t bother him at first. He’d assumed
his uncle—who ran a hospital and had connections with the school’s chairman—would
pull some strings as usual.
But then Honda
complicated matters by announcing he would personally verify every student’s
attendance and oversee the makeup sessions himself. With such direct
supervision, there was no room for Nishizaki to fake his way out. On top of
that, he was already on Honda’s radar for frequently sitting out of P.E.
classes under dubious pretenses.
"Why
does everyone have to participate?"
"How
is taking part in a sports festival supposed to impact the rest of my
life?"
"And
if I get injured? That’d be the worst."
When
Nishizaki grumbled, his uncle just gave a faint laugh and said, "Well,
well." His uncle, now 53, had taken over as the director of the hospital
Nishizaki’s grandfather once ran. Busy as he was, he rarely came home. With
gentle features reminiscent of Nishizaki’s mother, his younger sister, and an
air of polished dignity, he embodied the word gentleman.
"Every
teacher has their own way of thinking," his uncle offered diplomatically.
"Yeah,
well, whenever I see that guy with that self-righteous look like he’s drunk on
his own ideology, it pisses me off. That’s the definition of a fossil. Can’t we
just ship him off to some other school?"
Apparently,
his uncle had brought it up with the school chairman, but Honda, the P.E.
teacher, was set to retire next year. The absurdity of the "attendance
checks" passed because everyone decided to humor him, given it was his
last year. In the end, Nishizaki had no choice but to relent. He agreed to show
his face for the initial and final attendance checks and disappear in between.
With this
many students, no one’s going to notice if one slips away.
And Nishizaki’s bet was right. He managed to sneak back in and blend into the
crowd behind the cheering section for his class, Team F. All he had to do now
was pass Honda’s final "attendance check," and he’d be in the clear.
He had
timed his return to coincide with the end of the events, but the cavalry battle
was still going on in the center of the track. It seemed the program was
running late.
"Go!
Go!"
Ahead of
him, a shaved-headed senior with 3-F displayed on the back of his bib
waved his right arm and shouted, his face flushed red. It’s just a sports
festival. Nishizaki couldn’t understand why someone would get so worked up
about it.
The senior,
with his oversized face and features scrunched too close together, looked like
a cruel joke by some god. The uglier the guy, the worse they look when
they’re all fired up. Nishizaki had to fight the urge to pat the senior on
the shoulder and advise him: Relax a bit, Senpai. Keep it classy.
"Hey,
Nishizaki!"
Yuzuki
passed by, spotting him. Among their classmates, Yuzuki had a reasonably decent
face. His taste in things wasn’t bad either, putting him in the “cooler”
category. But today, he was decked out in the ultimate crime against fashion: a
white short-sleeve T-shirt and navy-blue gym shorts. The P.E. uniform left no
room for redemption. Nishizaki shuddered at the thought of being made to wear
it. Whoever designed this atrocity deserved a one-way ticket to hell.
"Where
have you been all this time?" Yuzuki’s face, red-brown and glistening from
sunburn, shone as he spoke.
"My
girlfriend’s place," Nishizaki replied casually. "Figured they’d
start the attendance check soon."
Yuzuki
clapped his dusty hands lightly and said, "Ah, makes sense. The team relay
is the last event after the cavalry battle, so if they’re doing attendance,
it’ll probably be after that. …Oh, nice! We won!"
Cheers erupted
around them. Students with green headbands came tumbling back into the cheering
section from the field, greeted with high-fives and hugs. The scent of dirt and
sweat flooded the tent, making Nishizaki feel nauseous.
“With that
win in the cavalry battle, we’ve moved up to third. If we win the relay, we’ll
be the champions,” Yuzuki said, his voice a bit high-pitched with excitement.
Nishizaki didn’t care in the slightest. Whether they won or lost, he just
wanted it to end already.
Finally, as
the excitement from the cavalry battle faded, and students who seemed to be
relay participants began gathering inside the track.
"Hey,
Yuzuki, where’s our seat?" Nishizaki asked.
"Second-years
are in rows four, five, and six, arranged by attendance number. They’re marked,
so you’ll find it easy. Your spot’s probably in the middle somewhere."
"What
about you?"
"Far
left," Yuzuki replied.
"Relay’s
the last event, right? Let me sit in your spot."
Yuzuki
hesitated for a moment, his lips twitching in a half-smile, but then his usual
grin returned as he scratched the back of his head. "Fine, whatever."
When they
reached Yuzuki’s seat, a bottle of water was sitting on the chair with his
attendance number tag. Seeing it made Nishizaki’s throat feel parched.
"I’m
borrowing this," he said, unscrewing the cap before Yuzuki could reply.
The bottle was ice-cold, probably freshly bought, and the carbonation bubbled
pleasantly in his stomach. He drank enough to leave it half-empty but figured
it wasn’t empty, so it was fine.
A starter
pistol cracked in the distance, followed by cheers as the relay began. Girls in
gym uniforms sprinted along the track. Among them, Nishizaki spotted Ayukawa, a
classmate and one of the prettiest girls in their grade. She ranked in the top
three, easily. Nishizaki had tried hitting on her a few times, but she had a
boyfriend from another school and hadn’t shown any interest.
"Hey,
Ayukawa’s running. Did they pick her because of her looks or what?" he
muttered.
Standing
beside him, Yuzuki chuckled dryly, his eyes fixed on the race. "Nah, no
one wanted to sign up for the relay, so the girls drew lots."
Turns out,
Ayukawa wasn’t much of a runner. She lagged far behind, solidly in last place.
"Yikes,
being that bad in a relay feels like a public execution. Who’s running
for the guys?"
The group
relay had two male and two female runners from each grade. Nishizaki had
skipped out on discussions, so he had no idea who was participating.
"Nagano."
"You’re
kidding. Nagano? That Nagano, the bookworm Nagano?"
Sure
enough, at the end of the row of runners for Team F stood Masayuki Nagano. To
make matters worse, he had the green sash, marking him as the anchor.
"Wait,
he’s the anchor?"
Even after
half a year of sharing a class, Nishizaki’s impression of Nagano hadn’t
changed. The guy was a textbook example of a "study freak"—zero sense
of style or personality. Sure, Shirakashi East High School was known for
academics, but no one flaunted their hard work. Students who looked too
desperate were laughed at for trying too hard. It was cooler to appear as if
good grades came naturally.
Nagano,
however, was on another level. He would crack open his study guides and bury
himself in them, even during lunch or breaks, his diligence on full display. At
this level of transparency, it was almost like he existed in a different world.
So, everyone just thought, “Oh, he’s that kind of guy,” and left him alone
without any comparison.
“Kitao
recommended him. Nagano may not be in any clubs, but he’s fast. Not that you’d
know, with how much you skip practice,” Yuzuki added, his words laced with a
hint of a jab. Before Nishizaki could retort, a chorus of gasps erupted from
the cheering section—a third-year girl in the third leg of the race had
tripped. Though she quickly got back up and started running again, their
position, which had climbed to fourth, plummeted to last.
“Oh, come
on! What the hell is she doing?” Yuzuki clicked his tongue.
By the
fourth runner, they had clawed their way from last to fifth place. The fifth
runner pushed them up to fourth, but the gap to the top remained nearly 30
meters (98 ft) ahead. Worse, every other team’s anchor looked the part—fit,
composed, exuding confidence as they warmed up. By comparison, Nagano, who bore
the entire weight of Team F’s expectations—looked unnervingly pale and skinny,
his shoulders and his slender limbs almost delicate.
"Man,
maybe one of those guys ahead will trip or something," Yuzuki muttered,
practically casting curses under his breath.
The anchors
took their places on the track, accepting batons from their teams one after the
other. Team F’s fifth runner finally approached. Nagano crouched slightly,
taking a light jog as he positioned himself, and received the baton in fourth
place.
Nishizaki
had never really paid attention to how people run before. But even he, a
complete novice, could tell there was something different about the way Nagano
moved.
"Hey...
isn’t that second-year anchor crazy fast?"
A
third-year seated up front echoed Nishizaki’s unspoken thoughts. Unlike the
others, Nagano’s form wasn’t frantic or desperate; it was smooth and relaxed,
almost leisurely. Yet, despite that appearance, he closed the gap on the runner
ahead with stunning speed.
Every time
Nagano overtook another runner, the cheers from Team F’s section erupted
louder. Before long, Nishizaki found himself clenching both fists tightly, his
eyes glued to the green sash streaking forward.
With
breathtaking swiftness, Nagano overtook the runner from Team B just before the
finish line, breaking through the white tape at the goal. A roar like thunder
exploded from the crowd.
Team F had
pulled off a dramatic come-from-behind victory. Chaos broke out—teammates
embraced, tears flowed freely, and even those who’d been sitting in quiet
disinterest joined in the celebration.
Nagano,
though visibly reluctant, was hoisted into the air against his will, tossed up
repeatedly as the crowd celebrated him. People surrounded him, showering him
with praise: "You were incredible!" "So cool!" They
patted his shoulders, ruffled his hair, treating him like the hero of the
moment.
Yet
Nagano’s expression remained distant, detached, his eyes betraying no emotion
as though all this fuss had nothing to do with him.
Their eyes met.
Nishizaki
froze, a pang of awkwardness striking him. This was the same "study
freak" they had mocked countless times, laughing at how "he could
probably get off to his textbooks." And yet here Nishizaki was, feeling a
strange tension, as if meeting a celebrity.
Nagano, on
the other hand, looked at him—or rather, through him. It was like Nishizaki
wasn’t even there, just another piece of furniture or a stray pebble on the ground.
Entirely unbothered by the attention, barely acknowledging his classmate
sitting in his dress shirt nearby.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
The moment
November arrived, the wind turned bitingly cold. The dry sound of dead leaves
swirling in the air painted the season in shades of pale brown. Since two days
ago, the classroom heating had been turned on, and by the afternoon, more than
half of the class lay slumped over their desks like corpses, filling the room
with a languid, oppressive atmosphere.
On any
other day, Nishizaki would’ve joined the pile of bodies, but today, sleep
refused to come. His mind kept circling back to a conversation with his uncle,
leaving a restless, uneasy feeling in his chest. Yesterday, he had casually
mentioned wanting a nearby apartment for convenience. His uncle, who had been
at his desk working on his computer, glanced up and tilted his head.
“You’ve
only got a year or so left of high school,” he said. “Wouldn’t it make more
sense to wait and buy something near your university after you graduate? I
mean, we didn’t get Masaya his place until he started college. It’d be unfair
to do it earlier for you. Just hang in there a little longer, okay?”
The
explanation was reasonable enough that Nishizaki couldn’t throw a tantrum like
some petulant child and demand, “I want it now!” But even so, he still
wanted it. The fact that he could have it if they decided to buy it only
made giving up that much harder.
When
Nishizaki was barely a year old, his father had died in a car accident. His
mother, raised in a sheltered and privileged household, had no income as a
stay-at-home wife. With encouragement from her now-deceased parents, she moved
back to her childhood home with her two sons. From then on, Nishizaki and his
older brother Masaya were doted on and spoiled by their grandfather,
grandmother, and their uncle, who had taken over the family hospital after
marrying. Nishizaki had been so young that for a while, he even thought his
uncle was his father.
Though he
sometimes wondered what life might have been like if his real father had lived,
he never felt lonely—his uncle had filled that role perfectly.
His uncle
and aunt never had children of their own, so Nishizaki and his brother bore the
weight of their grandparents’ hopes and dreams. The responsible Masaya lived up
to those expectations, entering medical school and now in his fourth year. With
his brother taking on the burden of family expectations, Nishizaki, the second
son, was free to do whatever he wanted, unpressured and unrestrained.
But
Nishizaki’s desire for an apartment wasn’t just about having a rest spot close
to school. There was another reason—he didn’t want to live in the same house as
his uncle’s wife, Miyoko, any longer.
Back when
their grandparents were alive, Miyoko had behaved herself. But after their
deaths, with their uncle often away for work, leaving the four of them at home
together more often, Miyoko had dropped her facade. She started making snide
comments aimed at her sister-in-law and her two nephews.
He could
tolerate being called “lazy,” “arrogant,” or “spoiled.” But when she had the
audacity to criticize his perfect older brother—the one who had always been the
top student, the student council president, and a volunteer with an impeccable
record—by saying, “You’re creepy, always studying like that. If you don’t do
sports too, you’ll grow up to be an unbalanced person.” It was criticism taken
to an absurd level.
Masaya,
being the kind and earnest person he was, apologized with a simple, “I’m sorry,
Aunt Miyoko.” Miyoko, visibly pleased with herself after forcing this apology,
was the worst. She was a horrible old hag. That night, Nishizaki secretly
poured detergent at the base of her prized rose bushes. When her beloved roses
withered, Miyoko had been beside herself with rage.
If he
couldn’t get his own place before graduation, maybe he should have kept his
busty girlfriend, Mai, around a little longer. Her patronizing tone had started
grating on his nerves, and once he found something annoying, he couldn’t stand
the person’s face, body, voice, or even smell, so he’d broken it off. It was
the same pattern with his last girlfriend too. I guess I’m just the kind
of guy who’s done the moment I
think something’s off.
His gaze
drifted lazily toward the window. Just one desk over, he could see the back of
“the study freak,” bent over a reference book. The excitement from the sports
festival, which had peaked to fever pitch, had faded in less than three days,
and now, everyone’s focus was on their future plans. Ever since the career
survey was submitted last month, the classroom atmosphere had shifted
dramatically.
He couldn’t
tell his classmates, but he’d already secured a spot through the private
university recommendation slot offered by Shirakashi East High School. As long
as he kept up his attendance, he’d get in. Watching his classmates, who’d been
hit by the harsh reality of their test scores, slump in dejection, he felt a
little pity. Life really did come down to connections and money. The difference
between the haves and the have-nots was tangible.
That said,
blurting out “You guys are just the have-nots” would only stir jealousy
and get him excluded. So he kept quiet about his recommendation slot and played
along with their conversations. Among them, only Nagano, perpetually at the top
of their grade rankings, seemed capable of getting into his dream university
without the help of connections or wealth.
Even though
the brief glory of the relay hero had long since faded, “the study freak” now
exuded a different kind of aura, bolstered by the simple addition of “fast
runner” to his reputation. Thinking back to that race, Nishizaki still found
the image vivid: Nagano steadily overtaking runner after runner, as if the
others were standing still.
How is
someone that fast not on any sports teams? Nagano’s
running form hadn’t looked amateurish—if anything, it seemed likely he’d been
on a track team in middle school. Nishizaki wanted to ask, but he couldn’t
think of a natural way to bring it up. With no other option, he resorted to
fantasizing a conversation.
“Nagano, I
haven't had sex in a while since I broke up with an older girlfriend, so I'm
pent up. What do you think I should do?” He
imagined the model-student Nagano responding with a deadpan seriousness
straight out of a school handbook: “Sexual relations should wait until
marriage. Until then, use masturbation to cope.” It was the kind of
hilariously old-fashioned moral stance that could probably make him laugh out
loud.
As soon as
the break started, the zombie-like students around him revived, getting up from
their desks one by one.
“Hey, hey!”
Yuzuki
plopped down in the empty seat next to him. When Nishizaki didn’t feel like
talking, people like him were as annoying as flies.
“Sixth-period
Modern Japanese literature is self-study.”
As much as
Nishizaki found Yuzuki’s constant chatter irritating, the guy had a knack for
bringing useful gossip.
“Seriously?”
“Yeah,
Moriyama wasn’t feeling well and went home at lunch.”
“Nice. I
can catch up on some sleep.”
Yuzuki
leaned his elbows on the desk. “The only question is, who’s doing the rounds?”
“Oh yeah,
Nishizaki,” Yuzuki said suddenly. “You’ve actually been showing up to school
properly lately.”
Back in his
first year, Nishizaki had barely scraped together enough attendance to move up,
using doctor’s notes as cover to skip school and hang out in town. His second
year hadn’t been much different, but ever since the sports festival, he’d been
attending regularly.
“I’ve grown
up.”
“Yeah,
right. It’s because you need to secure your attendance for that recommendation,
isn’t it?”
Even though
Yuzuki had already figured it out, he still asked in that leading way that
revealed his passive-aggressive streak.
“It’s just…
everyone’s freaking out about exams. No one wants to hang out with me anymore.”
After the
career counseling survey, even the ones pretending to slack off had switched
gears to studying for exams. Their sudden unavailability was jarring.
But then
again, Nishizaki was in no position to criticize. He was coming to school for
the sake of his attendance record and his recommendation letter. In the end,
they were all just scrambling in their own ways.
“Everyone’s
got their future on the line, after all,” Yuzuki said, fluttering his right
hand in a lazy butterfly motion.
“Kill me
now, seriously, I’m dying of boredom.”
Nishizaki
slumped forward on his desk. Yuzuki leaned closer, laughing.
“Only one
in our class who’s all set is Nagano. He doesn’t hang out with anyone. Probably
thinks it’s a waste of time to talk to people dumber than him.”
“He’s
always with Kitao, though.”
Despite his
loner status, even someone like Nagano had a “diplomatic port” of sorts, a
connection to the rest of the class.
“Maybe
they’re just ‘gay friends,’” Yuzuki shrugged with a smirk.
“For real?”
Nishizaki leaned forward, intrigued. Yuzuki smacked him hard on the back. “I’m
kidding, obviously.”
“But if
they actually were, that’d be something,” Nishizaki joked as he noticed their
homeroom teacher, Yasukuni, entering the classroom during break. Wondering what
brought him there, he watched as Yasukuni called Nagano out into the hallway.
“I bet I
could get Nagano to fall for me,” Nishizaki muttered, watching the study
freak’s reflection in the hallway window. Yuzuki’s brows furrowed.
“Guys like
him—so serious—once you break through their defenses, they fall hard.”
“What’re
you even talking about? I thought you had an older girlfriend.”
“Already
broke it off. Big boobs are fun at first, but you get sick of them eventually.”
Yuzuki drew
close, brimming with excitement. “Dude, what a waste! You should’ve passed her
on to me.”
“Older
women are supposed to be wild, right?”
Nishizaki
tilted his head slightly, pretending to ponder. “She’s super picky about guys,
though.”
“What’s that
supposed to mean?” Yuzuki asked, his face scrunching up suspiciously. Sure, she
was a woman Nishizaki had dated, so by that standard, she wasn’t unattractive.
She could turn heads with makeup on, and Nishizaki—who had been scouted while
walking around town—was leagues ahead of Yuzuki. Let’s be real: if there
were five losers lined up, Yuzuki would be the least bad-looking. She wouldn’t
give him the time of day.
“Forget
her. Let’s make a bet. I’ll get Nagano to fall for me, and we’ll see who’s
right.”
Yuzuki gave
Nishizaki a skeptical look, narrowing his eyes. “This makes no sense. Guys
aren’t even fun.”
“That’s why
it’s just for kicks. A game,” Nishizaki said with a grin. “If I win and get
Nagano, you hand over your limited-edition Kash shoes. If I lose, I’ll hook you
up with a big-boobed girl.”
Yuzuki fell
silent. The limited-edition Kash sneakers were his pride and joy, the kind of
thing you couldn’t just buy anywhere. Nishizaki wasn’t the type to covet other
people’s stuff, but those shoes were special. Besides, Yuzuki’s constant
bragging about them had been getting on his nerves. He’d love to snatch them
away.
“No way.
That’s dumb,” Yuzuki muttered, looking down and refusing the bet, just as
Nishizaki expected.
“C’mon, that
guy is super into sex. If we started going out, I could probably get him into
bed on the first day.”
Yuzuki’s
head snapped up, his eyes locking onto Nishizaki’s. Seeing that, Nishizaki
smirked.
“You don’t
think I can do it, do you? That’s fine, then. But seriously, you’d have all the
advantage. If I lose, you get a hookup. If I win, you’re just out some shoes,
and I’ll even let you watch me kiss Nagano as proof.”
The way
Yuzuki’s Adam’s apple bobbed as he swallowed confirmed it: This guy’s a
total virgin.
“Well…
yeah, okay,” Yuzuki stammered.
“We’ll make
the deadline the end of the second semester,” Nishizaki said, leaning back in
his chair with a cocky grin. “If I win, I’ll kiss Nagano right in front of
you.”
“Seriously?”
Yuzuki gave a half-smile, part disbelief, part amusement.
“Sure, it’s
a game. But why Nagano, though? Aren’t there prettier, more feminine-looking
guys in the class?”
“It’s the
serious ones that are fun to conquer.”
Yuzuki
snorted, shaking his head. “You’re a maniac~”
“If Nagano
falls for you, and he gets serious, then what?” Yuzuki asked, a hint of genuine
concern in his tone.
Nishizaki
arched his back and let out a sharp laugh. “Like I’d care about that. It’s just
a game.”
T.N.: I want to thank P and D for the Ko-fi donations ☕, especially P for requesting this novel—it truly is a hidden gem in Konohara's works! 😍 (I know some people will disagree but oh well~ 😅)
Normally, I don't like the trope of 'popular boy makes a bet to seduce the nerdy classmate,' but since it's Konohara-sensei, I had a feeling this novel would be different.
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for the translation! And so it begins.....Nishizaki is such a scared and lonely character. He doesn't take anything seriously and I believe it is because his father died, so he feels like if he gets close romantically to anyone they'll abandon him in some way....he projects a lot and seems to be envious of Nagano. Nishizaki secretly admires him, but is too arrogant to let that be known....The first time I read this, I thought Nishizaki chose Nagano on a whim, but no, it was calculated. Nishizaki isn't just bored, he wants revenge.... Konohara-Sensei tends to write characters that are hiding something, so what are you hiding Nishizaki??? The theme topics I think will be presented in this novel are: Love, Revenge, Sacrifice, Man v. Self...
ReplyDeleteThat's an interesting point! I didn’t see Nishizaki as lonely—maybe because I was annoyed at him from the start lol. To me, he came across as a spoiled rich brat who grew up unrestrained and shallow, and Nagano felt like a new shiny toy he wanted to play with. Was he infatuated with Nagano? I’m not sure, but I kind of got that feeling too. I’m excited to see your analysis of him as the story unfolds~ 😊 enjoy your reading 💕
DeleteThat might be me projecting ahah 💀. I do think Nishizaki needs a hobby or something because he's always bored & doing this 'game' thing for fun. On the first read I did see Nishizaki as spoiled & I was annoyed with him & very angry w/him but on the 2nd reread I see him as a character who is trying to protect himself from getting hurt, but he ends up sabotaging himself. I feel like spoiled characters often crave attention & I Think it stems from his dad dying...
ReplyDeleteHis family do play a big hole on his personality and state of mind, but we'll get to see that more ahead~
DeleteHey Jewels, do you know if Nishizaki is the one standing or sitting on the cover? I can't figure it out. I feel like it shows their power dynamics throughout the novel...
ReplyDeleteNishizaki is the one sitting ☺️
DeleteLol it’s been a while since there’s been a woman in Konohara’s work haha and we get to see two in this chapter. I don’t know if I find it believable that Yuzuki is getting excited over watching to boys kiss lol. I do like Nishizaki’s personality though, he’s very interesting.
ReplyDeleteIt started right off the bat with a straight MC in bed with a woman 😅—definitely a sign that this novel isn't going to be a typical BL haha
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