MUNDANE HURT: Chapter 6
The narrow
alley, just wide enough for bicycles to pass, was tucked behind a strip of bars
and snack joints. There were no streetlights, just the dim, leftover light
seeping through windows, adding a sense of bleakness to the scene.
Nishizaki
had been sitting by the side door of the hostess club "Cupid" for
about ten minutes now, perched on a pile of concrete blocks. The chill was
seeping through him, creeping up his back and sending shivers down his spine.
Wasn't someone going to come out? If the door wasn’t locked, he could just walk
in… He glared at the cheap, stainless-steel doorknob as if he could blow it
open with his gaze alone.
A
black-suited bartender emerged from the back door of a shop across the alley,
tossing a clear garbage bag into a large trash can. He spotted Nishizaki
sitting there, gave him a suspicious look, and then disappeared back inside.
Frustrated by that lingering, judgmental stare, Nishizaki spat on the ground.
Ugly ape-faced loser with a receding hairline. He should get smashed over the
head with a beer bottle by one of his customers.
The faint
odor of rotting trash lingered, even with the lid closed. Out of nowhere, a
white cat appeared, circling around the trash can, stretching to poke its nose
under the lid. He picked up a small stone and threw it, but his aim was off,
and it hit the overhead pipes instead with a metallic clang. Startled, the cat
shivered and darted into the shadows of the alley.
Nishizaki
chuckled, but the cold air stung his throat, and he coughed lightly. His breath
hung white in the air. Just wearing a fleece jacket was miserably cold, but it
was all he had. He was out here freezing just to see Miyu. She’d blocked his
emails, texts, and calls, so now he had to stake out her workplace to catch
her. It was infuriating. She wasn’t even that pretty, just a big-bottomed fool.
Finally, he
heard the doorknob click open. A woman in a pale blue dress stepped out. He
recognized her face—she’d been over at Miyu’s apartment once. Her name… he
couldn’t remember. She lit a cigarette, her movements lethargic.
“Hey.”
She turned
in surprise, looking down at him. When she recognized him, her face twisted
with distaste, and she crushed her cigarette underfoot, starting to head back
inside. Nishizaki grabbed the hem of her dress, determined not to let her get
away.
“Let go.”
“Get Miyu.”
“She’s busy
right now.”
“She can
step out for a second.”
The woman,
realizing Nishizaki wasn’t going to back off, clicked her heels sharply and
glared at him.
“Seriously,
you’re the worst. Coming all the way here to bother her at work? Miyu doesn’t
want to see you.”
“This is
the last time. It’ll be over after this,” he lied smoothly.
The woman
stared at him in silence before muttering, “Fine, I’ll go get her,” and took a
step back.
“You’d
better,” he warned as he let go. Five minutes passed. Then ten. No sign of
Miyu. He checked his phone every minute, muttering curses under his breath. Was
she ignoring him? He began imagining going in through the front as if he were a
customer. He’d push past the bouncer, yank Miyu out from the sofa where she was
cozying up to some bald, fat old guy, and slap her across the face…
His violent
fantasy was interrupted by the soft sound of the door opening.
“...Tat-chan?”
Peeking out
from behind the door, Miyu stood in a baby-pink dress. Her makeup was heavy as
ever, despite his many complaints that it didn’t suit her.
“You’re
late,” he snapped.
“Sorryyy,”
she said, tilting her head with a pout.
“Lend me
some money.”
He tacked
on, “I’ll pay you back” as an afterthought. Miyu giggled nervously and pulled
out a wallet with a heart-shaped charm dangling from it. He snatched it from
her hand.
One, two…
almost 70,000 yen. He took the bills and tossed the now-empty wallet back to
her. Miyu’s face crumpled, looking like she was about to cry.
“That’s mean…”
“I’m not
your girlfriend anymore, Tat-chan. And you’ve never once paid me back,” she
said.
“Right,
thanks,” he replied, waving her off with his right hand.
“Drop dead,
you jerk!” she shouted at his back as he walked away. Pulling out his phone, he
left the entertainment district and headed to meet up with his guy at a
fast-food place near Sugamo Station, taking a cab there. But when he arrived,
his guy wasn’t at the counter. After about twenty minutes of waiting, flipping
idly through a cheap manga he’d bought at a convenience store, his contact
finally showed up.
The guy,
known for his signature green knit cap, was a man Nishizaki nicknamed “Tsubame”
because of his resemblance to the comedian Hashimoto Tsubame. Nishizaki didn’t
know his real name, and Tsubame probably didn’t know his either. He’d overheard
someone calling him “bro,” and had stuck with that.
Tsubame
picked up the manga Nishizaki had been holding, flipping through the pages as
if reading. He spotted the 60,000 yen stashed between the pages and slipped the
manga into his jacket pocket. Each dealer had their own method; Tsubame always
requested that sums over 30,000 yen be hidden inside a small book, and
Nishizaki, knowing this, had prepped the cash accordingly. Tsubame was pleased
with the extra care, as usual.
Yesterday
afternoon, Tsubame had texted, “Got something you might like—interested?”
Nishizaki replied immediately, “Very,” but he’d had only 4,700 yen on hand, not
nearly enough. He’d asked Tsubame to hold it, and Tsubame had responded, “For
you, bro, sure. But no more than two days, okay?”
The thing
he loved was expensive and rarely available, so he couldn’t afford to miss the
chance. But he was unemployed with no savings and unsure how long Miyu would
keep lending him money. He’d often thought that being a dealer like Tsubame
might not be a bad gig—he’d make cash and get to keep a stash for himself.
He texted Tsubame,
“How’s business?” They communicated mostly through text, even when sitting next
to each other. Tsubame’s reply came quickly.
“Same old,
same old.”
“Thinking
of getting into the biz,” Nishizaki replied, hinting at his interest in
dealing.
But Tsubame,
ever astute, replied, “You’d probably better not.”
“You’d end
up using it all yourself.”
Nishizaki’s
heart skipped a beat. He knew he couldn’t deny it convincingly, and Tsubame
wouldn’t budge.
“Broke as
hell, so if you know any high-paying gigs, let me know. I’ll do anything.”
Tsubame
replied with a funny sticker but Nishizaki had a feeling he wouldn’t be getting
a call.
Tsubame
left the store first, dropping a rolled-up note at his feet. Nishizaki picked
it up and checked the location for the key and station. Returning to Sugamo
Station, he found the hidden key in an old building’s flower bed, then took a
taxi to Yoyogi Station to open a coin locker.
The second
he saw the paper bag inside, a triumphant fanfare sounded in his mind. He
managed to resist the urge to indulge right there in the station bathroom and
instead hurried back to his usual manga café in Tabata. He rented a booth close
to the bathroom. His hands trembled with excitement—no, they were shaking too
much, making even the simplest tasks annoying.
He laid out
four neat white lines of powder and snorted them up through a straw. As
expected, the nausea came quickly. Stumbling to the restroom, he dry-heaved
over and over. After several cycles of inhaling and retching, the nausea began
to fade, replaced by a familiar, creeping euphoria that spread through his entire
body.
Lying back
on the cheap, cracked faux-leather mat, a soft laugh bubbled up from deep
inside him. Heh… heheh… It wouldn’t stop. That floating, in-between
state where he wasn’t quite asleep but wasn’t fully awake either—it felt
sublime. He didn’t want to think about anything. He didn’t want to do anything.
If he could stay suspended in this lazy haze forever, it would be perfect. If
he could die like this, drifting away in pleasure, that would be the ultimate.
The shabby mat beneath him felt as luxurious as a feather bed.
In that
foggy space where wakefulness and sleep blurred, his uncle’s face appeared in
his mind. Why him? Was it his death anniversary? Or… what day was it
today anyway? Ugh, who cares? I don’t want to think about this.
His uncle had
always done whatever he wanted for him, like a real dad, but that man didn’t
care about him at all. He preferred Nishizaki’s older brother, and he shunned
the “useless little brother.” The day after his high school graduation, he
overheard his uncle talking with his aunt Miyoko in the mansion garden.
“Masaya is
such a well-behaved, smart kid, but Tatsuya? Even back in high school, he just
kept taking advantage of your connections with the chairman to make
unreasonable demands and caused nothing but problems for the school. He’ll
never amount to anything.”
Hidden from
view, he listened as Miyoko’s words spilled out like poison.
“But even
if Tatsuya isn’t the brightest, I can’t just ignore him.”
His uncle’s
voice was as cold as ice.
“A kid like
Tatsuya just lashes out under strict control. If he gets reckless and does
something terrible, it’ll affect Masaya’s future. All I have to do is give him
some money and freedom, and he’ll be satisfied. Simple enough. But I’ll only
support him until he graduates college.”
He knew he
wasn’t particularly bright, but no one else had ever told him so to his face.
He didn’t care what Miyoko thought, but hearing his beloved uncle label him as
“hopeless” and treat him like a burden—it was a shock that made his knees go
weak.
“He’s dumb
and costs us a fortune—what a worthless investment,” Miyoko had spat, and his
uncle hadn’t contradicted her.
The sting
of those words lingered, corroding him from the inside out. Fine, he
thought, I’m worthless, just like you said. Then I’ll act like it. He
started skipping college classes, maxing out his credit cards every month, and
going even wilder than he had in high school. It was the best time of his life,
except for the way his uncle’s voice kept flashing through his mind: Hopeless…—it
got under his skin. Just go away already. Die, he’d thought—and then, as
if the curse had worked, his uncle had an accident and died during his first
year of college. He’d been driving his sick mother to the hospital… They hadn’t
exchanged meaningful words since that conversation in the garden.
Thinking
back on those feelings, his chest tightened with the same pain. So what? I’m
just not as sharp as my brother, okay? I can’t try hard, and I can’t stand
anything tedious. And even if I’m not smart, even if I screw around sometimes—I
still graduated high school, got into college, and with money, I can make
things work out no matter what, right?
But… still…
If I’d at least tried at something, if I’d held on, maybe something would be
different now. Is this stuff weak or something? Must be a defective batch.
Again, he
made a row of lines and inhaled. The sadness, the anxiety—they receded softly
into the background, replaced by that familiar, floating relaxation. Eyes fixed
on the patterns in the ceiling, he felt a slow, indulgent smile spread across
his face, his mind bathing in the happiness this stuff brought him.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
Three weeks
after buying "that stuff," a message from Tsubame finally came
through: Can we meet? The last bout of using it too often had left him
sleepless, fatigued, and with withdrawal symptoms that had just barely settled
down. He knew well enough how the stuff worked—if he paced himself, withdrawal
wouldn't hit as hard. But it was impossible to resist the “feast” right in
front of him. When the symptoms became unbearable, he messaged Tsubame more
than once saying, I’d like to read another “book.” Every time, Tsubame
shot him down with a curt Nothing in stock.
Even though
he’d just recovered, the first thought that popped into his mind when he saw
Tsubame’s message was, How can I get the cash? This had to mean new
stock was in. He wanted it. Wanted it badly. Maybe I’ll hit up Miyu again
for some cash? But last time she resisted so hard… Who else could I borrow
from…? He turned ideas for money over and over in his head. As if reading
his mind, Tsubame’s follow-up message came in: This isn’t about “that.”
Annoyed, he clicked his tongue.
Tsubame:
“A friend’s looking for help with some side work. Interested?”
With a
scowl, he let the message sit on read for a few hours. Just then, a clerk at
the manga café walked up, saying, “You’re a week overdue, so it’s about time
you paid for the room.” Right, he thought. He shot Tsubame a message
back: What kind of job?
Tsubame
complained back with a Slow response, dude, then added that he was
nearby and suggested they meet at a park about five minutes away from the café.
The park was small, with only three pieces of playground equipment. It wasn’t
hard to spot Tsubame in his trademark green knit cap.
“You’ve
gotten even thinner, haven’t you?” was the first thing out of his mouth. He’d
noticed his cheeks were looking a little hollow in the mirror lately, but it
wasn’t anything unusual. While on that stuff, he never had much of an appetite,
and even after it wore off, the symptoms left him too drained to feel hungry.
“Nah, not
really.”
“Everything
in moderation, you know? You’re responsible for yourself,” Tsubame replied in
that condescending way, like he hadn’t been the one selling it in the first
place. Mind your own business, he thought irritably, jerking his chin in
dismissal.
Usually,
their business was handled entirely through messaging—no calls, no in-person
meetings. For Tsubame to ask him to meet…There must be something more
dangerous going on than usual. Tsubame sighed, looking irritated, and
straddled one of the park’s worn-down playground animals.
“So, here’s
the thing—the job pays 100,000 yen a day.” He spread his hands wide,
emphasizing the amount.
“Seriously?
Is this something the cops could come after us for?”
Tsubame
shook his head emphatically.
“No, no,
that part’s fine. It’s just that the job is for some, uh, foreign clients, and
it comes with a little… extracurricular fun.”
He glanced
down involuntarily. The stuff left him pretty much useless for anything
physical, but he was clean now, so everything was back in working order. Getting
paid to sleep with foreign women? The thought seemed too good to be true,
but he knew better than to assume he’d luck out with some bombshell. For all he
knew, he’d be rolling the dice with some woman old enough to be his
grandmother. But for 100,000 yen? He could manage. It’d just be like using a
live “toy,” after all.
“I’m in.”
“You
answered pretty fast,” Tsubame smirked.
“Damn
right, 100,000 is sweet. How come you’re not doing it?”
“That’s the
thing.” Tsubame scratched at his scruffy beard with one finger, looking for all
the world like a seasoned sage. “The boss told me to round up some lookers for
the job. And you’re, well… you’re a good-looking guy, you know?”
It had been
a while since he’d gotten a compliment on his looks, and it lifted his spirits.
The job was scheduled for the next night at the lobby of an old, high-end
hotel. Yakuza might be involved, he thought, with the job’s… suggestive
nature, but it should be fine as long as it was women they were dealing with.
“I’ve
thought this for a while…” Tsubame said, creaking back and forth on the worn
playground elephant. “You’re pretty relaxed about things, but you seem like you
come from a good background.”
The comment
left him speechless for a second, a weird silence stretching between them. “I
guess,” he replied ambiguously, and they parted ways. When he returned to the
manga café, the familiar clerk trailed him, so he preempted him with, “I’ll get
paid from this job tomorrow. Just hold off till then,” to keep him off his
back.
In the
small manga café room that had become his home, he sat thinking vaguely about
the next day. Judging by the hotel’s level, the client must be someone with
money. Still, the idea of entering a high-end hotel in his shabby clothes was
depressing. He couldn't do much about the cheap look, but at least he could be
clean. So he tossed his shirt in the coin-operated laundry next to the café's
shower room.
Good background.
The phrase felt like nothing but a cruel irony now. Ten years ago, he maxed out
his credit card limits each month. Now, he was struggling to cover a few
thousand yen a day for a room at the manga café.
After his
uncle's death, Miyoko took over his uncle's hospital management. Then one day,
she informed him and his brother that the hospital was heavily in debt and
falling behind on repayments. She took away their apartments and froze their
credit cards. They were given about a month’s grace to leave the apartment, but
he barely had any cash on hand.
He’d known,
on some level, what it meant to not have money, but understanding and
experiencing it were two different things. For the first time, he had to be
mindful of the cash in his wallet, felt the anxiety of seeing it dwindle, and
learned to pick what he could afford over what he wanted. It was like losing
the feathers that once let him fly, one by one. When he found himself
stretching one convenience store rice ball to last an entire day, he thought
there could be no greater despair. Driven by hunger, he went to his mother to
ask for pocket money. She’d survived the accident with his uncle, though
severely injured, and was still in his uncle’s hospital.
When he
visited, her face lit up, her eyes filling with tears. She’d always been
petite, but now she was thinner and even smaller. Despite being in her forties,
her babyish face made her look young, especially with the long hair she tied
back with a ribbon, an affectation he’d told her was girlish but she refused to
change.
It felt
wrong to immediately ask her for pocket money. Bringing up their uncle’s
forty-ninth-day memorial would make her cry, and telling her about the
hospital’s debts and the cut-off in support for living expenses would only make
her more anxious.
Instead,
she confided that she wanted to leave the hospital. “I can’t sleep here,” she
murmured. “I keep having terrible dreams from the medication. If I can’t be
discharged, could I just stay out overnight? Wouldn’t that be okay?”
He couldn’t
just say “no” flat out, so he dodged with, “I’ll ask the doctor.” As he fumbled
for words, the door to the private room swung open without a knock. At first,
he thought it was his brother, but then he saw a man in a white coat—a doctor,
maybe? The man looked just as surprised to see a visitor in the room.
“Oh, my
apologies, I didn’t realize you had a visitor,” he said with a polite smile,
leaving with a parting, “I’ll come back later.” The doctor looked to be in his
late thirties, tall, well-kept, but his hairstyle was a bit outdated.
“Who was
that?”
Her primary
doctor was an old friend of his uncle’s, a gray-haired man in his fifties who
had explained her condition to him several times.
“That was
Dr. Aisaka, the general practitioner here. He’s the one treating me for sleep
issues and prescribing my medication.”
Her voice
trembled. He noticed her hands shaking.
“What’s
wrong? Are you cold?”
She looked
pale, like she was going to faint, so he helped her lie down on the bed. She
stopped him from pressing the nurse call button, saying, “I’ll be fine after
resting a bit.” She stared blankly at the ceiling, then suddenly pressed her
palms to her eyes, sobbing.
“I want to
go home. Right now. I can’t stand it here anymore.”
“Come on, mom,
hang in there. It won’t be much longer.”
“Please,
just take me home.”
She was
being difficult and unreasonable, suddenly bursting into tears. It was
frustrating. But he couldn’t abandon her, so he stayed beside her for a while,
holding her hand. They used to hold hands a lot when he was young, but this
might have been the first time they’d done so since he was older. Her hand,
which he hadn’t touched in years, felt disturbingly small and cold.
A nurse
entered, probably for the routine temperature check. He stood to leave the
room, saying, “I’ll wait outside,” but his mother called after him softly.
"Could
you buy me some lip balm?"
"Lip
balm?" Nishizaki repeated.
“My card
isn’t working, and I’ve run out of money, so I can’t buy anything.”
"...Got
it."
The moment
he left her room, the world around him seemed to dim into shades of gray. Mom’s
card doesn’t work either? Of course, it wasn’t surprising—his cards were
frozen too, so hers would be as well. Why hadn’t he thought of that?
He headed
to the shop on the hospital’s first floor, finding the cheapest lip balm for
230 yen with tax. His wallet held only 402 yen. If he bought this, he wouldn’t
have enough for the train back or even for dinner.
Hunching
his shoulders, he left the hospital as if trying to escape. He hurried around
the corner, not wanting his mother to catch a glimpse of him from her window. At
least in the hospital, she gets three meals a day. This really was a
survival issue for him.
On the way
to the station, his feet halted. He couldn’t move forward. After a moment, he
turned and walked back to the hospital. He bought the 230-yen lip balm and
returned to her room. The nurse was gone; perhaps she’d finished taking his
mother’s temperature.
“Here.” He
placed the lip balm on the side table. His mother pressed a finger to her
bottom lip and said, “Thank you.”
“The air
conditioning here makes my lips so dry.”
“I should
get going. My friends just called me over.”
Instantly,
his mother looked heartbreakingly sad.
“I’ll come
again, all right? Just listen to what the doctor says.” He patted her back
gently before leaving. As he waited for the elevator, he let out a bitter laugh
at his own expense. Now he’d be stuck with just a single rice ball for dinner
because he’d bought that lip balm.
It was just
past 3 p.m., yet it already looked like evening outside, the sky dim and
overcast, and the air biting cold. He should’ve worn a scarf. It was a day of
regrets. After walking about half an hour, his feet began to ache, and then it
started raining. No umbrella, and only 172 yen left—not enough to buy one.
Quickening his pace, he ignored the pain in his feet, but when he stumbled on
an uneven curb, he fell. He was soaked. He hurt. Hungry. Hungry. Hungry.
He hadn’t eaten anything since the night before. Someone, anyone, just give
me something to eat. Tears started to roll down his face. He felt pitiful,
wretched, and the tears wouldn’t stop… He felt as though even God was kicking
him down.
He can
laugh about it now. If only I could’ve told myself back then—rock bottom?
This was just the starting point. Things were far better back then.
The
rumbling of the washing machine stopped, pulling him back from his thoughts. He
pulled out his shirt, giving it a shake to smooth the wrinkles. The cool scent
of detergent wafted up to him. If only… He wondered. If only I’d
agreed to let mom come home or stay overnight back then, would the future have
turned out differently? Would it have been even a little better?
He shut the
thoughts down. Thinking about it would only make him feel worse. No matter how
many times he imagined different ways things could have gone, the past wouldn’t
change. Regret was a whirlpool that only wore him down.
He thought
about that hazy bliss, the numbness that came after doing that stuff. He wanted
it. Forget about the room fees, about everything… just ease my mind, even
for a little while.
Two days
ago, a building in Shinbashi had an exterior accident where steel plates fell,
killing three people. He’d been jealous. Those people did nothing wrong.
People only felt pity and sympathy for them. Their names, poor souls, were
splashed all over the news. Their suffering was probably over in an instant. “If
only I could take their place…” He muttered it aloud, realizing he had spoken
without meaning to.
But he couldn’t trade places, and he didn’t really want pain. So here he was, washing his shirt to avoid looking too shabby in front of women who’d pay for him. A gaping black hole stretched beneath him, an endless despair. Just as he’d been unable to see an end when he’d once felt hopeless over a lack of food, he couldn’t see past this either. Where this would end, he had no idea
In just one chapter, he went from a sheltered rich boy to a penniless drug addict… Is this rock bottom yet? 🤔
ReplyDeleteNishizaki is now on the other side of the coin. He's now apart of the lower caste and clearly hates it. He's no longer jealous of those smarter than him, he's jealous of those who died. He's suffering with sadness & anxiety. He is also no longer running from his feelings but his life & thoughts as well via the drugs
ReplyDeleteBecause now he’s living in shame, and he absolutely hates it—being looked down on, being talked about, all the things he used to do to others back in school. Hearing his uncle call him useless really hit him hard 😞
DeleteOf course lol. Not surprising at all he’s become a useless druggie. Serves him right.
ReplyDeleteI mean, it’s hard to feel sorry for him when he brought so much of this on himself... 😬 But wow, seeing him hit rock bottom like this is still kinda depressing. Guess karma works in mysterious ways 😅
DeleteDamnn
ReplyDelete