Cow Thief: Chapter 4
Past midnight, a faint noise echoed through the
stillness. In the dim light, Ryoichiro could make out the silhouette of Tokuma
sliding open the fusuma door. Anxiety gripped him—was Tokuma leaving for
good? He bolted upright in a panic.
Tokuma, startled, turned back to look at him.
He was in his yukata and carried nothing in his hands. If he were planning to
leave, surely he would have prepared appropriately and wouldn’t be
empty-handed.
"Are you going to the toilet?"
For a moment, Tokuma stood frozen, but then he
slowly nodded. At this hour, what other reason could there be?
"I see," Ryoichiro murmured, lying
back down again. But sleep wouldn’t come. The longer Tokuma was gone, the more
uneasy Ryoichiro became.
He got up, left the room, and went to the
toilet, but Tokuma wasn’t there. He walked around the garden in search of him,
but Tokuma was nowhere to be found.
It was then that Ryoichiro noticed the back
door leading to the kitchen was ajar. He stepped outside, into the pitch
darkness. Relying on the faint moonlight, he made his way down the dark road to
the foot of the bridge, but he didn’t encounter anyone.
Returning to his uncle’s house, Ryoichiro found
that Tokuma still hadn’t come back. The futon beside his own was already
completely cold. Sitting cross-legged on his own futon, Ryoichiro waited.
And waited.
But when morning came, Tokuma still had not
returned.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
That day, over breakfast, Ryoichiro's aunt
mentioned that the cow offered to the shrine had been "summoned by the
mountain deity." Even during the meal, Ritsuko was restless, fidgeting as
she asked, "Where’s Tokuma?" Ryoichiro, not knowing the answer
himself, irritably replied, "I don’t know."
After breakfast, Ryoichiro wandered around the
area, searching for Tokuma. By midday, tired and frustrated, he returned to his
uncle’s house, where an unusual commotion filled the air.
In a corner of the garden, Ritsuko was crouched
down, crying.
"What’s wrong?" he asked, but she
didn’t respond. Then, from the veranda, his uncle’s loud voice called out,
"Ryoichiro! Come here right now!"
When Ryoichiro approached, his uncle,
pale-faced and flustered, repeated in a trembling voice, "Something
terrible has happened. Something terrible!" His words were halting, his
speech disjointed.
"Tokuma’s done something outrageous!"
Hearing Tokuma’s name, Ryoichiro’s eyes widened
in shock.
"What did Tokuma do?"
"Of all things, he stole the sacred cow!
The one dedicated to the shrine! A charcoal-burner saw him leading it along a
mountain path and reported it to the police."
"That’s impossible…"
"They caught him as he was coming down
from the mountain. The police were here just a short while ago!"
His uncle paced nervously around the room,
unable to stay still.
"That man is a disgrace! I pitied him,
even helped pay for his mother’s funeral, and this is how he repays us—by
smearing mud on the name of the Satake family!"
"There must be a reason for this,"
Ryoichiro said firmly.
"What possible reason could justify
stealing someone else’s property?" his uncle shouted, waving his arms in
rage.
"If this scandal breaks off your
engagement, the Satake family is finished! That man is ungrateful, despicable!
After years of treating him like family, this is how he repays our
kindness!"
Ryoichiro turned sharply on his heel.
"Where are you going?" his uncle
barked.
"To the police station. I need to speak to
Tokuma directly and find out what’s going on."
"Stop piling disgrace on top of
disgrace!" his uncle roared. "Tokuma is dismissed from today onward.
He has nothing more to do with the Satake family!"
Ignoring the outburst, Ryoichiro rushed outside
and headed straight to the police station. There, he pleaded to see Tokuma, but
his request was denied—they said Tokuma was still under interrogation, and
visitors weren’t allowed.
The next day and the day after that, the answer
remained the same. No matter how much Ryoichiro begged, he couldn’t see Tokuma
or even leave him a message.
◇:-:◆:-:◇
It was on the seventh day after Tokuma’s arrest
that Ryoichiro was finally able to speak with him. This was thanks to a special
favor, as Adachi was acquainted with Tengoku, the prison warden.
At the beginning of September, Ryoichiro was
escorted into the prison by an officer. It was his first time seeing a jail
cell—a dim, dreary place filled with the stench of filth. The officer stopped
midway down a long hallway.
“This is it,” he said.
The cell, no larger than a single tatami mat,
had thick wooden bars. At the back, huddled with his back to the corridor, sat
someone in a dirt-streaked white yukata that looked as if it had been dragged
through the mud. It was unmistakably Tokuma.
“Tokuma Tanaka,” the officer called. Slowly,
Tokuma turned around. His lifeless eyes widened in shock upon recognizing
Ryoichiro.
“You have a visitor,” the officer said in a
monotone voice. Tokuma lowered his head. Ryoichiro knelt before the bars and
beckoned him closer.
“Come here.”
Tokuma didn’t move. Frustrated, Ryoichiro
snapped, “I said come here!” Tokuma flinched, then hesitantly crawled toward
the bars.
Ryoichiro looked up at the officer beside him.
“Can we speak alone for a moment?” he asked.
The officer furrowed his brow. “Visits must be
supervised. That’s the rule,” he said firmly.
The officer was young, but unyielding.
Ryoichiro gestured for him to step aside into a corner of the hallway. Lowering
his voice, he discreetly slipped some money into the officer’s uniform pocket.
“Just give us a little time,” he murmured. “If
I miss this chance, I might not see him again for years.”
The officer hesitated, glancing between the
money and Ryoichiro’s face.
“We’ll just talk. I’ve been searched, and I’m
not carrying anything dangerous.”
After some deliberation, the officer finally
relented. “Fine, but don’t tell anyone,” he muttered, then left the corridor.
Ryoichiro immediately turned back to Tokuma,
who sat slumped by the bars. The man’s already thin frame seemed even frailer.
Concern welled up in Ryoichiro.
“Are you eating properly?”
Tokuma gave a trembling nod.
“I wanted to bring you something, but they
wouldn’t let me. They wouldn’t even allow me to bring paper and a pencil.”
Tokuma stayed silent, his head bowed, his
fingers motionless.
“Why did you do something so foolish?”
Ryoichiro demanded. “If you wanted a cow, you only had to ask—I’d have bought
you one! But to steal the sacred cow, of all things…”
Still, Tokuma didn’t respond. Ryoichiro thrust
his right hand through the bars.
“I know you wouldn’t do something like this
without a reason. Write it here. Write the reason in my hand.”
Tokuma lifted his face. Even in his disheveled
state, Ryoichiro found him heartbreakingly dear.
“I don’t need paper or a pencil anymore,”
Tokuma said.
The voice was small, like the hum of a
mosquito, but it struck Ryoichiro like lightning. It was the first time he had
ever heard Tokuma speak. Startled beyond measure, he nearly fell over.
"What... your voice..."
"I can speak now," Tokuma said.
"It’s been so long since I last spoke that it’s still a little unsteady,
though."
His voice was low, slightly raspy.
"When did this happen? When did you regain
your voice?"
Tokuma replied, "It returned to me the day
I was arrested."
"Returned to you?"
"My voice was taken as collateral in a
pact with the swamp deity. But since I fulfilled my part of the agreement, it
was returned."
"The swamp deity? What are you talking
about?"
Tokuma lowered his gaze.
"The swamp deity is a yokai that resides
in the marsh where your mother... where your real mother passed away."
Ryoichiro’s fingers twitched at the mention of
his mother’s death.
"I know this may be difficult to believe, but
twenty years ago, your mother bargained with the swamp deity to save your life
when you were gravely ill. In exchange, she offered her own life. I couldn’t
tell you the truth until now because the pact forbade me to speak of it."
Tokuma bowed low, pressing his forehead against
the grimy floor of his cell. Meanwhile, Ryoichiro’s trembling fingers gripped
his knees.
"...So, my mother didn’t run away from
home after all?"
Tokuma shook his head.
"Every time I saw you grieving for her, it
broke my heart. I wanted so desperately to tell you the truth, to ease your
pain. But I was bound to silence."
Shock and confusion churned in Ryoichiro’s
mind. He struggled to process the revelation of Tokuma’s voice, the truth of
his mother’s disappearance, and the idea that her death had been to save him.
He didn’t know what to feel—gratitude, sorrow, or guilt.
While he felt he should be thankful for her
sacrifice, the emotions swirling within him were far more complex. And above
all, he found his thoughts returning to the man kneeling before him, rather
than the mother he had lost.
Suddenly, Tokuma spat something from his mouth
onto the floor. He picked it up and carefully wiped it clean with the sleeve of
his tattered yukata.
"Please, let me borrow your hand."
Ryoichiro extended his right hand through the
bars. Tokuma placed something in his palm.
It was small, white, and delicate—like a shard
of shell.
"When the police arrested me, they
confiscated everything I had," Tokuma explained. "I had no choice but
to hide this in my mouth."
"What is this?"
"Your mother’s fingernail. I wanted you to have
something of hers as a keepsake."
For the first time since Ryoichiro had arrived,
Tokuma smiled.
"I thought it would have more color—like
the flowers of the Mizosoba plant—but in the end, it’s just stark
white."
Ryoichiro slipped the nail into his jacket
pocket. Then he suddenly grabbed Tokuma’s hand through the bars, his grip tight
and commanding.
"Where is the cow?"
Tokuma flinched, startled by Ryoichiro’s sudden
outburst.
"The cow you stole—where did you hide it?
If you return it, your punishment will be less severe. I’ll speak with the
authorities and—"
"The cow cannot be returned," Tokuma
interrupted, his voice trembling but firm.
"Why not? You didn’t slaughter and eat it,
did you? Or did you sell it off somewhere?"
"The cow is dead. I cannot return it. And
this wasn’t the first time. Every year, I’ve stolen the sacred cow offered at
the Koji Festival. I’ve done it every year, not just this one."
Ryoichiro froze.
"The swamp deity demanded an offering—a
sacrificial cow—each year. It was part of our pact. I had no means of obtaining
one myself, so I resorted to stealing them."
Tokuma held Ryoichiro’s gaze without flinching.
Ryoichiro started to protest, to call it
absurd, but then he remembered something. Every year, around the time of the Koji
Festival, Tokuma would return to their hometown.
It all made sense now.
"I knew well enough that what I was doing
was wrong," Tokuma confessed, his voice heavy.
Even after hearing his words, Ryoichiro
couldn't bring himself to believe it.
"That's a lie. There's no way anyone could
steal an cow from the shrine every year without being caught!"
Tokuma lowered his gaze.
"Perhaps a person couldn't. But I have the
ability to command an oni. Every year, I had the oni steal the cow and lead it
to the base of the mountain. This year, while leading the cow stolen by the
oni, I was seen by a charcoal burner and reported to the police."
Before Ryoichiro could respond, Tokuma's hand
slipped away from his grasp and he retreated into the shadows of the cell,
beyond reach.
"As I mentioned before, I harbor an oni
within myself," Tokuma continued, his voice faint but steady. "The
oni serves as an extension of my will. Whether for good or ill, it acts
entirely as I command."
His words faltered, and he looked down.
"I'm better off being caught. Someone as
rotten to the core as I am is better suited for a prison cell. Please, forget
about me, Ryoichiro-san, and find happiness."
"I refuse to accept this!" Ryoichiro
shouted, slamming his hand against the wooden bars.
"I don't accept it! I don't understand. My
mother begged for my life—why must you offer cattle to this swamp deity? What
kind of agreement did you make with that yokai?"
Silence lingered. Finally, Tokuma spoke, his
voice a whisper.
"The first time I stole a cow, I was seven
years old. The act terrified me, and guilt ate at me. For a time, I couldn’t
look anyone in the eye. But as the years passed, the more I repeated it, the
less I felt that guilt. When the ‘Cow Driving’ ritual became part of the
festival, and people celebrated the disappearance of the cow, it made me feel
even less like what I was doing was wrong.
"I couldn’t regret it, couldn’t stop,
couldn’t even bring myself to die. I began to fear that the oni within me would
one day consume every part of my heart."
His confession spilled out in fragments.
"I see my arrest as a mercy from the
Buddha. I was thrown into this prison because even the heavens couldn’t ignore
someone like me. I want to disappear—to vanish entirely, along with the oni
inside me."
Tokuma raised his head.
"The only regret I had left was not being
able to give you your mother’s keepsake. But now I’ve done that. I have no more
regrets."
Lowering himself into a deep bow, Tokuma
touched his forehead to the cell floor.
"I never expected you to visit. Seeing
your face one last time has brought me great joy. Please convey my sincerest
apologies to the Satake family for repaying their kindness with betrayal,
despite their generosity, even holding my mother’s funeral."
Ryoichiro suddenly realized Tokuma was resolved
to die. At that moment, a fierce determination rose within him—he would not let
that happen.
"Don’t act rashly. Think it over,"
Ryoichiro pleaded.
Tokuma looked at him quietly, then gave a faint
smile.
"Please forget about me. I am sorry I
could not repay your kindness."
"Tokuma! Tokuma!" Ryoichiro shouted
as Tokuma moved to the far wall of the cell, turning his back. His unwavering
posture was impenetrable, leaving Ryoichiro feeling powerless. He lowered his
head, clenching his teeth.
"Tokuma," he murmured, his voice
breaking with desperation.
"Tokuma, I beg you. Just once more, let me
hold your hand one last time."
Tokuma’s head shifted slightly.
"If you don’t, I won’t be able to bear it.
I won’t be able to go on."
"Please..." Ryoichiro fell to his
knees, bowing deeply. "Please," he repeated, over and over. Amid his
pleas, a quiet sound emerged, close by—a voice.
"Raise your head. Please, don't bow for
someone like me," Tokuma said, his voice quiet.
A pale hand extended through the bars.
Ryoichiro quickly grabbed the arm and yanked hard. Tokuma's body slammed into
the wooden bars with a loud thud. Taking advantage of the closeness, Ryoichiro
punched Tokuma's stomach several times through the gap. At first, Tokuma let
out a short yelp, but eventually, he collapsed limply.
Confirming that Tokuma was no longer moving,
Ryoichiro sprinted down the hall and pushed open the door. Turning to the
waiting officer with feigned alarm.
"The prisoner I was visiting has
died," he announced, breathless.
"What?" the officer asked, startled.
"He had poison hidden on him and drank it
right in front of me," Ryoichiro added.
Panicking, the officer grabbed the keys from a
cabinet and rushed into the cellblock. When the officer stopped at Tokuma’s
cell, Ryoichiro struck. He seized the officer’s head and slammed it against the
bars. Disoriented, the officer staggered, and Ryoichiro swept his legs out from
under him, sending him sprawling onto the floor. Straddling the officer,
Ryoichiro pinned him down. The man went limp, his mouth slack and his eyes
rolled back—he had fainted.
Ryoichiro wrested the keys from the officer’s
grasp and unlocked Tokuma’s cell. He dragged the unconscious officer into the
cell and stripped him of his uniform. Then, he undressed the dazed Tokuma,
quickly realizing with a jolt of embarrassment that Tokuma wasn’t wearing a fundoshi.
He dismissed the thought and focused on dressing Tokuma in the officer's
uniform, including the shoes and cap. The unconscious officer was dressed in
Tokuma’s plain clothes, laid in the corner of the cell, and covered with the rank-smelling
bedding.
Locking the cell once more, Ryoichiro hoisted
Tokuma in his arms. Despite being a grown man, Tokuma’s weight was almost
negligible.
Ryoichiro placed the keys back in the cabinet
and strode down the hallway confidently, Tokuma in his arms. He spotted an
older officer approaching from the opposite direction and tipped the hat on
Tokuma’s head low to obscure his face. Ryoichiro hurried toward the older
officer, putting on an air of urgency.
"Emergency!" he called out. "A
sudden illness!"
The older officer stopped, eyeing Ryoichiro
with suspicion. "Who are you?" he asked.
"I'm the visitor of a prisoner here. After
the visit, the supervising officer escorting me suddenly collapsed,"
Ryoichiro replied swiftly. "I have some medical knowledge, and it seems
his heart may be failing. We must get him to a hospital immediately."
"That’s serious," the older officer
said, alarmed. "The police chief's rickshaw is at the front entrance. Use
that to get him to the hospital. I'll summon another rickshaw for the
chief."
"Understood. I'll accompany the officer to
ensure his safe arrival," Ryoichiro said.
"Right this way," the officer said,
leading Ryoichiro out of the prison and to the waiting rickshaw. After setting
Tokuma inside, the older officer paused as if recalling something.
"Wait, what’s your name again?" he
asked.
"There’s no time for that," Ryoichiro
snapped, feigning exasperation. "Once we reach the hospital, I’ll send
someone to update you."
Startled by Ryoichiro's tone, the older officer
faltered. "Ah, I—I understand," he stammered.
Without another word, Ryoichiro instructed the
rickshaw driver to head toward the next town. They disembarked on the
outskirts, and Ryoichiro carried Tokuma into the mountains.
As they walked along a forest trail, Tokuma
stirred. Realizing what was happening, he began to struggle. Ryoichiro had no
choice but to set him down. Tokuma looked around in panic, then at the uniform
he was wearing. His face turned pale.
"Ryoichiro-san, what have you done?"
Tokuma’s voice trembled, his hands shaking.
"If you're awake, then walk,"
Ryoichiro said curtly, tugging Tokuma forward by the hand.
"This—this is madness! You won’t get away
with this!" Tokuma cried, his voice breaking into something like a scream.
"If I get caught, I'll end up in prison
with you," Ryoichiro said.
Tokuma pulled his hand away.
"I’ll go back to the prison. I’ll tell
them I escaped on my own."
"Then I’ll kill myself," Ryoichiro
said.
Tokuma’s eyes widened in shock.
"You can’t mean that."
"If you don’t stay with me, I’ll
die," Ryoichiro repeated.
"That’s..."
"If you want me dead, go ahead and leave
the mountain."
Ryoichiro turned and began walking deeper into
the forest, confident that Tokuma would follow. Sure enough, he soon heard the
sound of hesitant footsteps trailing behind him.
Ryoichiro pressed on, his mind consumed by a
singular goal—to get as far away as possible. By the time the forest began to
darken, rain had started falling in a light drizzle. Undeterred, he continued
walking. He knew the authorities had likely already discovered Tokuma’s escape.
Time was against them, and he had no idea how much of it they had left.
The rain grew heavier, accompanied by a rising
wind that soon turned into a full-fledged storm. The path became impossible to
see in the darkness, and both moving forward and retreating became equally
treacherous. Ryoichiro paused, lost and uncertain, when Tokuma grabbed his
hand. Like a cat with night vision, Tokuma navigated the faint trails with
uncanny precision, leading them onward.
Eventually, a small hut came into view. From
the nearby charcoal kiln, it appeared to be a charcoal burner’s shack.
Ryoichiro knocked on the door, but no one answered. The hut seemed abandoned,
and when they entered, the pitch darkness confirmed it was empty. As their eyes
adjusted, the interior took shape—a cramped, four-tatami room with a dirt
floor, a central hearth, and little else.
On the dirt floor, they found wood scraps, bits
of charcoal, and a box of matches. Ryoichiro began kindling a fire in the
hearth, but Tokuma stopped him.
"If you light a fire, the smoke will give
away our location," he warned.
Ryoichiro gave a rueful laugh at his own
thoughtlessness.
"Then what? It’s so dark we can’t see
anything."
"There’s a lamp over there. I don’t know
if there’s any oil left, but since there are no windows here, it might be safe
to use it briefly."
The lamp contained a small amount of oil,
enough to light the room. In its dim glow, they surveyed their refuge. The
wooden floorboards were rudimentary, and the only furnishing was a thin,
tattered futon folded in the corner.
They removed their shoes and stepped onto the
floor, water dripping from their soaked clothing. Ryoichiro stripped off his
jacket, trousers, and shirt, leaving only his underclothes. The cold made his
body shiver uncontrollably, and he considered wrapping himself in the worn
futon. When he turned to suggest the same to Tokuma, he found him still sitting
in the corner, hugging his knees, dressed in the wet uniform.
"You’ll freeze to death like that. Take
off your clothes and let them dry," Ryoichiro said.
"I’m fine," Tokuma replied.
But his face was pale, and his lips were tinged
with blue under the lamplight.
"You’re shaking."
Tokuma stubbornly shook his head. Unable to
force him, Ryoichiro ran his fingers through his damp hair in frustration as
the storm raged on outside, rain pounding like a tantrum.
"With this much rain, the pursuers won’t
be able to climb the mountain easily," Ryoichiro remarked.
Tokuma, who had been silent and withdrawn,
suddenly stood up and slipped his feet into his wet shoes.
"Where are you going?" Ryoichiro
asked sharply.
Tokuma didn’t answer, and Ryoichiro leaped down
to the dirt floor and grabbed his arm.
"I’m going down the mountain," Tokuma
said at last. "If I return, this will all be over."
"No," Ryoichiro said firmly,
tightening his grip.
"I must," Tokuma said, meeting his
gaze with quiet determination.
"If you leave this hut, I’ll hang myself
here and now," Ryoichiro declared.
Tokuma glared at him, unimpressed.
"You’re not serious about that," he
said flatly.
The accusation hit its mark, and Ryoichiro
hesitated, his words faltering.
"Ryoichiro-san, your kindness has been
more than enough for me. So please, forget about me and live happily."
"I..."
Ryoichiro bit his lip.
"I can’t be happy without you," he
said.
Tokuma gave a sad smile.
"That’s not true. Even without someone
like me, you can be happy. At first, you might think of me from time to time,
but once you grow closer to your wife and have children..."
"I love you," Ryoichiro interrupted.
Even at Ryoichiro's heartfelt confession,
Tokuma’s expression didn’t change. He didn’t look surprised.
"I love you, and that’s why I want to be
with you," Ryoichiro repeated.
Tokuma lowered his gaze and said nothing
except, "Thank you." The ambiguity of his response made it impossible
for Ryoichiro to understand what he truly felt. The mere word "thank
you" seemed misplaced. Was he pleased? Annoyed? Embarrassed? Ryoichiro
desperately wanted to know.
"Maybe it’s a burden to you that someone
like me has feelings for you," Ryoichiro tested the waters.
Tokuma hastily raised his head. "Not at
all."
"What if I said I wanted you?"
Tokuma fell silent again. Ryoichiro didn’t
elaborate; he knew Tokuma understood the weight behind his words. After a long
pause, Tokuma replied in a trembling voice, "That would be
troubling."
"Why would it be troubling?"
"Because I cannot reciprocate your
feelings."
"Why not?"
"...Wouldn’t it be immoral, considering
you’re going to take a wife soon?"
Ryoichiro raised both hands and shouted,
"Idiot!" The shoulders of Tokuma’s uniform flinched.
"I begged on my knees in front of Adachi,
my fiancée’s father, pleading for his help just to see you. By breaking you out
of jail, I’ve dragged his name through the mud. Do you think he’ll still want
to give his daughter to a man who harbored a criminal? That engagement is
finished... because of you."
Tokuma looked as though he was about to cry.
"That’s why I said I should return to the
prison! If I go back now, maybe—"
"Go back and do what? Do you think
returning alone will absolve me? I’ll be hunted down for aiding your escape,
charged with harboring a fugitive, and imprisoned myself!"
"Then what should I do?" Tokuma’s
voice cracked, almost desperate.
"There’s nothing to be done now,"
Ryoichiro said coldly.
Tokuma collapsed to his knees on the dirt
floor, trembling. Ryoichiro continued his tirade, relentless.
"It’s your fault! When I went to see you,
you spoke as though we’d never meet again. How could I not break you out after
hearing that?"
Still staring at the floor, Tokuma whispered,
"I should have died. If only I hadn’t clung to the hope of delivering your
mother’s keepsake..."
Ryoichiro knelt in front of him, voice
softening.
"You mustn’t die. I won’t allow you to go
before me."
Tokuma shook his head in refusal.
"Please, I beg you—release me from
this," he said.
"I love you," Ryoichiro repeated
firmly. "Live for me."
The wind howled outside, shaking the small
charcoal hut violently.
"No matter how much you say you love me,
you’ll still marry your wife, won’t you?" Tokuma’s voice was thick with
tears and accusation. Ryoichiro’s eyes widened at the unexpected bitterness.
"Perhaps, to you, loving me and taking a
wife are separate matters. But I can’t stand to watch the person I love cherish
someone else."
Tokuma rose to his feet, but Ryoichiro grabbed
his right arm, dragging him onto the wooden floor without removing his shoes.
He gripped Tokuma’s narrow shoulders and shook him hard.
"Do you love me?"
Tokuma didn’t answer.
"Do you love me?" Ryoichiro demanded
again, shaking him harder.
Finally, Tokuma covered his face with both
hands.
"If I didn’t love you," he whispered,
his trembling lips finally forming words, "why would I have served such a
selfish, short-tempered man for twenty years?"
I loved their confession! It was so heartbreaking but sweet. Ryoichiro has chosen Tokuma instead of the “right” path. I’m sure their life is going to become a lot harder now.. but at least they have eachother
ReplyDeleteI'm glad you enjoyed their confession! It was such a bittersweet moment 🥺 Choosing love over societal expectations always comes with challenges...
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