About Love: Chapter 22
On the way, Asaka had parked his car
at a park for about two hours, so by the time he finally returned to his
apartment, it was already past six in the evening. He had been driving
absentmindedly, drained of all energy, when, just before pulling into the
parking lot, he happened to glance up at the apartment building.
A figure stood in front of his door.
The moment he realized it was
Sasagawa, Asaka turned off his right turn signal.
Sasagawa had followed him—and at
some point, overtaken him.
The thought of returning home
without noticing it sent a chill down his spine.
If that had happened, he would have
been trapped, forced to listen to things he had no desire to hear—the fact that
Sasagawa had grown tired of him, the details of how he had come to fall for a
woman.
Like hell he was going to sit
through that.
It was already unbearable enough
just knowing he had been cheated on and cast aside. He didn’t need another blow
on top of that. If he had to hear it spelled out, he might actually lose his
mind.
In the end, he parked his car in the
employee lot at Dragée and took the
train.
He headed to an izakaya he had once
frequented—a place Sasagawa had never been to, but that an ex-girlfriend of his
had loved.
Sitting at the counter, he ordered
sake.
He downed the first glass in one
gulp, and the alcohol burned as it hit his empty stomach. A sharp, twisting
pain spread through him. As he finished his second glass, someone called his
name.
“Asaka-san.”
He turned to see Ikegami-sama, a
client he managed alongside Koenji, standing beside him.
“I thought it was you,” Ikegami-sama
said. “Do you come here often?”
If possible, Asaka would have
preferred to avoid running into anyone he knew. He wasn’t in the mood to talk.
“I used to come here a lot, but it’s
been a while.”
His response was curt, stripped of
emotion.
“Ah, I see. I live nearby, so I drop
by now and then. I don’t really cook for myself, so…”
Ikegami-sama’s expression clouded
slightly.
“I guess the last thing you want
after work is to run into a client. Sorry about that.”
Asaka realized his blunt demeanor
had made Ikegami-sama say that.
When they first met, Ikegami-sama
had been openly wary of him. But over time, after countless discussions, he had
gradually warmed up. He wasn’t as talkative as Morino-sama, but if Asaka had to
choose, he preferred Ikegami-sama. Maybe that preference had been
obvious—whenever he and Koenji met with Ikegami-sama, the man always directed
his questions toward Asaka.
They had built a good relationship.
It would be a shame to ruin it over something as fleeting as his current
emotions.
As Ikegami-sama turned his back,
Asaka hesitated before calling out, “Um.”
Ikegami-sama looked back.
“Are you here alone?”
“Huh? Yeah, I am…”
“If you don’t mind, would you like
to sit next to me?”
Ikegami-sama looked surprised, his
gaze flickering upward at Asaka.
“…Are you sure it’s okay for me to
sit next to you?”
“Yes. Please.”
A small, pleased smile crossed
Ikegami-sama’s face as he moved to the seat beside him.
It was only then that Asaka noticed
how tightly he had been gripping his glass.
“I know it’s strange to invite you
over and then say this, but… I had a rough day. I’m just drinking to forget. If
I end up passing out, feel free to leave me be.”
Ikegami-sama looked momentarily
puzzled, then chuckled softly.
“Go for it. Drink as much as you
want.”
Even so, Asaka reminded
himself—Ikegami-sama was still a client, one he’d be working with for at least
another three months until the ceremony was over. Getting blackout drunk in
front of him wasn’t exactly an option.
Still, he ordered his third glass.
Ikegami-sama ordered a beer and some
lotus root tempura, nudging the plate toward Asaka. “This place makes great
ones. You should try some.”
At first, Asaka refused, but
Ikegami-sama persisted. “If you’ve never had them before, at least take a
bite.”
It felt petty to keep refusing, so
he took a single piece. As expected, it was good.
“So, Asaka-san,” Ikegami-sama began.
“Is your bad day work-related?”
Asaka shook his head. “No.”
“Then… did you have a fight with
your girlfriend?”
It wasn’t a girlfriend. But the
guess was painfully on the mark.
Asaka pressed his right hand to his
forehead and lowered his gaze.
“Oh, shit. Really?” Ikegami-sama
said. “Sorry. I shouldn’t have asked.”
His flustered voice made Asaka lift
his head.
"It's fine. It's the truth,
after all. To be precise, it wasn’t a fight—I just found out I was being
two-timed, and since he clearly prefers the other person, we’re done."
Asaka regretted saying it the moment
he saw the conflicted look on Ikegami-sama’s face. Even if something was true,
there were times when it was better left unsaid.
"I'm not as hurt as it sounds,
so don’t worry about it."
Muttering that, Asaka ordered his
fourth drink.
Was Sasagawa still standing in front
of his apartment? No, nearly two hours had passed since then—he had probably
gone home. Hopefully, he had.
"You know… seeing you like
this, you actually seem normal. When you’re working, you come off as this super
competent, no-nonsense guy."
Asaka let out a dry laugh.
"What’s that supposed to
mean?"
"No, really. It’s just… I
didn’t think there were guys like you who don’t have any prejudice."
As they continued their idle
conversation, Asaka kept drinking. Talking with Ikegami-sama helped take his
mind off things, if only a little. But the moment there was silence, it all
came rushing back—the tight, suffocating pain in his chest.
As the night dragged on, the crowd
in the izakaya thinned. Just as Asaka was thinking how quiet it had gotten, a
firm hand grabbed his shoulder and shook him.
"Asaka-san, we’re
leaving."
He stood up, drawn by the voice. But
his legs were unsteady, and he couldn’t walk properly. Stumbling into tables
and chairs, he somehow made it to the entrance. The moment he stepped outside,
he sank down onto the ground.
"Can you get in a taxi?"
"No, I… one more bar…"
"Yeah, right. You’re already
completely wasted. If you drink any more, you’ll die."
Ikegami-sama let Asaka lean on him
as they walked. But even that seemed to be a struggle—before long, he, too,
gave in and slumped down in front of a closed storefront.
"Asaka-san, you’re… kinda
heavy."
On the low stone steps, Asaka
sprawled out, completely limp.
Ikegami-sama didn’t leave him there.
Instead, he quietly sat beside him.
"Asaka-san…"
A voice filtered into his drowsy
ears.
"Be honest, do you think people
like us are disgusting?"
"What?"
He asked reflexively, then realized
what Ikegami-sama meant.
"…Not really."
Asaka curled in on himself, cradling
his head.
"I’m the same kind."
Ikegami-sama let out a small
"huh" of surprise.
Even in his drunken haze, Asaka knew
he had just said something he probably shouldn’t have.
"Don’t tell anyone. Not at
work, not to friends… I haven’t told a soul, and I don’t intend to."
A long sigh came from beside him.
"So that’s why,"
Ikegami-sama murmured. "That’s why you were so kind to us. Now it makes
sense."
"That’s… not why," Asaka
mumbled, gripping his head in both hands.
"A client is… a client. All the
same… the same…"
His consciousness drifted. Voices
faded. He thought he heard Ikegami-sama murmur, "I see…" but by then,
he could no longer tell if it was real or a dream.
The next morning, Asaka woke up in
Ikegami-sama’s apartment.
"Last night was pretty
entertaining," Ikegami said with a laugh.
But there was no doubt he had caused
a huge inconvenience, so Asaka apologized profusely before heading home.
On the train, he turned on his
phone. Three messages from Sasagawa. All of them said the same thing:
"I want to see you again. I
want to talk."
A flicker of unease passed through
him—what if Sasagawa was still waiting in front of his apartment? But when he
arrived, there was no tall figure standing by his door. Instead, a single note
was wedged into the doorframe.
"Whenever you're ready, please
contact me. I'll come to you."
The words made his chest ache.
When he had wanted to see Sasagawa
so desperately, he had been ignored. But now that things had fallen apart,
Sasagawa wanted to come to him.
His fingertips tingled as he held the
note. For a moment, he considered tearing it to shreds. But in the end, he
simply folded it up, small and tight, and stuffed it into the pocket of his
jeans.
I’ll be wrapping up the story in the next update—thank you so much for following along until now~
ReplyDeleteThank youuuu!
DeleteI wonder if this is a happy ending…
I'm going to upload the rest of the novel today, so I hope you enjoy the ending~ I think it was very fitting for the story 💕
Deletepoor thing ;-;
ReplyDelete🥺🥺
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