COLD HEART in TOKYO: Chapter 20
“I don’t think I get along with
Itsuki-san…”
Miyamoto spoke with a serious
expression, sinking her teeth into a thick slice of Japanese-style hamburger
steak. It was just past 7 p.m., and the family restaurant near their office was
about seventy percent full. The crowd was diverse—high schoolers in sports
jerseys just back from club, older salarymen, and everything in between. It was
May, but the heat had people in short sleeves.
The off-site meeting had run long,
and Kusuda hadn’t returned to the office until a little after six. Miyamoto was
still there, tidying up the ledgers. He handed over his taxi receipt, wanting
to get it out of the way before he forgot, and that’s when she’d said, almost
offhandedly, “There’s something I’d like to talk about…”
Thinking it might be a long
conversation, he offered to grab dinner while they talked. “I don’t want to
walk too far,” she said, so they ended up at the family restaurant down the
block.
Kusuda had already suspected the
topic had to do with Itsuki. Even from an outside perspective, it was obvious
the two of them weren’t clicking.
The drama Beyond Us, which
had once faced cancellation rumors, had managed to maintain high ratings
throughout its run. The final episode, featuring Muneishi appearing with both
eyes bandaged, created enough buzz to pull in a record-high 22% viewership
across the entire ten-episode season. A sequel had already been greenlit, and
all of the main cast would be returning.
After the drama's midpoint, Akizawa
had started receiving a flood of offers for new projects—mostly supporting
roles in other dramas and films. According to Numata, “This is our moment,” so
they accepted everything that fit the schedule. Akizawa’s calendar had filled
up fast.
He was now being featured not only
in men’s fashion magazines but women’s as well. Every time he wore CRUX
accessories in an interview, sales inquiries spiked. The products sold like
hotcakes.
There were even more boutique shops
reaching out, hoping to carry CRUX. The workload exploded. Between Kusuda and
Miyamoto, it had become impossible to manage it all, so in April they decided
to hire another office assistant. Miyamoto had only one condition: “Please hire
someone who isn’t a fan of Akizawa.”
“He practically lives in our office,
doesn’t he? If we hired someone who was a fan and it turned into some
messy romance, it’d be a nightmare.”
Kusuda remembered how, at first,
Akizawa had claimed he wanted to date Miyamoto. In the end, when narrowing down
the two finalists for the job, Kusuda had asked, “What do you think of Kaito
Akizawa?” The one who replied, “I don’t know much about him,” was
the one they hired.
The new assistant was twenty-three
years old. Her name was Mai Itsuki, and she had chestnut-colored hair that left
a strong impression. She didn’t seem to watch much TV despite her age; she knew
Akizawa’s name and face from his modeling work, but had no idea he was also in
a drama.
Her tone was gentle and unhurried,
but her instincts on the job weren’t bad. Kusuda had felt that she’d probably
settle in well.
But just as he was starting to think
things were going smoothly, a problem surfaced.
“Itsuki-san is obviously into you,
Kusuda-san.”
Miyamoto didn’t beat around the
bush. Kusuda had sensed Itsuki’s interest too. In her first week, he had
personally trained her. She had prior office experience, but the accessories
business had its own quirks and demands. There was a lot to learn. Wanting to
help her acclimate faster, he’d even invited her out to lunch a few times.
About a month in, Kusuda began to
feel her eyes lingering on him more and more.
During the hectic fall/winter
collection prep, when he found himself eating convenience store rice balls for
lunch three days in a row, she’d asked him, “Do you really like convenience
store rice balls, Kusuda-san?”—probing gently for a read.
“Ah—no, it’s just that I don’t have
time,” Kusuda replied.
With a concerned look, Itsuki leaned
in and said, “You always seem so busy. If there’s anything I can do to help,
please let me know.” Then, with a gentle smile, she added, “Just eating rice
balls might throw your nutrition off, don’t you think? If you’d like, I could
make you lunch. I’m actually pretty good at cooking.”
For the record, Miyamoto had also
been eating instant noodles three days in a row—but that detail had been
completely ignored.
“I usually eat out during lunch,”
Kusuda said, offering a plausible excuse. “It’d be a shame if you went through
the trouble of making something and I couldn’t eat it.”
Itsuki looked a bit disappointed but
replied, “I see…” and dropped the matter—at least temporarily. After that, she
started bringing homemade cookies instead, saying, “For when you get a little
hungry, maybe.” This time, perhaps reading the room, she gave the same cookies
to Miyamoto as well.
“She’s totally trying to set it up
so you’re the one who asks her out,” Miyamoto said bluntly, clearly
irritated by Itsuki’s obvious behavior.
Kusuda, the target of all this,
didn’t particularly mind being the object of someone’s affection. She was cute
enough. If he gave her a signal, they might end up in a pretty comfortable
relationship. He’d even considered what would happen if he made a move—but the
thought of Akizawa finding out was enough to freeze him in place. It wasn’t
worth the risk.
Two weeks ago, Akizawa had moved.
Until then, he’d lived in a small,
outdated one-bedroom rental. When he mentioned moving, Kusuda had assumed he’d
finally be upgrading to a proper apartment with good security, especially now
that his popularity was rising. For a moment, he even felt relieved—thinking
maybe his own place would stop being treated like a second home.
He was wrong.
Akizawa had moved one floor above
Kusuda’s unit.
His new place was still cluttered
with unopened cardboard boxes, just sitting there untouched. The only thing
that had changed was the location of his storage. The pattern remained the
same—Akizawa leaving for work from Kusuda’s place, coming home to it.
There were now so many little gigs
on Akizawa’s schedule that even Kusuda couldn’t keep track. If it was
CRUX-related, Numata would give Kusuda a heads-up. Anything else, he had no
idea. He couldn’t predict when Akizawa would leave or when he’d come home.
Sometimes, Akizawa wouldn’t show up
for days, then suddenly slip into Kusuda’s bed in the middle of the
night—starting things up while Kusuda was still asleep. The time Kusuda woke up
to find Akizawa already inside him, fully nude, he genuinely considered
punching him. But in the end, the pleasure won out. He went along with
it—again.
“As for Itsuki-san, I think if she
realizes I’m not interested, she’ll probably give up eventually.”
Miyamoto let out a long sigh. “Yeah,
I suppose…”
Then added, “But if you do
like her, Kusuda-san, I wouldn’t stop you or anything.”
That sharp remark caught him off
guard. Feeling a little exposed, Kusuda shook his head quickly. “No, no way.”
Miyamoto sipped her oolong tea from
the self-serve drink station with a zuuhh.
“Girls like that—you know, the super
domestic ones—they always seem to quit once they get married.”
“What does ‘domestic’ even
mean?”
The voice came unexpectedly from
beside them. A man who looked like a middle-aged auto mechanic stood by their
table, wearing a blue coverall, a straight silver bob tucked under a baseball
cap, and round glasses.
Miyamoto gave him a deeply skeptical
look, like—What is this old man doing eavesdropping on our conversation?
The man responded with a warm
smile—and then took off his hat.
“It’s me, Miyamoto,”
Akizawa said with a grin, adjusting
his round glasses. Miyamoto let out a loud “Ehh?!” that turned a few
heads nearby. It was a four-person booth, and Akizawa slipped into the seat
beside Kusuda like it was the most natural thing in the world.
“Sorry, I made a weird noise. You
surprised me,” Miyamoto said, still clutching her chest as if her heart was
racing.
“Pretty good disguise, huh? I
started doing it after getting tailed by reporters a few times—but like this,
no one recognizes me.”
In mid-April, a paparazzi photo of
Akizawa had been taken—specifically, a shot of him returning to Kusuda’s
apartment. The sound of the shutter had tipped him off, so he knew he’d been
caught. However, the photo never made it into a weekly magazine. “Returning to
the home of the vice president of the accessories brand he models for” might’ve
been a decent headline, but once it was clear the other party was just a single
man, there wasn’t much to generate buzz.
No scandal erupted from it, but
Akizawa had clearly hated the experience of being photographed, and since then,
he’d started going out in disguise. And it wasn’t one of those half-hearted
“You can still notice me if you want” looks—hat and sunglasses types. No, he
went all in: he wore a wig and aimed for a transformation so convincing even
his own father wouldn’t recognize him from a meter away.
He even invented a character: Goro
Ito, a 65-year-old auto mechanic who had injured his right leg in an accident a
few years back and now walked with a limp. When dressed in Goro’s signature
blue coveralls, Akizawa would hunch slightly and drag his leg with every step.
His usual youthfulness vanished—he looked every bit the aging man. His
remarkable, one-of-a-kind acting ability was being wasted on these outings.
“How’d you even know we were here?”
Miyamoto asked.
"I saw Masahiko’s message. He
said you were at a family restaurant," Akizawa replied.
...Just before leaving the office,
Kusuda had gotten a text from Akizawa: Where are you right now?
Usually, when he asked like that, it
meant he was already back at Kusuda’s condo, so Kusuda had replied, Having
dinner with Miyamoto-san at a family restaurant near the office, then heading
home.
But he never imagined Akizawa would
actually come looking for him.
A waitress approached their table
carrying a glass of water, and asked the new customer, "Would you like to
place an order?"
Still in his mechanic getup, Akizawa
leaned lazily against Kusuda’s shoulder and asked, “What are you eating?” The
clash between his appearance and his voice created a dizzying kind of
dissonance—he sounded like Akizawa, but looked nothing like him.
“Pork ginger set meal,” Kusuda
answered.
“Then I’ll have that too,” Akizawa
said, without even glancing at the menu.
“And the self-serve drink station?”
the waitress asked.
“Whatever’s fine,” he replied
vaguely, flustering her, so Kusuda jumped in with, “Yes, please include it,” to
smooth things over.
“I want some of that,” Akizawa said,
pointing at Kusuda’s pork. Kusuda couldn’t be bothered to argue, so he held up
a slice to Akizawa’s mouth. Akizawa chomped down like a dog, then, still
chewing, turned to Miyamoto and asked, “So girls with those domestic vibes—do
they really just get married and quit right away?”
Kusuda froze. How long has he
been listening?
Whether in public or private,
Akizawa now clung to Kusuda whenever he had a moment to spare. The spiky,
irritable youth he’d met early on had become a pampered, clingy house cat.
Miyamoto had once commented, “Once Akizawa-san gets attached to someone, he’s really
touchy,” but followed it with, “If he were a girl, this would be sexual
harassment. But since it’s you, Kusuda-san, it’s fine,” and left it at that.
“Starting in April, we hired a new
assistant, Itsuki-san,” Miyamoto explained neutrally. “She seems very domestic,
so we were just saying she might get a boyfriend and quit soon.”
Under the table—taking advantage of
being out of sight—Akizawa laced his fingers with Kusuda’s right hand and
tilted his head. “The one who looks kinda like a fava bean?”
“Fava bean?” Kusuda echoed.
“She’s got that round, flat face,
don’t you think?” Akizawa replied, looking up at him as if seeking agreement.
Miyamoto snorted into her drink.
Itsuki was definitely cute—but yes,
she had a round face and a slightly low bridge to her nose.
“Don’t ever say that in front
of her,” Kusuda warned. “You’ll get slapped with a harassment complaint.”
Akizawa turned away indifferently.
“We barely see each other anyway.”
“Thing is,” Miyamoto added, “it
feels like Itsuki-san’s got a bit of a crush on Kusuda-san.”
“A crush?” Akizawa perked up… or so
it seemed.
“Miyamoto-san, that’s not exactly confirmed
yet…” Kusuda tried to shut her down, not wanting Akizawa to hear—but Miyamoto,
ever the chaos agent, said it plainly: “We were just saying that Itsuki-san
probably likes Kusuda-san.”
Crap, Kusuda thought. If Akizawa got moody over
this, it’d be hell.
But Akizawa just replied with a
breezy, “Huh,” like it didn’t matter.
“Poor little fava bean,” he added.
“Masahiko’s already taken.”
Kusuda jolted and turned to him—only
to find Akizawa grinning.
“What? Kusuda-san, since when do you
have a girlfriend? You never told me!” Miyamoto jumped in at once.
“Uh… well…”
Before he could come up with an
excuse, Akizawa blurted, “Masahiko’s got someone who loves him back. They’re
totally in love, so fava bean’s gonna have to deal with heartbreak.”
“You’ve been so busy lately. How did
you even find time to go on dates?” Miyamoto pressed.
Now cornered, Kusuda forced a stiff
smile. “Well, you know… things happen.”
Miyamoto started asking about the
age and looks of this supposed girlfriend. “Younger?” “Tall?”—trying to piece
together the mystery woman. Kusuda dodged as best he could, while Akizawa sat
beside him, watching it all with a smug, amused smirk.
Just before eight, Akizawa, the
uninvited guest, suddenly said, “I wanna go home.”
Kusuda almost told him off—it was Miyamoto’s
story they were here for, after all, not his—but then Miyamoto stood up too,
saying, “Yeah, I should get going. My boyfriend’s probably getting home soon.”
And just like that, their dinner
wrapped up.
They saw Miyamoto off as she rode
away on her bike. Kusuda was about to head for the station when Akizawa said,
“Let’s take a taxi.”
Kusuda, still sore about being
thrown under the bus with the whole “girlfriend” lie, considered making him
walk to the station in that ridiculous outfit. But then he thought—if Akizawa
was exhausted from all the filming and interviews, maybe he shouldn’t be too
harsh.
“…Fine,” he said with a nod.
Akizawa hailed a cab and, once
inside, pulled up a map on his phone and showed it to the driver. “Can you take
us here?”
The middle-aged driver, buzz cut and
gruff, glanced at it. “Sure. But it’s a little far. Mind if we take the
highway?”
“Yeah, that’s fine,” Akizawa nodded.
Kusuda frowned. “Why the highway? I
thought we were going home.”
“I’ve got a place I want to go.”
“Where?”
Akizawa smirked behind his round
glasses. “Secret.”
Where the hell could he want to go
this late? A bar? But on the highway? And in that ridiculous getup—as a
65-year-old mechanic, blue coveralls and all?
Akizawa let out a small yawn and
leaned against Kusuda’s shoulder. That alone might’ve been tolerable—except he
also reached for Kusuda’s left hand and clasped it tight, fingers interlaced.
Kusuda tried to shake him off—but
Akizawa’s grip didn’t budge.
“…Oi,” he muttered.
Kusuda gently scolded him under his
breath. In response, Akizawa placed Kusuda’s work bag over their joined hands,
using it like a shield. Beneath it, he continued to squeeze and squeeze their
interlocked fingers. Not in public, Kusuda thought—but Akizawa’s face,
so softly lit up like a contented child, stopped him from pulling away. All he
could do was pray the driver wouldn’t notice, and let him be.
The taxi exited the highway and
slipped into a dim, rarely used road—quiet, with barely any foot traffic even
for Tokyo. They passed a few scattered homes before pulling up near a small
riverside. The driver slowed down and said, “This should be around here.”
“Please stop near that little hut,”
Akizawa instructed.
When the taxi stopped, Akizawa was
the first to hop out. Kusuda followed, paying the fare and hurrying after him.
Akizawa crossed a sidewalk with wide gaps between streetlights, heading into a
stretch of embankment thick with grass and shadows. The darkness was unsettling
enough that Kusuda instinctively called out, “Akizawa.”
Akizawa turned back and lifted a
hand. “Come with me.”
Still in his work suit and clutching
his bag, Kusuda pushed through grass up to his hips without understanding what
was going on. He turned on his smartphone flashlight, but there was no
path—just more overgrowth. If there were a body or two hidden in there, he
thought grimly, there’s no way anyone would notice.
The terrain made it difficult to
walk, and it took a while to reach the hut Akizawa had mentioned to the taxi
driver.
“You dragged me all the way out here
just for this—” Kusuda began to complain, but Akizawa placed a finger to his
lips. “Shhh.”
Then he took Kusuda’s hand and
pulled him forward again. The sound of water grew closer—a soft, shimmering
rustle. A river at night, holding hands… The word shinjū—double
suicide—floated into Kusuda’s mind uninvited. But there was no reason for that.
They weren’t star-crossed lovers with nowhere to turn. He blamed the thought on
how unnervingly dark everything was. Still, he had no idea what Akizawa’s real
intention was in bringing him here.
Then, by the river, something
blinked faintly in the dark. When Kusuda squinted, it flashed again—a pale,
glowing light. Before he knew it, he was squeezing Akizawa’s hand in return.
What was that?
And then he saw more of them, all
around them—soft glimmers appearing and fading in the grass.
Fireflies.
Akizawa crouched down, and Kusuda
sat beside him. The sound of the flowing river was peaceful, and somewhere in
the distance, a car engine passed and faded.
The fireflies clung to the tips of
leaves and then floated into the air, blinking as they moved. The last time
Kusuda had seen one was in elementary school. Their faint, bluish-white light
was so delicate it nearly disappeared in the glare of a phone screen. It was
still only mid-May, a bit too early to call it summer, but the fragile,
fleeting light had a quiet beauty—dreamlike, melancholic.
“One of the drama’s location scouts
told me about this place,” Akizawa said softly. “They found it while scouting,
and said, ‘It’s a hidden gem. If you bring your girlfriend here, she’ll be
thrilled.’”
“…So I’m the girlfriend?”
“I don’t mind if you’re the
boyfriend instead.”
It was a small thing—really, it
didn’t matter. Kusuda just stared, spellbound by the fireflies. When he woke up
this morning, it had felt like any other hectic day ahead—he never would’ve
imagined ending the night watching fireflies.
“If anyone ever mentions fireflies
to me from now on, I’ll remember these—these ones I saw with you, Masahiko.”
Akizawa squeezed his hand tightly,
still holding it.
“And when someone says ‘fireflies’
to you, I hope you’ll think of tonight too… the ones you saw with me.”
A firefly floated so close, it
seemed almost within reach.
“Masahiko,” Akizawa murmured, and
with their hands still entwined, he squeezed again—slowly, as if savoring the
shape of Kusuda’s fingers—again and again.
“I’ve been in the industry since I
was a kid, so even though I technically graduated, I didn’t really go to school
much. I was always in front of a TV camera or standing on a stage. I’m an
actor, so I play all kinds of roles, but there were so many times I felt like
the characters I played were happier than I was. When I was fifteen, I had a
role where I went on a date with a girl. That was my first date… even though it
was just acting. I guess it’s weird, calling that my first date, huh? But
this—this right now—this is the real thing, right?”
As he spoke, he pulled Kusuda’s hand
close, and their bodies pressed together. The grass rustled, and a firefly that
had been resting on a leaf took flight, startled.
“I love you, Masahiko.”
Akizawa was never one to hold back
when it came to words like love, so Kusuda had heard it many times
before. But tonight, for some reason, it hit different—his face flushed hot
with embarrassment. He was glad it was so dark around them.
“I think you really love me too,
Masahiko—but I’m pretty confident I love you even more.”
That relentless, unshakable
certainty of Akizawa’s—his ability to believe so purely—Kusuda found himself
almost envious of it.
“I like having sex, sure… but I also
want to go on dates like this, lots of them.”
Kusuda thought he probably should
say something in agreement… but the words “me too” felt too shy to say
aloud. Still, there was something ridiculously adorable about the way Akizawa
said it—about how much he wanted to go on dates—and the fireflies were
beautiful, too.
Kusuda leaned against him, touching
his cheek lightly with his fingertips. After feeling for the position of his
face, he kissed him. At first, Akizawa flinched like he’d been caught off
guard, but he quickly melted into it, sucking at Kusuda’s lips with hungry
enthusiasm.
They fell back into the tall grass
together, wrapped in each other’s arms. Desire stirred—Kusuda wanted to go
further—but even he could tell that having sex here would be completely insane.
Apparently, Akizawa understood that too. So they just stayed there, tangled
together, kissing like two love-drunk middle schoolers.
Flooded with affection, Kusuda
couldn’t help but think of Itsuki again—her interest, that easy alternative—but
maybe all that had just been a form of escape. Because once he admitted this
relationship with Akizawa to himself… he would never be able to break free of
him again.
A man who clung to him like a cat,
who invited him out to see fireflies like it was some schoolkid’s date, who
brought him all the way into a creepy grass field that looked like it could be
hiding a corpse, only to tell him over and over, I love you, I love you—Akizawa
was such an idiot.
And so unbearably cute.
So cute that Kusuda didn’t want to
stop kissing him.
A firefly landed on Akizawa’s
shoulder as he leaned down again, flickering gently. Kusuda reached for it
without thinking, but it floated up with a soft flutter, disappearing into the
night, leaving a faint trail of glowing light behind in the dark sky.
To be continued in COLD HEART in NEWYORK.
This was cute but it’s missing something. The characters don’t feel flaws enough and there’s no drama in the relationship itself. Maybe in the next volumes? Thanks for the translations!
ReplyDeleteI get what you’re saying! The relationship here is pretty straightforward. Let’s see if the next volumes bring a little more drama and depth. Thanks for reading along! ✨
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