Disclaimer: You should know this by now
Disclaimer: You
should know this by now.
Time: This story is occurring in the winter of 2041.
Warnings: This is not
an AU. It is a post Galaxia
fanfiction about what I now call The One Hundred Year Sleep. This might very well turn into a series under
the name I've used to dub the period of time this, and later stories, occur
within. I'm treating this time of "sleep" to metaphorically describe a
time period where the Senshi are trying to get
themselves together (in this story, only one person is even close to being
labeled as in a sleeping status, maybe). The reality of it is that Rome was not built within a day (and that was
not even close to being labeled as a Utopia).
The period may not even be exactly one hundred years; it too is used as
a metaphor for this time period.
Summary: Kumada Akina has just lost her Father, Kumada Yuuichiro, to disease and
age. However, on his death bed he
requested to not be buried with his prestigious ancestors but to have his ashes
placed at a Tokyo
shrine. From there on out, a trip to Tokyo for the family from Kobe will force Akina
to face a few flaws in her character and discover a city of ghosts. There, through the memory of others, Akina will learn the bonds of friendship and family, one
that she had forsaken long ago in her silent anger at a father she loved and
hated above all others.
"Who's that lady in black down
the hall?" Kumada
Akina whispered to her teary-eyed sister. "I've never seen her before."
Kumada
Hiroshi, who was sitting in between his two sisters, cleared his throat and
gently turned away the pointing finger.
"It's not polite to point, Akina
Chan."
Akina made
a face at him, "You should treat your older sister with more
respect," she snubbed him. "Akina Sensei or Akina San would
do."
Hiroshi raised a cool brow at this
comment. "Only if you act your age,
Older Sister Chan," he countered
briskly, the words of honor spiced with hints of mockery.
Akina
opened her mouth to angrily retort but caught herself as Nami
sent them both a harsh glare with her bleary eyes before settling a gentle,
pointed hand on their mother's shaking shoulders. Silent and solemn, both siblings settled
grudgingly to glaring at each other instead before turning to the white wall before
them.
"She looks young, doesn't
she?" Akina
asked at last, when she couldn't contain herself anymore. "I wonder how Father would come to know
such a woman." Akina
felt Hiroshi sigh heavily beside her before he rose abruptly.
"If you will excuse us,
Mother." Hiroshi bowed respectfully
to their teary eyed mother but it was Nami who
dismissed them with weariness etched on her face.
"What do you mean us? Who's us--" Akina
demanded brashly. Surprise came over her
face when she felt her brother's strong fingers wrap around her arm, lifting
and then dragging her away. "Let go
of me, you brute!" She struggled
till they passed the lady and turned down the hallway. Akina finally
jerked herself away with a glare.
"How dare you--?"
"Did you not see how much you
were hurting Mother with those comments?"
Hiroshi exploded, his face completely changed the from calm and cool
facade he always wore to anger, the lines of such strong emotions etched aroundhis mouth and eyes.
"How dare I? You were never
mindful of your mouth, Akina, but you've gone too far
this time!"
"How dare you accuse me of
something like that?" Akina sputtered.
"Father was always away, he deserves no more respect from us now
than he did when he was healthy."
"Akina!" Hiroshi raised his hand threateningly, and
for a moment they stood frozen, waiting for the other to move. Hiroshi sighed and turned, punching the wall
behind him harshly. "He is still our
father," he finally said with quiet resignation that hid his emotions.
Akina glared
at his back, feeling the moment of danger passing. "Unlike you, younger brother, I won't
lie to myself and pretend that I don't know what's going on. I will never accept that, I will never
forgive him for what he did!" Blue
eyes turned away. "And that woman,
she was watching us. I could feel
it. She was the reason he
left." The slap stunned both of
them, the sound echoing down the hallway.
But Kumada
Hiroshi did not feel sorry for it one bit.
"You are so selfish, Akina," he
finally said, eyes cast down to the floor.
"Just like our Father," Akina's eyes
snapped up at him, her mouth agape with outrage. "Until you collect yourself to be more
responsible, I will not allow such words you sprout near Mother
again." Before Akina
could recover to say anything else, Hiroshi turned and left.
"Baka*!"
Akina finally shouted after her brother, legs
shaking. Stumbling back against the
white wall of the hospital, she then fell to her knees. She quickly covered her face with her hands
to hide the unwanted tears that fell in both anger and those uncontrolled
emotions she dared not name. "Baka*," she whispered to the lonely hallway.
Things
That Change
by Blue Jeans
"I
have a secret that I wish to tell to you.
Only
you. I trust you, and you alone, with
such a
secret. It is the truth, you see?
It might
hurt you too- this secret.
But... it
will set me free."
Chapter 1
A Daughter’s Anger
It was raining and dreary. Everyone wore black except Kumada Iku. People whispered a little at her conservative
white kimono that stood out like a beacon in the sea of black suits. "She had always been a child of the
past," one observer described it later.
And the setting had been like one from the past as well, the whole
funeral, in fact. All the way up to the
point when Iku had told those around her that they
would not be keeping the ashes of her deceased husband, but that they were
going on a pilgrimage to Tokyo,
where Kumada Yuuichiro had
said a temple still stood. "Someone
there will know what to do," he told his wife before his death. "Just tell them, Kumada
Yuuichiro has returned and wishes for
forgiveness."
It confused them all, for the Kumadas had a family plot to bury him in as with all the Kumadas before him.
It was, and had always been, a symbol of their family's wealth and
influence. But it was not what Kumada Yuuichiro had wished
for. So Iku
had agreed to travel from Kobe to Tokyo and take her
children and the last of her husband's earthly remains with her. But first, there was a headstone to be put
into the cemetery, in honor to the Kumada name. After everyone was gone, Akina
found herself to be the last to leave.
"Baka, never knew why you loved lilies so
much. They're such a depressing flower
for such a philandering man." She
muttered but she set the white flower onto the headstone with a heavy heart.
A part of her could never forgive
her father, for what he had done to the family.
Still, there was no helping it when it came to the tears in her
eyes. The cool rain drenched her black
hair and the expensive black suit that the maid had picked out that
morning. She was glad, glad that she
could lie and say that it was not tears staining her cheeks but rain. Anyway, she couldn't tell the difference
nowadays. Did it really matter? "They're Casablancas,
you know?" A beautiful voice spoke
from behind her, and Akina blinked in realization
that the rain had stopped falling on her and it was getting cold. "They're a very special type of
lilies."
"Huh?" Blue eyes turned to see the familiar figure
of a dark-haired woman whose attire was as surprising as Kumada
Iku's. A
simple black-white kimono adorned the stranger's small, but graceful figure
along with a sode-kaburi* covering the other's hair
in silk-white. It was not at all like
the plain but elegant one that her mother wore, yet the style of dress was too
similar for Akina's taste. "Y-you're the lady from the hospital
that we saw... the woman the nurse spoke of."
Akina rose
and found herself towering over the slight form of the Japanese woman, whose
features were breath-taking, even from her perspective. The woman had a fine boned face that was
framed by straight, black hair. The
other carried herself with a confident knowing that built a powerful presence
in the small frame. And the stranger
emulated the image of traditional beauty to the very tips of her long
eyelashes, all except for the foreign and yet exotic eyes set upon a face of
alabaster. And those eyes, there were
fire in those strange, dark eyes. The
hue was of a purple sheen over a blackness that appeared to be fathomless. Akina had never met
anyone with such eyes. "I was
visiting an old friend," the stranger answered before shifting to have a
better view of the headstone. "It
would have been his birthday today, you know?" Akina
blinked in surprise as she watched the lady tilt her head with a sorrow laden
glance.
"Who are you? How did you know my father?" Akina asked
tentatively, though inside she seethed with resentment and suspicion at this
unknown person before her.
"An old, old friend," the
other answered. Fingers reached and
caressed a petal of the white flower.
"I can't believe he still wanted these," the stranger
reminisced.
Akina
didn't realize she slapped the woman's hand away until it had happened. Yet, she couldn't find it in herself to be
ashamed or sorry. "Are you his
mistress? Because if you are, we really
don't want you here!"
"Akina!" Hiroshi appeared just then. "How rude to say that to a
stranger--" His breath caught when
he caught sight of their stranger though.
"M-Miss, are you alright?"
"Get out of here," Akina growled, pointing a threatening finger at the bland
face of the woman before her. Her
annoyance grew at her younger brother's love-sick expression. "Get out and don't come back. Haven't you ruined our family enough? Go find another rich, pathetic, old man to
leech off of."
Hiroshi sucked in his breath in
alarm, "Akina!" he scolded angrily. "I can't believe--"
It was the soft, grim laughter that
caught them off-guard. "Is that your
opinion of your own father?" The
woman paused as she studied both brother and sister. "I shared similar resentment for mine a
long time ago." The woman smiled,
her hand settled over the smooth, wooden handle of her parasol with careful
grace. "I am Mars Reiko, and I am
no one's mistress." Akina and Hiroshi glanced at her with apprehensive
eyes. "I depend on no one,
especially not men. It was your father
who lived freely at my temple for a while in his youth. My grandfather had thought him a crude student
to be had and not the brightest of sorts, but Yuuichiro
was a kind hearted boy and stubborn to the bone. He meant well then," she said, glancing
at the grave stone fondly. "When he
left, I-- my grandfather and I-- we missed him, we did. That was all there was to that story."
"Mars Reiko-- San?" Hiroshi blinked, unsure where he had heard
the name right. "Y-you're that idol
singer, aren't you?"
The dark-haired woman smiled,
"Once, I had been a priestess," she answered vaguely. "We were children together then, your
father and I."
"Mars Reiko San? I-I bought your CDs a few months
back." Akina
blinked. "Y-you've seen my father
at a... a temple?"
Reiko looked at them surprised. "I worked with him, yes."
"Why are you here, Mars Reiko
San? To pay your respect?" Akina asked
incredulously. "I don't believe
you! My father has never set foot in a
temple, and he certainly does not associate with a woman without taking
advantage of them, or my mother's poor heart!"
Reiko raised a brow at this. "Your mother made her own
decisions. Knowing the things that she
knew, she was not at a disadvantage when she had chosen what she did. When it came to your father, she was never
taken advantage of without the full consent she gave freely herself," the woman
before her said with her dark eyes sad but clear. "We all chose what we did then, it was
how it was."
Akina
angrily threw her hand out, and it would have caught Mars Reiko in the cheek if
the woman hadn't stopped her. Pale
hands, delicate looking but calloused on the inside, startled Akina. "I let
you slap me once," Rei said, eyes narrowing
slightly. "Don't think I'll let you
do so again when your only reason is so pointless and selfish. Nobody slaps me twice without my deserving
it, especially when they move so slowly that anyone can avoid such a careless
attack."
Angered, Akina
struck out again and again, each time stopped by the woman with easy
grace. But by the third blow, her
brother was dragging her away. "Let
me go!" Akina
cried out in rage, struggling to attack Mars Reiko once more. "Let me go, damn you!" She finally settled when she realized she
wasn't going anywhere when Hiroshi and her had fallen into the mud together in
a tangled and messy heap. Both Akina and her brother were getting wet exceptionally fast
in the downpour, and muddied as well from the fall, but Hiroshi would not let
her go.
"Stop it!" Hiroshi finally said harshly in her ear. Apparently, he had been yelling at her for
some time because his voice seemed hoarser than before, as if he had been
shouting. "Stop it, Akina! Stop making
such a spectacle of yourself while you shame this family, and at such a
time… Stop being like Father! Why are you so absorbed in your own pain, you
can't look beyond to see the people you're hurting?"
Akina
cried, breaking down. "Baka!" she shouted with renewed strength as she tried
to get away from her brother's harsh embrace.
"I'm nothing like him!"
"I agree." Mars Reiko's
quiet and yet beautiful voice surprised them both. "Yuuichiro
never amounted to much of anything in his life because he was selfish, but he
never fought for any of the things he desired for either. He never liked confrontations, and yet, here
now is his daughter who thrives upon it."
Akina glared at Mars Reiko through wet, black
bangs. A small part of her was satisfied
to see that there was mud spatters on the beautiful kimono the other woman wore
that must have resulted from their scuffle.
"How do you know our father so
well?" Hiroshi asked in surprise. "He was fifty-nine when he died. You cannot have known him for more than ten,
twenty years at most!"
Reiko blinked at them in
surprise. "Huh?" She smiled a bit sadly down at them, at Akina's solemn face and Hiroshi's curious one. "That's my secret," she said. "But it's not one that I share
alone. So, I can't tell."
"Whore," Akina muttered under her breath when no further information
came from the woman's lips.
Reiko's dark eyes narrowed angrily
then. "Don't insult others for
situations you don't understand," The other bowed to the rising
Hiroshi. "You have my condolences, Kumada San."
Mars Reiko straightened and smiled ruefully. "It was nice meeting with both of
you. I will be seeing you in the future." With that, the other turned and left.
"What?" Akina
exploded. "I don't want to ever see
you again!" she declared rudely to the other woman's retreating back. But Mars Reiko only shot Akina
an uncaring glance over her shoulder as she left.
Hiroshi sighed almost dreamily,
"Now that's a lady." At Akina's snort however, Hiroshi promptly smacked her on the
head. "That was amazingly
stupid," Hiroshi lectured. "Do
you even know what you're doing anymore, Akina? Have a little more control! You're turning twenty-two in two months, so
stop acting like an animal. We're not
four anymore, you realize that?"
Akina
glared at the retreating figure of Mars Reiko.
"I won't forgive either of them," she turned to her
brother. "Like Father must have
learned before, I don't forgive liars and deceivers. And that especially means her!"
"How do you know Reiko San is
the other woman, anyway?" Hiroshi
demanded in annoyance.
"Because," Akina thought to a few months back when she had to clean
her father's study. There had been
photographs of Mars Reiko (some with Yuuichiro in it)
that her father had hid in his drawers, ones that Akina
discovered by herself. "I
know."
- - - - -
Lesta Gin
tapped at the key of her computer with some amount of interest, but her
intensity was disturbed by the voice of her unwelcome friend. "Well," Akina
demanded as she leaned over Gin's shoulder.
"Did you find anything, yet?"
Akina asked over the music that Gin insisted
upon listening to while she tapped away at the computer.
The dirty-blonde haired woman shot a
glare at Akina, whose face was next to her own. With great annoyance at the other's pestering
proximity, Gin answered with icy reproach.
"If I didn't grow up with you, Akina
Chan, I wouldn't know how I could have been able to stand you for so
long."
Akina
stuck her tongue out at her friend playfully.
"You know you love me!"
"Unfortunately," Gin
replied with a resigned sigh, "that was also not my choice."
"So what have you found, if not
everything I've asked of you?" Akina challenged.
Gin shot her another annoyed glance
before popping up a screen. "Mars
Reiko San's been a pop artist for five years in the industry. She rose to prominence pretty quickly and the
model agencies and such immediately picked her up. I can see why though,” Gin sighed enviously
as she scrolled down the documents she collected. "It was difficult to find any really
concrete information on her. There are a
lot of bios, but no actual year of birth, which I noticed with some surprising
frequency." Gin nodded to herself,
ignoring the curious glances Akina shot her. "But a lot of people assume that she's
in her early twenties, but her agent has yet to disclose anything."
"Agent?" Akina asked.
Gin grinned at this. "Yup, and you'd never guess who it is,
either?"
"Who?" Akina asked wide-eyed.
"Hidekai
Kyoko San," Gin replied easily, "a former student of Tokyo
University. She’s apparently one of the
university's last students before they converted it to JTI-U."
"What a silly change in name
for a once distinguished university," Akina commented,
but her comment was easily ignored.
"Still, Hidekai Kyoko San? That's Nami's
fiancé’s cousin, if I remember correctly," Akina
thought out loud to herself.
"Ignoring the confusion of your
family tree, you still picked a very interesting person to look up," Gin
answered instead with a roll of her eyes.
"There's really no record of a Mars Reiko before this, though, so I
thought it was a stage name that she must have picked up earlier on. So, without any leads, I begin looking up the
list of shrines your father might have hopped around to in his earlier
ages. Another rather strange anomaly did
pop up from that search. Well, there
is--" Gin paused "--but there is no way that the two are the same
woman!" Akina
was confused and expressed it in her glance to her friend's speculative
face. "You said that Mars Reiko San
told you and Hiroshi Kun that your father stayed at her temple?" Akina nodded slowly
in agreement. "Well, there were
several temples your father had resided in while in his twenties." Akina blinked in
surprise at this information.
That
woman wasn't lying then?
"But here's the part that
confused me," Gin told Akina with a disturbed
air about her. "There was a shrine
by the name of Hikawa Jinja,
owned by a Matsuko Masakazu." At this the picture of an old man
appeared. "He died in 2006 and left
his shrine to his granddaughter -- a Hino Rei
San." There was a small, black and
white picture from school records that Gin dug up somehow on the web, the only
one to accompany the young lady's profile.
"I couldn't find a trace of her background really, except to this
really old Catholic girl school that's been around for decades. But the woman in this picture must be in her
fifties or sixties now if she was around when your father lived there."
"The Mars Reiko San that you
and I know is most definitely in her early twenties," Akina
pondered.
"Bing-o,"
Gin agreed cheerfully. "As I said,
it's not possible."
Akina
tapped her chin. "Could it be her
daughter that visited me and Hiroshi Chan, then?"
Gin scratched her head. "I want to say yes, Akina
Chan, except there are no records of Hino Rei San
having a child, or even marrying. The
pictures are too disturbingly similar.
The girl and the older women look almost like the same woman, only at
two different stages in life. It's hard
to believe the two of them are not related," Gin said, grinning a bit
mischievously, "Unless you start believing in reincarnation, or the
Doppelganger Theory. Other than that,
the trail for Hino Rei ends when she turned
twenty-two. No records were kept,
apparently. Not after she graduated from
university with a Bachelor’s in Political Science."
"Political Science?" Akina inquired.
"Apparently, her father was an
important politician in the day," Gin explained.
"Ah!" Akina exclaimed,
"I remember now! There was a Hino
Akira San we read about in modern politics when I was in high
school!" Akina
blinked in surprise. "But, that was
quite a few decades back," she whispered in confusion.
"Exactly," Gin nodded. "Her story and the one she told you
don't match." Thinking about it
some more, Gin then started to shake her head.
"Actually, they do match," she remarked, scratching her head
once more in confusion, "but the implications that came with the matching are
too impossible to be true."
"You know, she might be a bit
crazy in the head," Akina joked. "She might have gotten her mother's
story and her own mixed up! Or she's
really a reincarnation gone completely wrong!"
Gin rolled her eyes at this. "You're crazy in the head, Akina Chan.
Sometimes I don't know why I hang out with you, knowing this to be
true."
Akina
stuck her tongue out at her friend in retaliation. "No one else can stand you, that's
why," she remarked saucily.
"Anyway, you're the one who's crazy in the head."
Gin rolled her eyes again. "You sure you graduated from high
school, Akina Chan?" Gin leaned back in her chair and stared at
the white ceiling. "Sometimes, you
act like such a kid. Makes me wonder who
let you graduate university with that attitude in tact."
Akina
glared at Gin for that one. "At
least I don't work at a job I detest, Gin Chan," she answered with sugared
venom in her tone.
But Gin was used to Akina's short temper as well as her arguments. "Ah, the life of the wealthy. I can't compete with such lazy luxuries that
you take advantage of everyday!"
Gin grieved, shooting a pointed look at Akina's
expensive purse that was haphazardly thrown onto Gin's bed. "The rest of us must slave away just to
earn a living, you know? While others
just live spoiled and rotten for the rest of their pampered lives."
Akina was
outraged but she could do no more than humph at her friend, choosing not to
continue the argument any further.
- - - - -
The train station was as crowded as
ever. Winter was coming and the holiday
decorations were already being put up by the stores and offices. Kumada Iku had put off the family pilgrimage so that every child
of hers would be available to make the trip.
The bundle of clothes that Akina brought from
home took up more space than she had expected since the weather in Tokyo was
reportedly colder than Kobe this year, and the city was expecting snow before
they could take leave from it back to Kobe.
"I can't believe we'll be
missing the Luminarie*!" Akina groused. Her form was hunched over her leather bag
sullenly. "Gin Chan and I were so
looking forward to it. I mean, Mother,
do we really need to make this trip?"
Nami was
the one who spoke this time, though Hiroshi shot Akina
his disapproving glance. "Akina Chan, please control yourself," Nami said in her soft, authoritative voice. Of the family, other than their father, no
one could silence Akina as effectively as Nami could.
Akina
sighed and crossed her arms over her chest rebelliously though she said
nothing. "I made a promise to your
father, you know?" Iku finally spoke when her children silenced. Between her two hands was the urn that held
the last of her husband's remains. There
was great weariness in the lines of Kumada Iku's slight frame and more lines on her aged face. "We must go, all of us, to that place
that changed everything."
"Eh?" Akina perked up
interested. "Changed
everything?"
Iku smiled
ruefully at her second daughter.
"Yes, Akina Chan, everything." Mother spoke no more after that little
speech, ignoring all of Akina's careful prodding that
soon deteriorated to bold questions. But
no amount of coercion worked and Akina spent the rest
of the train ride looking out the window at the passing of fields, trees, and
towns.
The conductor finally announced
their arrival at Tokyo, making the excited Akina
ready to leap out of her seat.
"Come on, everyone!" Akina announced with cheerful determination. "We got a temple to visit!"
But Kumada
Iku only chuckled a little at her second daughter's
antics, the first in a while, as Nami and Hiroshi
shared a knowing smile. "Baka," Hiroshi spoke, "we all need rest before we
go. We have a hotel to check into
first."
Akina
pouted, but complied when she saw the tired shadows beneath her mother's
eyes. "Alright," she gave
reluctantly. "Let's go then to the
hotel!"
Iku
smiled, knowing that her family's been worried about her since her husband's
death. It was lonelier somehow, knowing
he was gone for good. And yet, he had
never really been there. Iku looked at the urn sitting on her lap. It held the last of the man who had once made
her heart tremble like a frightened rabbit.
For such a simple container, it held with it also, the last of his
secrets.
Kumada Iku, then Haruko Iku, knew from day one that she would never have Kumada Yuuichiro's heart. He had told her so later, when she had tried
to force him to see her for once. But
even then, he only saw one woman, even after three children and endless years,
he still loved that woman above all others.
She was a woman who cared for him as much as he did for Iku. It was an irony
not lost to Iku, not even after all these years. She had thought then, as a girl, that he
would one day realize the fruitlessness of his desires and turn to her at
last. But, Iku
ruefully thought, it was herself who should have saw the foolishness of her own
desires. Yuuichiro
and her, they were indeed alike in too many ways, ways married people should
never have in common.
"Mother?" Nami leaned over cautiously to get a better view of her
mother's face in the shadowed darkness.
"Are you alright?"
Iku forced
a smile upon her face. "Yes, Nami Chan," Iku nodded,
"I'm fine."
Nami
nodded politely to show she would not push the matter whether or not she
believed her mother's words. For that, Iku was thankful. Nami was born a polite, serious, and quiet child. Her fiancé, Hidekai
Kiyoshi was a much looser person, though some considered him a bit too
loose. Iku had
liked how Kiyoshi could make a room light up with a smile, but she had seen her
daughter stand quietly beside the man like the darkness deepening next to the
bright candle. Yuuichiro
liked the match from the start and pushed for his daughter to marry the
man. Not because Kiyoshi was successful
or well off, but because Yuuichiro said he did Nami good. She
needed the light in her life, their serious Nami, Yuuichiro used to say.
But Iku thought it was not a relationship that
should have ended in marriage.
Iku had
played a shadow to her husband's desires, and knew no woman would want that in
the end. Sometimes the light could hurt
a person. After all, prince charming
wasn't for everyone. Nami
would have done well if she found herself a kind, quiet man who could
understand her silence, her seriousness.
But Kiyoshi and Nami was what Yuuichiro had wanted, and even when it came to her
children, Iku could not help but be swayed by her
husband's desires. She was a weak woman,
Iku knew that.
It was not something in her that she was proud of, far from it, but she
knew also that she had not the strength to change it even if she wanted to.
The cab stopped at the hotel and
Hiroshi hurriedly helped his mother out of the car. "Thank you," Iku
murmured with a small smile at her handsome son. Hiroshi looked much like his father did,
though his face was narrower, a trait from her side of the family. Akina, on the other
hand, looked nothing like either parents, though she did inherit their
colorings. Akina
looked like her grandfather, Iku's father, along with
all of his spirit. Iku
always thought that Kiyoshi would have done better with Akina. At least the two of them would be competing
for the spotlight then.
Akina had
always been the wild child. Though
Hiroshi held much of the passion his sister had, he controlled himself
better. If there were two more different
from each other, it was Nami and Akina,
two sisters who looked and acted not quite like those who were born from the
same parents. Where Nami
stilled, Akina burned, and where Nami
thought, Akina acted.
Once, Yuuichiro had smilingly described his
two daughters as two opposing elements where one was like a pool of still
waters, and the other a burning flame. Yuuichiro always did like Akina
more, of the two daughters Iku gave him. It did not take much to realize such was
true; Akina had a lot of the spirit that must have
reminded Yuuichiro of the woman he once pursued.
Akina, who
was like that woman, Akina who adored her father as a child and had grown to
hate him as an adult, Akina, who, come tomorrow,
would at last see that place that made her parents who they were, and the woman
who was at the heart of it all. Iku sighed as she closed the door to Nami's
worried expression and Hiroshi's weary grin.
Akina was waving goodnight, and Iku held onto that smile.
Tomorrow, tomorrow that smile may disappear when Akina
learned how weak her mother truly was.
And then, Akina may come to hate her as much
as Akina despised her father now, as much as Iku hated herself.
- - - - -
Iku had
insisted they take the bus that day after walking around Tokyo a bit, much to
the surprise of her children. "We
may be able to afford a cab or a private ride," she smiled, "but I'd
much rather take a bus."
Nami only
shrugged, something she did whenever she was confused with a decision. Hiroshi looked perplexed, but did not
protest. Akina
was the one who challenged the decision.
"Mother," the dark-haired woman whined, "you don't want
to take public transportation in Tokyo.
You know how many perverts are on that bus?" Akina's blue eyes
were round with disbelief. "It's
not safe for you, or Nami, or me!" Casting a sly glance at Hiroshi, she said,
"Though I'm sure some members of the household won't mind being grabbed by
the opposite sex."
"Akina
Chan!" Nami's voice was sharp. Rarely did the eldest daughter ever use such
a tone, but it stopped Akina dead in her tracks,
along with her words. "Such crude
remarks are unbecoming of a Kumada. Please don't repeat yourself in a similar
manner again." Akina
grudgingly complied with a grumbled apology.
"Thank you, Akina Chan," Nami said in a soft, compelling tone.
"Hey," Hiroshi cheered
after a silence fell over them.
"Are we going to do more sight seeing after we visit the
temple?"
"Yeah!" Akina perked up.
"I heard the stores in Tokyo are definitely worth a tour of. And Christmas is coming, along with New
Years. I want to get my boyfriend
something he'll never be able to lay a hand on back home!"
Nami
smiled, a little excited herself.
"I heard Kiyoshi San tell me of a great noodle place downtown, when
he last visited the city."
"Ah, Nami
Chan," Akina taunted, wagging a finger at her
older sister, "I can't believe you still call him Kiyoshi San. Didn't he tell you not to be so formal?"
Nami
blushed a bit under her younger sister's scrutiny. "What I call Kiyoshi San is my own
business, Akina Chan.
It's not polite to butt in like that."
Hiroshi sighed at this, and quickly
cut in before Akina could make a blunder with her
words. "Where will this noodle
place be?" he asked curiously.
"I didn't know Kiyoshi even liked noodles."
It was known in the family that Nami had a great like of noodles and noodle shops, though
it was one of the few quirks that did not match her somber personality and
expensive tastes. "He doesn't
really. But he looked into it for
me," Nami told them with a blush staining her
cheeks. If one didn't know her better,
they'd think Nami was quite in love with her
fiancé. But Nami
quite blushed at any personal information she gave out about herself, even to
her own family, be it about her love life or her likes and dislikes.
"Quite considerate of
him," Akina teased.
Iku
watched her children with a smile. They
didn't get along quite as well as one may have hoped, but they certainly fitted
quite well together as is. Iku looked down at the jar in her hand with a small
smile. "We didn't do so badly, you
and I," she said softly with a soft smile.
Yuuichiro did not love her as he did that
woman. But he loved his children and he
liked her quite a lot; there were things they had shared in their lifetime
together that she wouldn't have traded for anything in the world, except... for
his love.
The rumored bus-ride filled with
perverts did not turn out to be so bad. There
were a few incidents with shifty eyed men, but everyone exited at the stop
safely without any groping or inappropriate touching. "That was freakish," Akina shuddered with a sigh. "I don't know how Tokyo girls do
it!"
Hiroshi raised an amused brow at his
sister as he was wont to do. "By
not being so paranoid," he suggested.
The comment earned him a good, sound whack on the back of his head. "Hey, what was that for? I was merely answering your question, baka*!"
"Who are you calling a baka*?" Akina demanded.
Hiroshi opened his mouth to answer
only to be interrupted by a caw from overhead.
Startled, he looked up to see two black crows, seemingly cawing, or more
like laughing, at them.
"Eh?" He blinked.
"Eh?" Akina demanded
before her gaze shifted and she gasped.
"Hikawa-- Jinja?"
"There
was a shrine by the name of Hikawa Jinja, owned by a Matsuko
Masakazu. He died in 2006 and left his
shrine to his granddaughter-- a Hino Rei San." Gin's voice returned to Akina
in that moment as she looked at the weather worn stone tablet.
"Yes," Iku
smiled sadly at the worn sign. "Hikawa Jinja, where it had all
began. Your father, she, and I came
together at such a place. A place of the
past, some call it, a place of memories."
To be continued...
Baka - Idiot
- Kobe Luminarie --
December 23 festival of illumination (no less than 5 mill visitors are expected
-- though I really think the numbers here are a bit exaggerated for tourism
sake...)
- In
big cities like Tokyo,
it is notorious for "hentai" – perverted –
men to grope women on crowded, public transits, at least, that's the rumors
I've heard. So, Akina
apparently heard such a rumor too, that's why she was so stressed out about
using the public transit. The rumor need
not be true; it's a rumor after all.
- Because
the Kumada family is rich, most likely, Akina never really used the public transit until now. Most likely her siblings probably never have
been on a bus before, either. Iku is reliving her teenage years by taking the bus. The hotel is not that far from the shrine in
this story (it is in walking distance).
Special
Thanks To:
My editor, Yumeko
San! She had to wade through my horrible
grammar to help me polish this baby to perfection! Thank you so much Yumeko
San! I would be so lost without you! [Dabs away tears of gratitude]