This one's an extra story written for the 2020 Secret Santa project initiated by ProfAllister.
Victim: EuroBeatJester
Prompt: It's pretty common for graduating students to go back the first year or two for their school's festivals. Write a story about your favorite KS couple (Hisao x any of the girls) going back to visit Sendai and Yamaku for Tanabata the year after they've graduated.
Note: EBJ knows this girl far better than I do, so compromises have had to be made, for which I apologize most sincerely—forsaking all others, cleaving only unto her, so to speak. I’m still learning to fly.
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Returns
“Hisao?” she murmurs, her throaty voice somehow both matter-of-fact and alluring at the same time. It’s as if she’s taking me for granted and also asking shyly and sincerely for my attention. I have never been able to fully solve the enigma that she is, and believe me, I have tried for a very long time.
I turn, still struggling with my jacket and wondering about the silly idea of a bowtie.
“Do you like this?”
I take a moment. There is too much to see, and yet not enough. Part of her is the woman I’ve known thus far: honey-coloured hair, expressive eyes, a determined but somehow delicate jaw, a figure that is slight but with significant presence. And part of that presence is both enhanced and concealed by a dark maroon traditional gown, with finely wrought sea-dragons in gold thread.
There’s a sea-dragon’s head atop her deadly-looking blackwood swordstick too. Or at least, it would be a swordstick if it weren’t a cane, or the bow for a stringed instrument, or a staff of power. I have fantasies too, as does she.
I surreptitiously take a deep breath, attempting nonchalance while looking desperately for words. “Not an orange and red yukata?” I say, carelessly.
It’s not a question, and she knows it. “One shouldn’t repeat oneself, unless it’s a matter of training by repetition, Mr Nakai.”
“Well, gold on maroon is quite similar. But it’s nice, and I like those dragons.” I wasn’t ever very good at snappy repartee, and I’m blessed that she doesn’t mind doing the sarcastic put-downs which I, in turn, don’t mind.
This time, however, of the many times we’ve done this, she half-grimaces and half-pouts. Then, she disappears into the depths of her wardrobe.
I start thinking of a more traditional yukata myself. Perhaps the whole tuxedo thing is putting her off her game. I do have an old grey one that I once borrowed, and I’m sure that…
“Nakai?” she says, her voice oddly flat, summoning my attention peremptorily.
How many yukatas can a girl have in her wardrobe? It beggars my imagination, and I once thought I might have a chance of writing fantasy novels. I turn again, awkwardly, with my jacket half-off.
Deep blue fabric, with the charcoal ghosts of trees, each tree with small dragonflies and summer pennants. At her waist, you can see a distant harbour, with a single ship waiting for its crew. Damn.
“A ship about to sail?” I say, no trace of humour in my voice—rather, I’m a little shaken because of what it might mean.
“I have an ancestor who was an admiral. He helped to found the Imperial Navy.”
I’m not expecting that, which is a lot better than what I thought it might be. I nod respectfully as her voice takes on imperious tones of its own. How can such a soft voice sound so large?
*****
It takes a while to get there. In the summer, we make visits, and our visitations cover much ground. The journey from Kichijo-ji, in Tokyo, to Yamaku takes a fairly long time, even for comparatively young travellers. We always look out from the windows of the train, as the stars flash by in the evening and the traffic soars both ways on ribbons of light and concrete and steel.
“Enomoto?” I tug at the strings of her attention.
“Yes, Hisao?” she replies.
“Did you ever think you could love someone forever?”
“Well, I always think I could love you for the rest of my life, if that counts.”
That’s the bittersweet part. There are now treatments that can prolong the inevitable for people like Saki, and my condition in most people can be managed for a significantly long time and perhaps even a normal life.
But who are we kidding?
I smile at her. “That’s enough, you know.”
“It’s never enough,” she whispers, and places her head gently against my shoulder, releasing the tension slowly, as if gradually entrusting her weight to my strength.
As we go up to Sendai, we can see the eastern seaboard and the lights of fishing vessels beginning to return in the evening. She’s next to the window, as always, and sunset is behind her, lighting up the warm amber tones in her freshly trimmed locks.
She sighs a little at the extra warmth, and I hold her closer, the layers of fabric rustling under the movement of my hands. She reaches back, and I feel a spark of warmth as she rubs against me.
The light falls just right, illuminating the outline of her breasts for a moment before the sun falls away from us. I have fond memories of Tanabata.
There will be a car waiting for us at Sendai. There would be. My life-partner has somehow always been one to make long-term plans. I don’t question this very much. It’s just the way she is, Saki Enomoto, the one and only.
*****
By the time we arrive, she’s cheerful again. We’re at Sendai Station, and the evening sky is still bright and cloudless; sunset this year should be at around 7 pm, they say.
“I wonder who’ll be here this year? Maybe someone unexpected. If it were someone unexpected, who do you think it’d be?” she chatters on, leaning slightly on her sword-cane while we walk from the platform.
“You can’t think about the unexpected because it is unexpected. You can only do two things: prepare for everything and prepare to absorb damage.”
That’s a rude interruption, but sometimes, interruptions can be interesting. I look up and to the left at the source. It’s a familiar voice, and really one I hadn’t expected.
“Kenji!”
I hail him as positively as I can under the circumstances, adding, “How have you been? Where have you been?” This question-barrage thing is something I swear I have picked up from Saki.
“It’s the drinking train, you know, the carriage which the whisky manufacturers sponsor? Moves smoothly down your throat, gets you to places that you’d like to be. If you drink enough, they give you a free ride. It’s a neat conspiracy, but I have them on the rocks.”
I shake my head, just as I spot a twinkle in Saki’s demeanour. “What are you wearing, Mr Setou? It’s very summery and full of happiness.”
“Aha, you like it? Damn! I thought women didn’t go in for this kind of thing. I need to engineer new designs for my antifeminist camouflage prints.”
I take a good look at him. He’s wearing a lemon-yellow yukata, with little red-brown ornaments which I realise are actually slices of salami, whisky bottles, and cherries. It’s something you wouldn’t notice unless you looked carefully. But what Saki’s looking at is that scarf, striped red-yellow-green and apparently unchanged and unwashed since the days we were in high school together.
Then again, perhaps it’s the overall effect. His spectacle lenses are as opaque as ever. I used to wonder a lot about how blind he really was, but now, as he saunters along with us, I’m quite sure he isn’t blind at all.
*****
When we reach the school gates, the black iron has given way to garlands. The gates are wide open, and summer lanterns hang from the trees. The school grounds are decorated more lavishly than the former student council had ever dreamt possible. I wonder where Aoi found the funds. Probably pale Rika’s insanely rich family, or green-haired Keiko’s extremely charming wheedling and deedling (as we used to say).
We pass through the game stalls, the food stalls. I see a fish-catching game, and whisper to Saki, “Coffee filter.” It triggers a surprised giggle which I savour, an in-joke which we can share while Kenji ponders the significance of caffeine in his web of conspiracies. Our juniors are way too busy having their own lives to notice us as we climb the hill so that we can book a spot to watch the fireworks later.
“I still say the rooftop is better. You can see for miles around. Besides, I like that place, always have been drawn to it. And it has proper seating. Up in the woods, you get the moonlight shadow all around you. Creepy.”
We’ve outvoted him, and he’s still a bit unhappy about that.
“Well, Mr Setou, you can always go off on your own, you know. An independent spirit like you, surely that’s a possibility?”
The spectacles tilt slightly. “Ever the pawn of the global feminist conspiracy, Enomoto. If I went up there on my own at night, on this night of all nights when fireworks are exploding in the sky…” his voice trails off as he takes the time to shudder a little. “Well, it might not go so well for me. I might be taken out by a stray runner or a one-armed boxer. And nobody would hear the sound of my demise.”
I look at Saki. That word, ‘demise’, it has an effect on her most times. Tonight, however, she just has a wry and somewhat wistful look on her face as she replies to our paranoid acquaintance.
“Kenji, just remember that you’re wearing your yukata right over left.”
“Wha-at? I would never…”
He scowls and turns away, towards the men’s dorms. He’ll find his way up there and down again, through the mysterious methods of the dedicated conspiracy theorist. He and his drinking!
I sigh, only to find Saki doing the same. She grins. “It’s always fun to tease people, but with Kenji, I never know if he gets the joke and doesn’t like it, senses there is a joke and doesn’t quite get it, or is just annoyed that we’re not listening to him.”
“Yeah, back when he was always hanging around my room, he was always annoyed that nobody was listening to him. He should be used to it by now.”
Immediately after saying that, I feel a little regret. Things change, people change, life goes on. Being cruel to someone by reflex, that’s just mean. We should be getting better as time passes, I reflect.
She playfully smacks me on the back of the head, as if she can read my mind. “Come on, Mr Nakai, we have a few flights of steps and some rough ground to cover before we get to our place. If Shizune and Misha or some other people get there before we do, I shall be most unhappy.”
*****
“This isn’t the roof,” I gesture.
“No, it is not.”
“This is indeed the creepy spot crazy Kenji mentioned. I didn’t think he was telling the truth.”
“You, of all people, Nakai, should know that there’s nothing to be afraid of up here,” she chuckles, softly and elegantly.
I sense that she’s probably right, and she wants this to be good, and I’m just being my old stubborn self. It’s amazing how much difference one year can make.
This is a dense part of the woods on the hill behind the ladies’ dorms. A little cobbled path leads up like a particularly lazy serpent, deeper into the woods. I worry about Saki’s footing, while noting that there’s no reason for that sort of anxiety, really.
We follow the path upward, and eventually, the woods thin out. We’re looking far down over a bend in the river, and a bit further away, the old harbour of Sendai Bay. It’s a beautiful view, with darkness like ink and orange lights like streaks of lava.
I rest my head on her shoulder as I clasp her from behind. My heart echoes with a fire that has been burning for many months.
“There’ll be fireworks, Hisao. Remember last year? We had some of our own.”
I can hear her grinning in the dark. I’m about to reply, but I’m silenced when Saki turns around out of my grip, and a finger is planted against my lips, shushing me. Saki’s eyes are two deep pools, drinking in all the light around us, and staring straight into mine, just as they did last year.
She reaches down for me as my left hand finds itself drifting into the folds of her yukata. I can feel her nipple swelling as I wish I had warmer fingers. She carefully puts her cane down.
There’s a lot less material between us than there was last year. We’ve learnt a lot since then. We find a spot in the shadow of the trees, and I warm my other hand on her right hip for a while.
We’ve hardly any breath left to catch. I don’t think I’m breathing as my hand moves down between her legs. There’s a moment when neither of us remembers to breathe.
Fabric moves, slides, flutters. I feel her take me in, already wet, her weight somehow adjusting as I find her tightness almost too much.
A rain of fire erupts above us. The fireworks are beginning. There are several explosions of flowers and stars and the salt air of the sea. The ships come into the harbour. The concussions climax to one last roar in the heavens. And as above, so below.
When she began to fold her yukatas right over left, it broke me. But our love never went away. Kenji might never figure it out, but we have. There is life after death, and there’s a lot of it.
END
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