Act 1: Life Expectancy
Scene 1: Cut and Deal
This takes place in Act 1 during the scene Event Horizon, where Shizune and Misha have Hisao building stalls on a Thursday afternoon.
I don’t think I’ve ever hammered so much in my life.
No, I certainly haven’t.
As I wipe a bead of sweat from my brow, I wonder to myself why I’ve gotten myself mixed up with people who seem so intent on treating me like an ancient Egyptian slave, hauling giant stones and building pyramids. It’s practically as hot as a desert, too, with the Student Council room seeming to have sucked the heat out of the entire school just to keep us roasting. Unfortunately, what I’m building won’t stand the test of… what? Five thousand years? If I’m lucky, this stall will stand until the end of this Sunday. If I’m unlucky, I’ll get chewed out by Shizune.
“Taking a break, hmm, Hicchan~?” Misha calls over the stall she’s working on with Shizune. We’ve made about the same number of stalls, but while I’ve assembled them all by myself, Shizune and Misha have split the work. In essence, I’ve done the same amount of work as both of them combined, and a frown appears on my face as I make that observation. I want to complain, but Shizune would probably chalk it up to me being a man, or Misha having delicate, easily broken nails. It would make me laugh if it didn’t also upset me, but I can’t really stay mad at them. I can mope, though. I’m very good at moping.
I turn back towards my stall with a sigh and continue hammering. Outside, the yellow-orange sky tells me that it’ll probably be sunset in less than an hour. Doing some quick mental calculations, I’ve been working on these stalls for more than four hours. I wonder what I could have spent that time doing instead? Taking a walk? Getting a proper dinner? Even if I had just spent these past hours reading, I could have gotten a sizable chunk through a book. I was actually really looking forward to starting this new one I got from the libra-
THUD.
“OW!” I shout. I jerk my hand back and grab my thumb, my hammer an afterthought, clattering to the floor with a loud crash that makes Misha yelp. That’s what I get for wondering while hammering.
“Are you okay, Hicchan?” Misha asks, the normal lilt in her voice absent. Shizune, on the other hand, hasn’t even raised her eyes from the stall she’s ‘working’ on.
I examine my thumb with a grimace on my face. It’s red all along the knuckle and the impact of the hammer head has burnt a curved white line into the nail.
“Yeah, I’m fine. Hit my thumb. Not too bad, I think.”
Misha, still signing everything she says, seems to notice Shizune inattentiveness, and flicks her up the head irritably to get her attention. “Do you need a band-aid, Hicchan? We keep some in the cupboards… somewhere…”
“It’s not cut, I’m fine.”
“Ice, then? From the nurse’s office?”
“No, I’m fine,” I repeat, my tone coming off as more annoyed than I am. I have no reason to be pissy with Misha, but pain does seem to do that to you.
Misha looks concernedly at me one last time, then turns back to her stall.
“If you say so, Hicchan.”
I stand up, shaking my thumb, and sit on a desk by the window. Yeah, this’ll definitely bruise, but at least I didn’t split my nail. I frown again, wrenching my attention away from my increasingly red thumb and looking outside. I think I should quit. Maybe if I wasn’t here then the girls would actually get some work done.
There’s a knock at the door, and, without waiting for an answer, a girl carrying a slim folder of papers opens the door and walks in.
She lets the door fall closed behind her as she sweeps her eyes across the room, first on Shizune, then Misha, then lingering on me. If she’s confused as to someone being in the Student Council room other than the dynamic duo, she doesn’t let it show.
I think I recognize her from my class: Molly Kapur, if I remember correctly. She sits directly in front of me. I have to make the rather embarrassing confession that I recognized her more from her metal legs than her face. I’d seen them before, but it still shocks me now: unlike Emi’s, the prosthetics continue well above her knee.
She has a regal face: a thin mouth with lips pulled into a light frown, accompanied with curious, flickering eyes that I can’t determine the color of, somewhere between black and brown. She’s wearing the standard school uniform, although on her it acquires a neater appearance. Her face is framed with two braids, the left one pinned to her temple with two small red clips.
“Molly~!” Misha translates for Shizune. Even for Misha, she has an exceptionally cheery tone to her voice. “Come to deliver your club budget report? Ahead of schedule, as usual!”
“Wait a second,” I interrupt, drawing an annoyed glance from Shizune. “Weren’t you guys fighting with Lilly just earlier today about how she was late? Isn’t it due tomorrow?”
“Hicchan, this is the report for this trimester, not for the festival. Molly submitted the festival’s budget report last week~!” Misha beams a smile at Molly, who stares straight at her with a bored expression, pretending I’m not in the room. “And the trimester’s budget report isn’t due until the end of this month~!”
“Whether I submit the report or not,” Molly begins, her voice quiet but traveling further than you would expect due to her clear enunciation, “depends on whether you will approve a few adjustments I have made. I have increased our budget for supplies. We have to buy some new costumes.”
“Costumes?” I ask, and Shizune glares at me again. “What club is this for?”
Misha turns to me and claps her hand onto Molly’s shoulder before leading her forward, presenting her like a very unwilling trophy. She allows herself to be led along for a few steps before planting her feet.
“Molly here runs the theater club, Hicchan~. She took over as student director this year, and it’s already got twenty members!”
“Thirty,” Molly corrects, handing the folder in question to Misha to distract her and then snaking out of her grasp. “There were twenty-four members as of the previous report. I’ve had to adjust most of the figures to compensate.”
“I’m sure we can approve it, since so many students love your club~. Right, Shicchan?”
Shizune nods slowly, a pleased smile on her face, before adjusting her glasses. Molly stands where she is, looking down at Shizune for a moment. She traces the shambling corpse (pre-corpse?) of the half-constructed stall with her eyes, which I have now determined are, in fact, a very dark brown, and at some point she meets my gaze. I look away, back towards the window.
Outside, the sky is still just as orange as ever. Did Molly stay after class to finish the report? For four hours? And who knows how much she had been working on it before then. I can’t help but admire her dedication.
Misha translates for Shizune, who signs emphatically beside her: “Well, then. Is that it, Molly?”
“It is,” she replies. Shizune nods again, and Molly spins around lazily, but instead of walking towards the door, she stops her turn at ninety degrees and comes straight towards me.
“Hurt your hand?”
After a moment of bewildering suspicion at how she could read minds, I realize I’ve been holding my hand out in front of me like a bird with a broken wing.
“W-what? Oh, yeah. I hit myself with a hammer just a minute ago.”
She looks at my hand, which I present to her. It, regretfully, does not look as bad as my pose would suggest.
“While, uh, nailing the stalls together.”
Of course, Hisao. Of course you had to specify. What? Does she think you were just randomly waving a hammer around? Of course it was while nailing the stalls together.
“You should go to the nurse to get a cold compress,” she says, looking up from my hand towards Misha and Shizune. For the first time since Molly’s arrival, an expression that isn’t a beaming smile spreads across Misha’s face as she suddenly frowns. Shizune raises an eyebrow, too.
“Follow me,” Molly commands, ignoring them.
She turns around sharply, not bothering to check whether I plan to follow her. I shrug at Misha, who glances back towards Shizune, wide-eyed. They seem shocked that their slave is about to be stolen from them. Unfortunately for their schemes, I have a major medical emergency. I droop my grave injury at them and use my other hand to wipe away fake tears as I leave.
“It’s not really that bad, I don’t need to go to the nurse,” I say, jogging towards Molly to catch up. She's not exactly a fast walker, but she’s faster than I expected, considering her…
I still don’t know what to call it. Disability? It’s definitely a disability, but the word still sounds too harsh. Handicap? No, that’s even worse. Anyway, she had a head start.
“Have you been working since the end of the school day?” she asks, her tone flat, as if uninterested in the answer to her own question.
She holds her hands behind herself as she walks, her steps deliberate and placed in front of her with measured ease, such that the whole of her body bears the intention of motion. Anyway it causes her braids to swing beside her head like pendulums, which I find a little funny.
I chuckle. “Yeah, right since the bell rang, but now Nurse is going to think I’m a big baby.”
We round the corner of the hallway into the main lobby, and I take a few quick steps ahead and get the door, holding it open for her. She walks through as if she expected it all along, but she does dip her head almost imperceptibly to say thanks.
She doesn’t have to dip her head much. I’ve just realized that she’s quite short, now that I’m standing beside her. I understand someone with prosthetic legs would be shorter than average, but it’s not like her prosthetics look out of proportion. She might be even shorter than Emi.
“Then think of it as a necessary sacrifice in order to escape the Student Council for the rest of the evening,” she says, and I can’t tell whether she actually caught onto my comment being a joke. “They would have kept you there until dark.”
“Probably not that long, we were almost done,” I reply instinctively.
“Oh, were you?” she asks, almost mockingly, daring me to correct myself.
“...No, not really,” I admit, chuckling awkwardly again. I scratch the back of my head and sigh as I look at Molly.
Her posture is perfect, and the easy and obviously practiced nature of her gait makes me feel that, were she to wear a longer skirt, it would be practically impossible to tell that she… well… doesn’t have legs. Given how long it must have taken to relearn walking after losing them (or maybe she was born without them? I don’t know, I’m new here), I can’t help but wonder whether choosing to wear the knee-length skirt was a deliberate decision. After all, the school definitely offers longer skirts as an option. Lilly practically wears a floor-sweeper.
“What?”
Molly is looking at me, and I’m looking at her legs (lack of legs?) again. I wrench my head forward in embarrassment.
“Nothing.”
Molly frowns. Or perhaps returns to frowning, I can’t really tell. She alternates between looking ahead and at the sky, her eyes occasionally flicking my way, as if to check that I’m still here.
“So, what do you think of Yamaku academy, Hicchan?”
“Oh god. Don’t you start calling me that too.”
Molly hums, apparently pleased with herself. “Too late. Misha used to call me Moka.”
“Mocha?”
“Molly Kapur, first syllables of my first and last names. Back when I was in the Student Council, I told her it was hardly professional for her to compare a person with dark skin to chocolate in a professional environment. As a joke, of course. She couldn’t tell I was joking, so she took me seriously and stopped. Ever since then I don’t think she considers me much fun.”
“I can’t imagine how something like that could possibly happen,” I say, my sarcasm unfortunately less subtle than I had hoped.
“Yes, my sarcasm is sometimes so powerful it is undetectable. Har har.”
Maybe if she added “har har” to the end of her sentences more people could tell when she was joking. I don’t see how anyone could otherwise.
“You were in the Student Council?” I ask, absentmindedly.
“I was, until it broke up.”
I put my hand to my chin, thinking. We round a bend, and the medical building attached to the school comes into sight. I think back to Lilly and Shizune’s argument this morning. God, it was loud. I don’t know how that can even happen, considering one of the involved parties is deaf-mute.
“I’m still a little unclear on that. The Student Council broke up fairly recently, right? And Lilly was in it? Was that the reason it broke up? Because they hate each other so much?”
Molly raises an eyebrow and stays silent for a moment. It’s becoming very clear to me that she likes to structure her entire sentence in her head before she speaks. I don’t know if that’s something to be admired or not. That, or she’s considering whether she should answer me at all.
“They hate each other because it broke up, not the other way around. They are related, first cousins, and they have drastically different approaches towards leadership,” Molly opens her mouth wide as if to laugh, but closes it without comment. She continues: “The Student Council broke up into factions and then the factions dissolved. Shizune and Misha are perfectly fine people, if you can stand them.”
It sounds strange hearing her call people by their first names in a conversation. Given her formality earlier, I had assumed she would have gone with ‘Miss Satou’ and ‘Miss Hakamichi,’ or something similar. Anyway, that’s not as important as the fact that they’re cousins?! What?!?
Processing that information, I drag myself back to the present and the last couple things Molly said.
“Ah,” I say, “and… why did you leave?”
“I can’t stand them.”
“Ah.”
I think for a moment, then continue: “I agree they can be a little in-your-face, sometimes, but I do like hanging out with them, even if I don't sound like it. Once you get past all the… recruitment, they’re really nice, don’t you think?”
Molly doesn’t respond, instead contenting herself with giving me side-eye. That seems to be what she does. That’s her thing. She doesn’t look at me while we’re talking, and instead only looks straight ahead. Maybe it has something to do with her legs, and she has to focus on walking more than me? I guess I’m just giving her the benefit of the doubt, she could totally be doing that to mess with me.
Goddammit, she's caught me looking at her legs again. She’s gonna yell at me.
Here it comes.
“You had to check in with the nurse when you arrived, no?” Molly asks, suddenly changing the topic.
“Well, yes,” I reply, a little confused.
“So you know where his office is, then?”
“I do.”
“Then why do you think I’m walking with you?”
Ow.
It's a good question, even if it was only meant as a gut-punch. Could be any number of reasons, right? Maybe she has to see the nurse as well? Maybe her room is- no, wait, the girls' dorms are the other way. Finding something funny to say in response would be a lot easier if she wasn't looking at me like that; like I'm stupid.
Molly stops abruptly, and I turn around to find her standing still in the middle of the sidewalk, looking at me with an eyebrow raised.
“Here. I’ll cut you a deal. I’m the de facto president and student director of the theater club. We meet after school and I’m still looking for new members. We’ve finished our first play and even though you’re joining more than halfway through the year we’re only just starting our second one, so you’ll have an opportunity to join something from the beginning, for a change. I would hate to see another new student wasted on the Student ‘Council,’ and you’ll be able to say you’ve joined a club, since that’s so encouraged at this school.”
I stand still for a moment, frozen, with my hand paused in the middle of awkwardly scratching the back of my head. Is this the answer to her question? That she wanted to recruit me? While I struggle to think of an answer to everything that has just transpired, Molly slightly relaxes her posture and dusts off her skirt. I figure I shouldn’t keep her waiting much longer.
“Um, thanks. I will definitely think about it.”
She raises her head, nodding at me with a grin. “Thank you, Nakai. Now, are we going to the nurse or not?”
“Now that I’m out here I should probably get some ice, yeah.”
“Wonderful. So when you said you didn’t need it earlier, what was that?”
“A lie?”
Molly shrugs. “You tell me.”
“Well, it’s not very fun to be consistent, is it?”
And Molly hums. No answer.
I wonder.
After... whatever just happened, we find our way to Nurse’s office, and my unscheduled appointment goes largely without incident. Nurse gives me more than one furrowing of his eyebrows for showing up, not just with such a minor injury, but also with a girl. I can tell he gets a lot of fun out of teasing me. Thankfully, Molly isn’t present for the brunt of it; she excuses herself just about the instant we arrive. On the one hand, it prevents Molly from seeing this. On the other hand, it allows Nurse to really rev up his teasing engine.
“Well, do you want anything more than some ice, Hisao? A kiss for your booboo, maybe?”
Nurse holds out a bag of ice for me, a lopsided grin on his face. His office smells like a combination of coffee and hand sanitizer.
“No thanks,” I say, accepting the ice from him gratefully. “Although a lollipop would be nice.”
He contemplates this. “If I just started handing out my secret stash of lollipops to everyone who got the tiniest injury, people would start hurting themselves just to get them.”
“You have a secret stash of lollipops?”
“Emphasis on ‘secret,’” he says, and his smile returns.
He leans back in his chair, crossing his arms. His face returns to a neutral expression, and I see him turn around to look for his cup of coffee, which he then realizes is empty, before turning back towards me. He shuffles a folder, one that I have reason to believe is my folder, and then speaks up again.
“I heard from my anonymous informant that you showed up to the track this morning. Glad to see you’re taking my advice seriously.”
“Anonymous informant? Now who could that be?”
“Who knows? I’m a very mysterious man,” he says, then pauses. “...So it was Miss Kapur who noticed your injury and dropped you off?”
“Uh, yeah,” I say, coloring a bit. Saying that she ‘dropped me off’ makes it sound like she’s my mom.
“Well, I feel the need to ask you a favor, then. She’s supposed to be exercising more often, too,” he pauses. He grabs a pencil off of his desk and scribbles something onto a piece of paper, likely a note for himself. “If you could get her to the pool, or the gym, or even to go for walks every so often, I would be grateful.”
I nod, thinking. Nurse’s frown immediately tells me that I won’t be getting any extra information out of him. Something something client confidentiality and all that.
“Can’t you tell Emi? Or a teacher? Or tell her yourself?” I say. I’m just curious, but my tone accidentally comes off as if I’m complaining.
“Oh believe me, I would if I could, but that girl has made an art out of avoiding me,” he groans. “Emi seems to have given up on her, and it makes sense; running in Molly’s situation would be exceptionally difficult, even if Emi insists that she should ‘just try it.’ I have another anonymous informant at the pool, but she’s not as pushy as Emi, so I’m out of luck over there.”
I try to imagine Emi pressuring Molly to go running, but something about their personalities tells me they’d mesh like oil and water. It would definitely be fun to watch, though.
“I will let her know, then."
“Thanks. Don’t hit yourself with a hammer again,” he jokes, but the frown doesn’t leave his face.
“I’ll keep it in mind,” I say, and I turn to leave.
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