Roots in the Frost (1/3)
Roots in the Frost
Hisao carefully folded a large selection of clothes, placing them one by one into a large bag. Nothing fancy or formal - just casual clothes to be worn while on vacation. T-shirts, shorts, socks, sweatpants, skirts, and of course, plenty of underwear.
He rather enjoyed the process; not only was there some impish joy in getting to handle Saki’s panties, it was also just a simple, relaxing chore that he could do while letting his mind wander.
It was just as well that he enjoyed it, because Saki was lying in bed next to him grumbling to herself, very much not in the mood to pack.
He stopped briefly to reach over and scratch her head a bit. “It’s just a week - you’ll be back here in no time.”
Saki was trying her best to remain angry, despite Hisao’s affection, but was clearly having trouble. “It’s gonna suck so much. I’m gonna hate it the whole time.”
“And here I thought you were an optimist.”
She sighed, ignoring his little jokes, and kept staring at the ceiling. “Honestly, getting to see my mom is fine. I didn’t always get along with her as a kid, but I think we understand each other now. My father, on the other hand...” She groaned. “Don’t get me started.”
Hisao zipped up the bag, having packed almost everything. He pulled himself up and sat on the edge of the bed, putting one hand on Saki’s shoulder. “You should vent about it while you can.”
Saki clenched her eyes shut briefly, and when they opened again, they were filled with rage. “He’s so controlling! He wants everyone to do what he says, like he knows what’s best for us all. He butts into everything, and never takes no for an answer.” She took a deep breath. “But somehow, despite wanting to have a say in everything and keep everyone within arm’s reach, he’s only interested in his work! He only ever spent time with me as a kid when he was telling me what to do - if I did something right, or needed his help, or just wanted to talk, he was always busy! What’s the point of trying to micromanage your family if you don’t give a shit about them most of the time‽”
She pursed her lips, seething for a moment, and Hisao took the opportunity to scooch closer, now sitting cross-legged on the bed, so he could reach both of her shoulders. “This is going to sound stupid, but have you thought about not going? We’re 18 now - you don’t have to do what they tell you to.”
Saki brought her hands up to her face, squishing her cheeks inward as she groaned again. “God, I wish. But my father is the one paying for me to be at Yamaku, so I have to keep him happy. If I couldn’t pay my tuition here, I’d just end up moving back in with my parents anyways...”
“You could elope to my room. We could probably figure out a way to hide it from the school.”
She chuckled, but then quickly groaned again. “Ugh, the thought of my father looking for me if I tried to leave, him and his stupid...”
After a moment to regain her composure, she moved one hand up to hold one of Hisao’s, then tilted her head back so that she could look him in the eye. “We can’t do it now, but... someday, can we run away together?”
“Wherever you want to go.”
She closed her eyes. “I don’t know how long I’ll last, but-”
“It’s okay. I can’t run for very long either.”
That brought a wry smile to her face. She knew that he knew that she had meant something else, but also that his answer would be the same either way.
Hisao kept rubbing Saki’s shoulders for a while, both of them relaxing. The sun had already gone down, and they’d have to sleep soon... but maybe not right away.
“Want me to try and take your mind off of things?”
Saki giggled, then sighed. “Sorry. With packing, and ranting, and thinking about this stupid vacation, I...” She yawned. “I’m too tired. I’d be like a dead fish.”
Hisao lowered his voice to a husky tone. “I can handle you in dead fish mode.”
Saki barely managed to suppress a laugh. “Please never say that again.”
“My poetry is wasted on you.” Hisao chuckled, then leaned forward and kissed Saki on the forehead before getting up. Her eyes were half closed as he got his things and prepared to leave. “When will you get to your parents’ house? I can call you.”
Saki groaned, though it was hard to tell whether that was due to annoyance at the thought of being at her parents’ place, or just at having to keep herself awake. “The cell reception there is terrible, and the landline... has problems.” She propped herself up with one arm, turning to look at Hisao again. “I’ll have to call you when I get a chance. You can try texting me, but no promises it’ll get through.”
That part hurt Hisao the most - he felt like he wouldn’t have anything to do if he couldn’t at least text Saki. Plus, he wanted to help her through the week, and he couldn’t do that without some sort of communication. “Okay.”
Saki lied down again, but before Hisao could leave, added a muffled “I love you.”
“I love you too.”
~~~~~~
Hisao stared out of his window at the trees outside - their leaves were long gone, but it hadn’t snowed recently, which meant that instead of looking wintery and festive, they just looked... barren. Empty. Kind of like how he felt.
That wasn’t entirely true - there was plenty of stuff he could’ve been occupying himself with. Plus, he had gotten a lot better at looking forward to things since he arrived at Yamaku and met Saki.
She would’ve called that ironic. He would’ve kissed her to shut her up. Sigh.
In hindsight, the decision not to go to his own parents’ place during the holidays seemed like a poor one, but he knew that it would’ve been more trouble than it was worth; his parents barely took any time off, so he would’ve been just as alone, except in a place he wasn’t as used to. He briefly thought about the prospect of meeting up with his friends from his old school, but the thought alone felt strange. He didn’t know why, but there was no use trying to figure that out now.
He looked over at his phone, as if it would have any more messages than it did 30 seconds ago - it didn’t, of course. Saki must’ve been right about the phone situation at her family’s place, though it seemed strange for them to be so disconnected. It had already been two whole days - and the fact that that was less than a third of the way through made it seem even worse.
Still, part of him wanted to stay bored; in a way, it meant that he was-
A sudden loud noise made him jump, and he jumped again once he realized what it was: his phone was ringing!
Hurriedly, clumsily, he grabbed his phone and flipped it open - it was from an unknown number, but that was probably Saki’s parents’ number! He quickly pressed the green button and held it to his ear. “Hello?”
“HISAO NAKAI.”
Whoever he had been expecting to hear on the other end, it wasn’t this. The voice was deep, warbly, and almost eerily robotic. It was impossible to tell what tone it was trying to talk in, as if there was no emotion behind it at all.
In his shock, he said nothing, until the voice repeated itself: “IS THIS HISAO NAKAI’S NUMBER.”
He understood now what was being asked, but began to wonder whether he should even respond - this sounded like something out of a bad horror film. Unable to decide quickly enough, he instinctively responded with “Um, yes, it is.” The shock slowly faded. “Who is this?”
“THIS IS SAKI ENOMOTO’S MOM.”
It took him a moment to realize what those words meant, but they still didn’t make sense.
“... What?”
“YES, I. WAIT A MINUTE. HOLD ON, IS THIS. OH, I SWEAR TO-”
The line abruptly went silent for a few seconds, leaving Hisao baffled, until a woman’s voice spoke. “Okay, how about now?”
Somehow even more shocked now that he was speaking to a normal person - or at least, what sounded like a normal person - Hisao stuttered a bit. “Okay, it, uh, it’s... It’s working now? Hello?”
“Yes, hello, I’m so sorry about that, this phone is garbage, and sometimes it just does that.”
Hisao hadn’t been sure what Saki meant when she said the landline had “problems”, but he definitely hadn’t been expecting it to turn this woman’s voice - Saki’s mother’s voice? - into a garbled robotic one. “Oh, ha, it’s okay, Mrs... Enomoto?”
“Oh, come on, I’m not that old - just call me Juri.”
“O-okay.”
There was a brief expectant pause before she started again. “So, you’re the Hisao?”
“Yes.” He wasn’t quite sure what Saki had told her mother about him, and suddenly realized that he’d have to play it by ear.
“The same one who’s been dating my daughter the past few months?”
In the span of one sentence he had gone from playing it by ear to flying by the seat of his pants. “Ah, yeah, that’s me.” The call was starting to feel scary again.
“Awesome! Saki’s been talking about you non-stop, so it’s great to finally put a voice to the name.”
“Oh!” Hisao tried to lighten the mood, mostly for his own sake. “Mostly good things, I hope?”
Saki’s mother chuckled on the other end. “Yeah, ‘mostly’ is about right.”
Hisao chuckled nervously in response, hoping that his first impression hadn’t been ruined - and also that it wasn’t in the process of being ruined. “So, is, uh... Is everything okay? With Saki?”
“Oh, yeah, no, don’t worry - I’m not calling you to tell you she died or anything.” She laughed, but Hisao didn’t. “I’m mostly calling because I think she’s going a little stir-crazy without you around.”
“Ah.” Now was his chance - Saki’s mom would just have to call her over, hand her the phone, and they could finally reconnect. “Do you want me to talk with her a bit?”
“Well, actually, I had something else in mind - just depends what you’re up for.”
Hisao instinctively replied “Anything!” before he could clamp his mouth shut - he had no idea what he was getting himself into.
“Haha, I like your attitude! In that case, how about you pack a few days’ worth of clothes and stuff, and tomorrow morning we can drive you here?”
It took a moment for Hisao to realize what was being proposed. “As in, have me over to spend the vacation with Saki?”
“Yup! She mentioned that you were staying at Yamaku for the holidays, so I figured, why not invite you over to our place? It’d be a nice little Christmas surprise for her.”
A number of worries swirled through Hisao’s head: he had no idea whether this woman was actually Saki’s mother, especially given the strange voice at the beginning of the call. He wasn’t going to be able to speak to Saki until he got there - and he had no idea where “there” was, or how far away it was, or who would be driving him there. And hadn’t Saki said that her father was the controlling type? How would he react to meeting his daughter’s boyfriend? Did he even know that his daughter had a boyfriend?
Somewhat to his surprise, before he could quell any of those worries, Hisao was already packing his things.
~~~~~~
Hisao stood outside in the cold winter air, the sun still relatively low in the sky, waiting for his ride.
He had no idea what kind of ride to expect - Saki’s mother hadn’t specified - but the campus was so quiet, given that it was the middle of winter vacation, that his was the only car likely to show up that day anyways.
But who would be driving it? Saki’s mother had seemed nice over the phone, but would she be the one in the driver’s seat? Or would she send her husband - who Hisao was already worried about meeting? And, whoever was driving, would Saki be with them? Hisao tried not to worry about it too much, but other than shivering and checking that his bag was still at his feet, there wasn’t much else to do.
Eventually, finally, a car appeared on the horizon: a large black sedan. It seemed imposing, even at a distance, but Hisao gathered himself. If that car was the way to Saki, it didn’t matter what it looked like, or who was driving it.
When it finally pulled up to the front gate - much more quietly than Hisao had expected from a car of its size - the driver’s door opened. Hisao’s breath caught in his throat as a gigantic man, decently tall but impossibly broad-shouldered, stepped out. His head was shaven bald, and he wore a pair of dark sunglasses, despite the dreary weather.
As he stepped around and onto the sidewalk, Hisao saw that the driver was wearing a sleek black suit - one that must’ve been tailored to fit his abnormally-large frame - and a pair of dress shoes that almost didn’t seem big enough to support the man above them.
They locked eyes, and the man spoke; instead of the booming yell or the ragged growl that Hisao was expecting, however, it was calm, refined, and almost gentle.
“Mister Nakai, I presume?”
“Ah, yes, that’s me.”
The burly man extended his right hand, revealing a shiny watch around his wrist. After staring for a moment, Hisao realized what was meant, and reached out to shake it. Again, despite the difference in size between them, Hisao was taken aback at how gentle the man’s handshake was.
“A pleasure to meet you - call me Butler.”
Yet another surprise - Hisao had spent this whole encounter thinking that he was meeting Saki’s father. Or maybe this was Saki’s father, and Butler was his name? He decided to fish for answers.
“So, you know Saki?”
“Indeed,” the large man replied as he turned around and opened the rear door of the car, “I’ve known Miss Enomoto since she was born, and I’ve been working for her parents since well before that.”
Perfect, so this wasn’t Saki’s father - that put Hisao a bit more at ease. He let the large man take his bag and put it in the trunk as he climbed into the back seat and put on a surprisingly comfortable seat belt. He barely noticed the engine start up again - it really was quiet - and soon enough he was watching Yamaku fade away.
More at ease around his driver than expected, Hisao decided to start up a conversation - maybe this man could help prepare him for whatever awaited him at Saki’s house. “So, are you used to driving to Yamaku?”
“Yes, it’s almost automatic by now - I drive Miss Enomoto home for every vacation, and back to the school afterwards. It’s quite nice to see how the trees have changed each time I come back.”
“Oh, yeah - it must be a pretty drastic change, if you’re only here every few months.”
“Indeed; I drive past plenty of trees around the estate, but Yamaku is a much more open environment. I’ve never been a student here, of course, but I can’t help but feel welcome each time I show up at that gate.”
Hisao briefly thought about his own experiences with that gate, but quickly caught on to something Butler had said: “the estate”. He wondered what that phrase implied about Saki’s house - that it was large, of course, but also maybe that it was rural? And yet, not nearly as “open” as Yamaku? He realized that he had absolutely no idea where he was being taken.
“So, about how far away is Saki’s house?” He felt a bit odd calling it that, compared to “the estate”, but he didn’t exactly have a better word for it.
“A couple hours, unfortunately - it’s quite the drive.” Hisao barely had time to consider that before Butler remembered something. “Oh, of course, speaking of which...”
He pressed a button on the dash of the car, and suddenly the rear windows and windshield all faded to black, as did a window between the rear and front seats that Hisao hadn’t even noticed until now.
As Hisao’s eyes adjusted to the light, Butler chuckled, in a way that would have been reassuring were it not for the rear seat being completely dark now. “Consider yourself lucky, Mister Nakai - before we got these electrochromics installed, I had to blindfold everyone!”
He laughed heartily, and Hisao chuckled nervously, trying not to wonder what he had just gotten himself into.
~~~~~~
Hisao stepped out of the car, hoping to finally get his bearings after the arduous drive, only to end up just as confused as before. In every direction was concrete: concrete walls, concrete ceiling, concrete floor, and only painted markings and metal supports to break it up. The closest thing he could compare it to was an underground parking lot, but even then, it felt... bigger, somehow.
Not entirely sure who would build an underground parking lot on their estate, he went to grab his bag, only to find that Butler had already picked it up. Hisao considered offering to carry it, but decided that it was probably better for both of them if he didn’t.
He followed the burly man over to a large metal door set into one of the walls - were it not for the control panel next to it with buttons for “up” and “down”, it could’ve been mistaken for the entrance to a bomb shelter.
After a brief wait, the doors slowly slid open, revealing a spacious but plain interior - just as there had been concrete in every direction before, now it was metal in every direction, painted matte grey with the occasional hazard stripes. Instinctively walking to the back wall, Hisao rested against it as the elevator jolted and began to travel.
No sooner had it started to move than a booming voice came out of the walls - unlike the one he had heard over the phone yesterday, however, this one was clearly a normal man’s voice, albeit with some subtle effects layered on top.
“So, our guest of honor finally arrives!” He laughed, and somehow it felt... wrong. “Tell me, Mister Nakai, what do you think of the place so far?”
It took a moment for Hisao to realize that he was supposed to respond - he had never spoken to someone through the intercom of an elevator before. And, wait, hadn’t this elevator been moving for an awfully long time?
“It’s very, uh, spacious.”
Another bout of unsettling cackling from the speakers. “But of course! When you work in a business like mine, you can simply never have enough space.” A low chuckle. “But I won’t spoil the surprise. Let Butler know if you need anything, and try not to wander off - after all, we wouldn’t want you to be late for... dinner.” He laughed again, and the intercom slowly faded to silence.
Butler gave a calm smile. “I daresay he’s fond of you already - it’s been a while since he had a guest.”
Hisao got the feeling that one of them knew something the other didn’t, but he wasn’t quite sure which.
Luckily, before he could think about it too much, the elevator shuddered to a stop. Finally, he could see the outdoors, just as soon as the doors opened.
Unfortunately, they opened to reveal even more metal and concrete - how had they traveled for so long and not reached the surface? Before he could finish that thought, however, he noticed someone standing there, clearly waiting for the elevator.
She wore blue jeans, sandals, and a loose white t-shirt. Her arms and face were heavily tanned, and her long blonde hair was tied back into a simple ponytail. Perhaps it was the makeup she was wearing, but she looked fairly young - in fact, she looked even younger once she spotted Hisao and gasped, a wide smile taking over her face.
“Oh my gosh, Hisao!”
She ran forward, surprisingly quickly, and grabbed him in an entirely-unexpected hug. Hisao froze up, his arms stuck rigidly at his sides as the woman embraced him, squeezing surprisingly hard. He glanced over at Butler, who offered only the same warm smile as before.
After a few seconds, the excited woman pulled back, looking Hisao in the eyes and patting him on the shoulder. “It’s awesome to finally meet you! I haven’t told Saki yet, but she’s going to flip when she sees you.”
Only now, at the mention of Saki, did it dawn on Hisao who he was talking to. “... Mrs. Enomoto?”
Her smile faded as she pursed her lips. Before Hisao could worry that he had gotten it wrong, however, she lightly smacked him on the head. “Either you’re going to call me Juri, or I’m going to make you call me Juri.”
Given the strength of the hug prior, Hisao believed her threat. Still, despite the whirlwind of surprises, he managed to remember the phone conversation from yesterday. “Right, sorry, J-Juri.”
She smiled again, but in contrast to her earlier excitement, this one was much calmer, more... motherly. “There we go.” Hisao suddenly saw it: the long blonde hair, the calm smile, the tone of her voice - she was undoubtedly Saki’s mother, despite the tan skin and excessive energy.
As quickly as it arrived, however, the moment passed, and the woman’s excited smile returned. “Come on, let’s go put your stuff in the guest room, and then we can go see Saki.” She grinned. “Or will you be sharing her room?”
Put on the spot, Hisao chuckled nervously. “Let’s put my stuff in the guest room.” He did want to share Saki’s room, but they’d figure all that stuff out later - preferably without much input from her parents.
“Alright, alright. Come on, it’s this way.”
Only as he started following her, with Butler right behind him, did Hisao notice that they were heading down a long concrete hallway, illuminated by thin fluorescent lights on the ceiling, and with just metal pipes and painted markings for decor. It clashed terribly with the upbeat, animated woman he was walking behind.
Still, as weird as this place was, it wasn’t like he could turn back now.
Come to think of it, he wasn’t sure what the last point he could’ve turned back at had been.