Re: A pseudo-pseudo Suzu route (updated 7/12)
Posted: Sat Jul 14, 2012 8:49 am
That sounds drastic.
I think it more likely whomever was once her beau simply couldn't deal with her narcolepsy. I can imagine it being strenuous for an impatient man to constantly pick his girlfriends/lover/wife off the floor and wait for her to awaken. Hisao doesn't seem to have that problem, especially after the hallway scene - he sat out with her for half an hour, peacefully.
Or, perhaps he succumbed to whatever condition plagued him - perhaps even intentionally. It's a nasty recurring theme in KS, but I imagine the suicide rate for people afflicted with life-threatening illnesses is probably high. The emotional strain of knowing you're one step from death would mess with you in ways you might not even acknowledge.
Death, in her dream, seems to be a phantom of the man she was with before - and his words make it sound like whatever happened was beyond Suzu's control; but she blames herself anyway. That sounds like he may have committed suicide and she thinks she could have done something - a really common affliction. Left behind, she blames herself for not seeing it - or her condition for preventing her.
She may harbor the same kind of fear about Hisao.
Of course, this is speculation again.
Scissorlips is the only one who knows the mind of Suzu in this tale, and he's slow to be forthcoming. To that, I say continue the torture. It makes your story more powerful to have an internal struggle even the character whose mind you're following avoids. Deluding herself, or hiding from the pain, it's a very human reaction.
This whole thing is an erratic page-turner.
I think it more likely whomever was once her beau simply couldn't deal with her narcolepsy. I can imagine it being strenuous for an impatient man to constantly pick his girlfriends/lover/wife off the floor and wait for her to awaken. Hisao doesn't seem to have that problem, especially after the hallway scene - he sat out with her for half an hour, peacefully.
Or, perhaps he succumbed to whatever condition plagued him - perhaps even intentionally. It's a nasty recurring theme in KS, but I imagine the suicide rate for people afflicted with life-threatening illnesses is probably high. The emotional strain of knowing you're one step from death would mess with you in ways you might not even acknowledge.
Death, in her dream, seems to be a phantom of the man she was with before - and his words make it sound like whatever happened was beyond Suzu's control; but she blames herself anyway. That sounds like he may have committed suicide and she thinks she could have done something - a really common affliction. Left behind, she blames herself for not seeing it - or her condition for preventing her.
She may harbor the same kind of fear about Hisao.
Of course, this is speculation again.
Scissorlips is the only one who knows the mind of Suzu in this tale, and he's slow to be forthcoming. To that, I say continue the torture. It makes your story more powerful to have an internal struggle even the character whose mind you're following avoids. Deluding herself, or hiding from the pain, it's a very human reaction.
This whole thing is an erratic page-turner.