Page 1 of 1

Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Thu May 30, 2013 10:27 pm
by Lost In The Fire
I guess I am not unique in claiming to be a long time lurker and first time poster.

I got the idea for this oneshot when I returned to my high school with some friends a few weeks ago and caught up with a few of my favorite teachers. We somehow ended up on the subject of shipping, and I learned that it actually is something that the teachers would do all the time.

Thus I received the idea and decided to role with it. I only half expect this to backfire.

As always, criticism and comments are appreciated.


Observations

By 2007 I had already been a member of the nursing staff at Yamaku for over three years. An old friend of mine was the head nurse at the school and when he offered me a position on his staff I accepted. In the time I had spent there I had seen waves of young men and women triumph over their disabilities and set out to conquer the world in the way they saw fit. I also saw those less fortunate squeeze the most out of what little time they had left.

I rarely interacted with them outside of medical emergencies. I was not a teacher. It was not my place to leave a deep impact on the lives of these teenagers. Rather my part, and the part of my colleagues, was to observe. We were to be watching and render aid at a moment’s notice, but ultimately remain in the background so as to let the students go about their lives with as little interference as possible.

However, this was a high school, and so our observations seemed were acted out in front of us like a continuous play. The characters were many and always changing, but the comedy and tragedy were still there. It was not uncommon for those of us on the nursing staff to gossip about the various students. Such banter was always trivial and harmless. Along the lines of “Did you hear about so and so breaking up with what’s-his-name?”

Indeed, relationships were a favorite topic of discussion. Several of my peers thought themselves quite the matchmakers, and often made bets as to who each student would date. I only participated in such things halfheartedly, though when I did it was always a matter of surprise and amusement to see how the pieces would fall into place. When Nakai transferred to Yamaku that year, he was no exception.

I recall it was after a changing of the nursing shift one evening shortly after he arrived that Nakai’s social circle became a matter of discussion. A large group of four of my colleagues and I were walking to a restaurant in the nearby town when someone spoke.

“I saw that new transfer student painting with Tezuka the other day. He seemed to be really enjoying himself and Tezuka seemed happy in her own way,” She said. “What do you guys think?”

“Most find Tezuka enjoyable at first,” a different colleague replied. “Nakai will probably find that quirkiness will begin to wear out its welcome sooner rather than later. I heard the boss was having him take up running with Ibarazaki in the mornings. If anything is going to happen I would be willing to bet that it will happen between them.”

This caused a third member of our group to giggle. She smiled and gave a small shake of her head in disagreement.

“If the track and field team can’t keep up with Ibarazaki in the mornings I don’t think a boy who just spent the last few months in the hospital will. Hakamichi is his class representative, and I saw Nakai leave the student council room the other day. When Hakamichi and Mikado left shortly afterwards, Hakamichi seemed more than thrilled,” She replied.

I couldn’t help but give an audible chuckle at this notion.

“So instead of pairing him with the girl who is passionate about running, you pair him with the girl who is passionate about everything else,” I asked. “Hakamichi was probably just thrilled to have another person beside herself and Mikado doing student council work.”

“Why not,” Hakamichi’s advocate asked, “do you have another suggestion?”

I shrugged. At that point I had only seen Nakai on a few occasions in the hallways. He seemed to be making few waves in his first few days at Yamaku and flew relatively under my radar. Still I had seen him accompanying Satou to the library, and at this point it seemed like we were throwing potential matches at the wall to see what would stick.

“I saw him with Satou the other day. Why not her,” I asked.

My friends who had advocated Ibarazaki and Hakamichi were already winding up for their own counter arguments when my fifth and final colleague spoke up. He usually made a point to avoid such conversations, as he found them trivial and to a degree unprofessional. This time it appeared he had something to say.

“Ikezawa.” He stated.

I turned to my colleague with an intrigued expression. I could see the rest of our peers had done the same.

“Why?” asked our friend who had earlier advocated Tezuka. She seemed shocked by the suggestion.

“They are in the same class, and from the sounds of it Nakai has already made friends with Satou. I don’t see why not,” he said coolly.

The rest of us knew exactly why not, but none of us bothered to say anything.

“Willing to bet on that,” Ibarazaki’s advocate asked. He replied with a shrug.

“How much,” he asked.

“1000 yen,” Ibarazaki’s advocate suggested, “The rest of you want in?”

One by one the rest of us agreed. It had been agreed that I was to carry the winnings until either all candidates were no longer in the running or one had won Nakai’s heart. By this point we had reached the restaurant and that was the last we spoke of the topic as group.

The weeks soon passed and one by one the different candidates began to drop out of the running. None of us saw Nakai paint with Tezuka again, though whether or not it was Tezuka’s quirks or a general lack of interest in art that drove Nakai away remained to be seen.

“It was a shot in the dark anyway,” my colleague who originally suggested Tezuka said as she placed her 1000 yen into an envelope that I carried on my person.

My friend who suggested Ibarazaki also soon found himself disappointed. Much to his ire and that of the head nurse, Nakai had simply stopped attending the morning running sessions. It soon became clear that in addition to running, Nakai had no real interest in Ibarazaki as well.

“She probably would have dumped him like her last boyfriend,” he said as he too placed his money in the envelope.

Our peer who suggested Hakamichi remained hopeful much longer than she probably should have. While in the weeks following the festival we had seen Nakai hanging out with Hakamichi and Mikado, it was apparent that she had not won his heart. The two seemed content as friends.

“Boys just don’t get her,” Hakamichi’s advocate commented when I came to collect her 1000 yen.

It was shortly after this I that too lost hope in winning the bet. Not because my suggestion had been disproven for Nakai had in fact become close friends with Satou and Ikezawa by this point. Instead it was because he seemed uninterested in making a move for either girl. As the weeks passed the bet seemed all but forgotten. Satou eventually left for Scotland for family matters. At the same time, however, if he and Ikezawa had become more than friends, my peers and I did not see it.

Perhaps that is why I was so shocked that day I was in town. My friend who had suggested Ikezawa and I were returning to Yamaku when we saw the two of them down the street.

“Isn’t that Ikezawa and Nakai,” I asked. My colleague nodded, confused as I was to see students in town while classes were still in session. We were even more shocked when Ikezawa turned and kissed Nakai. I felt my jaw drop. In all the observations I had made of Ikezawa in the time I had spent at Yamaku I had never imagined I would ever see her do such as thing. Out of the corner of my eye I noticed my colleague had a small smile, one that combined the sentiment of “I told you so,” with pure surprise. I gave a small chuckle as I reached into my coat pocket and pulled out the now wrinkled envelope, placing my 1000 yen inside as I handed it to my friend.

“Congratulations,” I said.

“They did all the work,” he replied as he pocketed the money.

“Should we say something? They are skipping class, and I don’t think it is because Ikezawa needs time and space,” I asked. My colleague shook his head. Already Nakai and Ikezawa had made their way further down the street, holding hands the entire way. This was the first time any of had seen her happy.

“I haven’t seen any students in town all day, have you?” my friend asked with a small chuckle. I gave him a small smile and the two of us continued to make our way back to Yamaku.

In the remaining time that Nakai spent at Yamaku I never once actually spoke to him. I saw him graduate and his relationship with Ikezawa blossom, but I left no impact on his life. I was not a teacher. It was not my place to leave an impression on the students. My part was that of an observer. I was simply there to watch as the lives of these young men and women played out, and render medical assistance when needed.

All of us were background characters here, and we would have it no other way.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Thu May 30, 2013 11:23 pm
by Oddball
I do like the idea behind it. It's a nice cute little one-shot.

At first when I was reading it, I was a bit thrown by how none of the staff were ever identified by name. It made it feel less like they were characters and more like they were just there to say their lines. However the last bit where it's mentioned that they're just background made me think that might have been intentional. I'm not quite sure if it works for me, but I see where you're coming from with it.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Fri May 31, 2013 4:17 am
by Lost In The Fire
The decision to have none of the staff identified by name was intentional. My goal was not to establish proper OCs so much as to create the viewpoint of the majority of the nursing staff. They are around and see nearly everything, but due to the fact they choose to leave minimal impact on the students they are individually rather faceless. I could go through and add names to all five of the staff members in the story, but I feel that would be beside the point.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Fri May 31, 2013 6:17 am
by Mirage_GSM
No, it's okay as it is. At first I thought nurse was the narrator, so maybe you could make it a bit clearer that he isn't one of the five, though.

Good job by the way. I always like stories that provide some kind of fresh idea or perspective.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Fri May 31, 2013 7:33 am
by BlackWaltzTheThird
First of all, welcome to the forums! I agree with Mirage wholeheartedly. It's quite refreshing to see an idea like this, and I feel grateful for that tiny whisper of curiosity that led me here. The namelessness (in fact, the identity-lessness) works entirely in favour of the story and strengthens the point it makes. That said, I'm with Mirage in that a clarification that this mystery nurse is not the nurse would be helpful. All in all, this is a good piece of work. Congratulations on making a great first impression.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Sat Jun 01, 2013 12:28 am
by Lost In The Fire
Thank you for the comments. I have edited the story to hopefully clarify that the narrator is in fact not Nurse.

I'm glad to see that this did not backfire, for truth be told it was my first time writing fan fiction.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Sun Jun 02, 2013 8:10 pm
by griffon8
Well as another inexperienced fanfic writer whose first writing was well received by our fellow forumites, I commend you on this. Quite enjoyable.

In my case, I got an idea for a story and my mind couldn't stop working on it until I got it written down. :)

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Sun Jun 02, 2013 8:21 pm
by Helbereth
BlackWaltzTheThird wrote:That said, I'm with Mirage in that a clarification that this mystery nurse is not the nurse would be helpful.
This I would agree with.

All you'd need to do is mention the Head Nurse as being more the face of the nursing staff and establish him as a separate entity (him never having a name of his own makes that somewhat difficult).

(yeah, I didn't read the rest of the comments before I wrote that)

Also, I read this days ago, and thought I posted a reply... I guess not. I forgot what I was probably going to say, but I'll reiterate some other comments and mention that I liked the way this one-shot is formulated.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Sun Jun 02, 2013 9:49 pm
by neio
Welcome to the forums, and nice oneshot :)

It flows well and is easy to read. It's also nice to see someone tackle a story in the past tense; it's a change from most fics here and a slightly more difficult way of writing.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Mon Aug 12, 2013 9:41 pm
by dewelar
Just got around to reading this myself. Nice, quick, and fun read. Well done.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Thu Aug 15, 2013 6:37 pm
by Lost In The Fire
Glad you enjoyed it.
I do aim to please and I am happy that this piece in particular was so well received.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Sun Oct 19, 2014 8:14 am
by brythain
Lost In The Fire wrote:Glad you enjoyed it.
I do aim to please and I am happy that this piece in particular was so well received.
Sorry to necro this thread more than a year later, but I was mulling a similar idea and some helpful people pointed me here.

Aww, excellently done! I'll have to find something else to do now. :)

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Wed Oct 22, 2014 2:42 am
by Lost In The Fire
brythain wrote: Sorry to necro this thread more than a year later, but I was mulling a similar idea and some helpful people pointed me here.

Aww, excellently done! I'll have to find something else to do now. :)
Out of curiosity, what were you planning on doing? I'm intrigued.

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Wed Oct 22, 2014 3:14 am
by brythain
Lost In The Fire wrote:
brythain wrote: Sorry to necro this thread more than a year later, but I was mulling a similar idea and some helpful people pointed me here.

Aww, excellently done! I'll have to find something else to do now. :)
Out of curiosity, what were you planning on doing? I'm intrigued.
I've written a complete Mutou epilogue and even explored his relationship with Ms Miyagi, 3-2's homeroom teacher. In 'After the Dream', Nurse appears a fair number of times too. So my next stage was to consider a Nurse arc. That's harder because he isn't a named character in KS, he's just 'Nurse'. Then in the other thread someone pointed out you'd already written this little gem. It does a few things very nicely, and I can't at the moment see myself doing any better.

As it is, I wrote the beginning of Mutou's arc [LINK] without referencing your piece written almost exactly a year (well, 11 months) before. I suddenly had retroactive pangs of guilt. Dang, I could imagine the events you describe as having happened (just a little differently) in the background. :)

Re: Observations - Oneshot

Posted: Thu Oct 23, 2014 12:27 am
by Lost In The Fire
Heh.

Guess great minds think alike, or something like that.

Glad to see that I'm not the only one to envision something similar to the events of this oneshot happening.