Tsuki Monogatari
Tsuki Monogatari
Tsuki Monogatari
Yotsugi Ononoki is a doll. To put it another way, she’s not human. Not a
person, not a living being, not a part of the natural world─that’s Yotsugi
Ononoki, a tsukumogami possession employed as a shikigami familiar.
Though to all appearances she’s just an adorable tween.
This expressionless child, who delights all and sundry with her
eccentricities, is in truth an aberration, an apparition, a monster, one of the
endless varieties of ghosts ’n goblins with which nature abounds.
For which reason.
She’s hopelessly incompatible with human society.
“Nay, truth to tell, my lord, ’tis not so─not that lass,” came Shinobu’s
response. From within my shadow. “For she springs originally from a human
corpse, and is a doll─a creation patterned after humankind. An imitation of a
person.”
Then.
Then does that mean she’s trying to be, or become, human? But when I
voiced this question, Shinobu informed me that I was still off the mark.
To be patterned.
Proves you aren’t trying to be it.
It’s only a means for mingling with human society─for making her
compatible─and not a means for assimilation.
“However skillful thou mayst become in a foreign tongue, however
Whether out of kindness or out of habit, or maybe a desire to harass and feel
superior to their older brother, or for no reason at all, my two wretched little
sisters Karen and Tsukihi Araragi, known to the world as the Tsuganoki
Second Middle Fire Sisters, wake me up every morning. They wake me up in
the morning like I walk the night. They wake me up regardless of whether it’s
a weekday or a Sunday or a holiday, almost like it’s their occupation, like
their life depends on it.
Sure, there have been times when I lashed out at them in annoyance
(mostly when I was a freshman, I think), but on this one point they remained
undaunted. Whatever horrid miseries I might treat them to, whatever silent
treatment, still they woke me up. It bordered on obsession.
Lately, though, by which I mean for a while now, I’d been studying for
my college entrance exams, which sometimes kept me up late into the night,
and on such occasions I was grateful for their morning “wake-up
call”─honestly I’m grateful even now. In fact, when I think back, I should
always have been grateful.
And now I’m even grown up enough to admit it.
It’s just that as a high school senior in my last term, I didn’t really need
to show up at school anymore, which meant that there was no need for me to
wake up so early… A consistent amount of sleep was necessary to maintain
both my performance and my health, but no need to be so hung up on waking
The nail on my pinky toe that Tsukihi had crushed earlier in my room was
still split─still miserably, painfully split. Which meant that, at present, I was
not in vampiric form. And yet, I had no reflection─how was I to interpret
this?
Whatever the answer, it was at the very least not a phenomenon I could
approach with a cool head.
Because this was happening for the first time since I’d become a
vampire over spring break─but maybe bringing up all this stuff out of the
blue will make you think I’ve finally lost my marbles, things having been
weird ever since I went into the bathroom with my little sister. So let me give
a brief explanation.
Over spring break I was attacked by someone─by something. By a
vampire.
A vampire beautiful enough to freeze your blood.
I was attacked by the iron-blooded, hot-blooded, yet cold-blooded
vampire─Kissshot Acerolaorion Heartunderblade.
She sank her teeth into my neck, clung there like a leech.
She possessed me utterly.
And she sucked me dry, of all the blood, all the spirit I possessed.
She wrung out my very being.
Then hung me out to dry as the vampire I’d become.
Night fell.
By “night,” I mean the time after the sun goes down.
Until which point I spent the entire day inside.
Thank goodness school was out for the moment─if I missed any more
days, I actually wouldn’t be able to graduate. And it was also fortunate that I
was studying for exams, and barely hanging on by the skin of my teeth at
that─since no one thought it strange that I spent the entire day holed up in my
room studying with the curtains closed. Nor would they invite me to go
outside.
Once the sun went down and I’d eaten dinner with the whole family, I
left the house─I used to have two bicycles, but I lost both of them in what
you could call self-inflicted accidents, and they were now just a fond
memory. Putting it that way really doesn’t sit right with me, but─but
basically, what can you call dealing with such aberration-ness, such
“darkness”-ness, other than self-inflicted, a self-fulfilling prophecy?
And so I walked.
To the station.
After I had left the house and walked for a while, there was suddenly a
little blond girl beside me─Tsubasa Hanekawa once said that I looked like I
was on Gmen ’75 when I walked, and having Shinobu by my side definitely
gave me that kind of reassurance.
Shinobu might have lost her power, she might have become a little girl, but in
spite of it all she was still proud of her blond hair, and having it trod upon so
rudely must have been quite a shock because she ended up sequestering
herself inside my shadow.
You could also say that by ditching me like that she was abandoning her
role as my buddy, or bodyguard, which would be inexcusable behavior for
my trusted partner, but when I considered what a shock it must have been, I
didn’t have the heart to blame her for it.
Shinobu had been interposed between us, but even if she hadn’t been,
I’m not so fragile that I’d feel insulted by a woman standing on my head.
Nevertheless, the fact is that I was startled─the fact is that I was so startled I
jumped.
I’d shot up, shrieking gaaah, but Ms. Kagenui’s balance hadn’t been
thrown off in the slightest, she’d remained perched atop Shinobu’s head with
a composed look, not moving a muscle─
But hang on, she didn’t weigh a thing.
It was like she was floating.
Not like when I say, Shinobu’s so tiny, she’s light as a feather─nor like
Senjogahara, when she’d been stripped of her weight─it just seemed like Ms.
Kagenui didn’t weigh anything at all. This might not be a particularly apt
metaphor, but it was like physically experiencing trompe-l’œil.
It may be a little late at this point to insert “the story so far.” It feels like I
missed the window, and frankly it’s a total embarrassment as a narrator─but
if I’m going to explain everything in proper sequence, it’s got to be now or
never.
Where to begin? I guess it’s got to be spring break─that hellish spring
break.
Or no, strictly speaking, just before it started?
That bloodsucking spring when I was attacked by a vampire, when I
became a vampire─up until then I had somehow managed to make my way
down the road of humanity, sometimes unsteady on my feet, sometimes
going off course of course, but that spring I strayed entirely.
That was about a year ago.
Once I became a vampire, it was neither a kinslaying vampire nor a half-
vampire nor a vampire-hunting spec ops team who saved me─but a heaven-
sent class president with braids and glasses, and an older guy in a Hawaiian
shirt.
And I became human once more, a demon no longer.
Give or take a few lingering after-effects.
And they all lived happily ever after.
Except when they didn’t.
I’ve already told you all of this, so let’s skip ahead a month─to Golden
How well do people know their own towns? Like, if you asked people how
well they know the town they live in, I imagine that most of them would
say─well, I may not know it like the back of my hand, but I’ve got a pretty
good sense of it.
That’s how I’d respond, at least.
I live there, after all; at the very least I wouldn’t say, I don’t know
anything, I don’t know a thing about it, what in the world does town even
mean─I couldn’t feign that much ignorance, and the fact is that I do have a
pretty good sense of it.
And yet, maybe it depends on how you define “town.” One short year
ago, I didn’t know about that cram school building─I had absolutely no idea
it existed until Shinobu brought me there.
Nor did I know about Kita-Shirahebi Shrine.
I knew nothing about that ophiolatrous shrine.
That forgotten shrine, bound so deeply to snakes, and to a serpent
aberration─and to Nadeko Sengoku, until I visited it with Kanbaru at
Oshino’s behest.
“I don’t know everything, I just know what I know”─class president
Tsubasa Hanekawa’s catch phrase. Hitagi Senjogahara, approaching this
from the standpoint of set theory, says she’s just telling it like it is, but if you
understand Hanekawa’s statement as a kind of reminder, a self-admonition,
“You know, I bet that kid is the one pulling the strings, kind monster sir, the
mastermind who hired Tadatsuru to do some aberration elimination, the last
boss who’s amusing herself by tormenting you,” Ononoki opined calmly as
we hiked up the mountain path─though when I say mountain path, in fact
when I say path, I’m unfortunately not referring to the familiar stairway up to
Kita-Shirahebi Shrine.
Having given up on a direct descent from the sky to avoid being seen,
what was the point of then approaching via the usual, well-known route─via
that stairway on which I had once passed Sengoku? Well, Shinobu probably
would’ve wanted to go that way even knowing that it might be a trap, but at
the moment she was recharging her batteries in my shadow, and anyway, I no
longer had the power to back up such a bold and brazen approach.
In order to get the drop on Tadatsuru─to take him by surprise, we kept
hidden by taking a path that wasn’t a path.
Compared to the mountain paths I once trod with Ononoki, and
Hachikuji, this was nothing to speak of─or so I told myself, but no matter
how much I tried to bolster my spirits, a mountain path at night is straight-up
dangerous. Dangerous and scary.
I mean, you had to watch out for snakes on this mountain even in the
middle of winter.
Speaking of which, I know the shrine’s name is Kita-Shirahebi because
They say that “he who laughs last, laughs best,” but to me that just seems to
mean “never laugh, because you won’t be last.” And they say that “fortune
favors a home filled with laughter,” but the road home can be paved with
misfortune for those who laugh before they get there. They also say, “demons
laugh when we plan for the future,” but those demons aren’t necessarily the
ones laughing last, and they themselves are often laughed at for their own
lack of foresight. “He who laughs at a penny will someday cry over one”?
Seems like that just amounts to “he who laughs first cries in the end.” What
the hell is my point, you ask? It’s that whether we’re talking about an
individual life or the entire world, ultimately we don’t know how things are
going to shake out. Stability, unending peace and quiet, unending hell, these
things are all pretty untenable, as it turns out. Then again, there’s no
guarantee that the duration of “unending” won’t be longer than a human life.
We don’t know what’s going to happen tomorrow, and we don’t know what’s
not going to happen tomorrow. Yesterday’s pleasure causes today’s hell, and
today’s hell produces tomorrow’s heaven. That just keeps on happening,
doesn’t it? When is last, anyway? “All’s well that ends well,” that’s like
saying the result is all that matters. The proverb is hardly funny.
And so here we are, the fourteenth volume in the Monogatari series.
This particular tale starred the expressionless and unlaughing Miss Yotsugi.
Fourteen volumes. Feels kind of excessive, but in the beginning, of course, I
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