Monogatari - LN 14 - Tsukimonogatari
Monogatari - LN 14 - Tsukimonogatari
Monogatari - LN 14 - Tsukimonogatari
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 much
dost study it and speak it like ’twere thine own, ’tis only ever for the sake of
communicating with the people of a foreign land, and thou mayst not wish to
become their countryman─’tis much the same. She was made in the image of
humankind, but not for the sake of being human or becoming human. ’Twas for
being with humans.”
Not to be, nor to become.
To be with.
That foreign language analogy really did the job─well, bringing other
countries into the mix makes it all terribly global, but framing it in terms of other
cultures does put us back in the realm of everyday conversation for me, or for
anyone, I bet.
In order to forge a positive relationship with someone from another culture,
you’ve got to see through the eyes of that culture─when in Rome, as they say.
“Come, my lord. Hast thou never considered why aberrations, why
monstrous beings of legend, wear the aspects of human beings or of animals─to
wit, why the form of the unreal is founded in reality?”
I never had.
I mean, can’t we just say that our imagination has its limits? We can’t
picture, can’t visualize, things that aren’t, so we fashion them by spicing up
things that are.
Take Shinobu Oshino’s base form, Kissshot Acerolaorion Heartunderblade,
for instance─though a vampire, a beautiful demon, she was ultimately modeled
on a human being.
When she sprouted wings, they were a bat’s.
When she bared her fangs, they were a wolf’s.
Though she embodied the unreal and surreal as a vampire, substantially she
was an assemblage of realistic elements─no more than an idealization.
A beauty that no painting can capture isn’t going to be captured in a
painting.
A beauty that our eyes can’t behold isn’t going to be beheld by our eyes.
To resort to another linguistic analogy, people can only relate reality using
the words available to them─however inexpressible the reality, however
inexhaustible the dream, in the end we have to rely on our voices and our pens.
Expressing with words.
Exhausting them.
But we can’t just say that, I suppose. Aberrations, whose appearances are
modeled on, and dictated by, the limits of our imagination aren’t going to take it
lying down. Sure, they’re unstable, they change their appearance depending on
the observer and transform depending on their surroundings, but I bet they desire
a fixed form.
So I couldn’t say anything─certainly not to the aberration right there in
front of me, Shinobu, a former vampire who now looked like an eight-year-old
blonde of all things.
Having read my thoughts, and for that reason not touching on the matter,
she said, “All in all, ’tis because people exist, because they are, that aberrations
are too. Which meanest not the latter are dependent upon the former─’tis simply
that if none observe, none are observed either.”
I had to wonder.
I assumed she was talking about the so-called Observer Effect, but this
sounded different─it was something else, not some theory, but more emotional
and sentimental, so to speak.
“Every presence, every act, requireth a witness lest it be devoid of meaning.
Untold, any tale of heroes or of aberrations may as well have ne’er been.”
Shinobu seemed to be reflecting on her own experiences. “I have been called a
legendary vampire─but if those legends did not exist, ’twould be as if I were no
vampire at all. An aberration that goes unheralded is not worthy of the name.”
Weird tales─must be weird in the telling, she remarked.
“Though ’tis less mine own thinking or values than that execrable Aloha
shirt’s, ultimately an aberration is a deep attachment.”
Deep attachment─feeling.
Like empathizing with a doll? You could say that’s how tsukumogami, or
more generally the spirit of not being wasteful, the mottainai obake, is born.
They say the belief that gods reside in everything, that there are eight
million of them, is native to Japan, but empathizing with something that isn’t
human, be it living or inanimate, isn’t unique to one culture.
Which is why tales of aberrations are told throughout the world.
Told─by humans.
It was a pretty convincing argument, or rather, an argument I had no choice
but to be convinced by, as someone who’s spoken of so many aberrations.
And told their tales.
Of a vampire.
Of a cat.
Of a crab.
Of a snail.
Of a monkey.
Of a snake.
Of a bee.
Of a phoenix.
As someone who has, I had no choice but to be convinced.
And now I’m about to speak again, of a doll this time, but I have the
sneaking feeling that I’ve been telling too many tales.
Urban legend, word on the street, or secondhand gossip, it’s all just idle
chatter if you speak of it too much. It ceases to be eerie, or alarming─when I
think back to the beginning of second term and the bizarre “Darkness,” or to the
matter of Nadeko Sengoku’s godly serpent-god from around New Year’s, I have
to ask how long this is going to continue, and feel a little exhausted. Since my
tricks are starting not to work on these aberrations that keep coming out of the
woodwork, I’m kind of sinking into despair─though that feeling is a luxury.
Forever, is how long.
Our world doesn’t afford that luxury, I ought to have known by now─but
it’s a little too late for ought’s.
Every tale comes to an end.
My, my, I guess the crazy times weren’t quite over yet─even that refrain has
its limits.
Because the story I’m about to tell you about a doll is also the story of how
I “learned that”─learned it, whether I liked it or not.
So this is the beginning of the end.
The tale of how I, the human being called Koyomi Araragi─began to end.
002
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 up early per
se. Considering that I’d been receiving their constant blessing for the past six
months or so, however, I couldn’t really tell them to get lost. I mean, even if I
did tell them to get lost they definitely wouldn’t, and it’s not just about exam
prep. Since it was the Fire Sisters whom I have to thank for rescuing me from
the peril of potentially not graduating due to the number of absences, tardies, and
early departures I racked up during the second half of my first year and the
beginning of my second, I really couldn’t tell them to get lost. Leaving aside
justice and all that, their unswerving dedication to waking me up constituted a
meritorious service I could not ignore.
Without question, I owe Tsubasa Hanekawa and Hitagi Senjogahara for my
scholastic improvement on the road to entrance exams, but equally indisputably,
Karen and Tsukihi Araragi are to thank for supporting me on the road to
graduation─and it’s only human nature to want to repay that debt in some small
way.
Only human.
Just to be clear, it has nothing to do with me being into my little sisters.
That kind of thing only exists in manga (how many times now have I said
that?).
In fact it’s what they call “the reciprocity principle” in psychology─that’s
definitely what it is. Apparently, human beings have this “quirk” of wanting to
repay a person from whom they’ve received some kind of favor.
Take this fact in isolation, and you might get the impression that human
beings are a fair species, that they possess a spirit of fairness, but reality isn’t so
pretty. Basically, people just “feel shitty when they owe somebody something.”
People want that free and clear feeling of paying back a debt, or of feeling
superior by paying it back and then some─that seems to be the gist of it.
Which is exactly why I felt it was about time I repaid my debt to Karen and
Tsukihi after six months─no, six years of being woken up by them.
As an older brother.
Out of consideration for their futures─
“Karen’s got her strength and her looks, though, so even if I don’t give it
too much attention, she’ll make something of herself… I can leave her alone and
she’ll be somebody, but…” I grumbled as I went downstairs.
The walls have ears, the doors have eyes, and the shadows have vampires in
them.
I couldn’t be sure no one was eavesdropping on me so I didn’t finish my
thought, but yeah, I was worried about Tsukihi.
Tsukihi Araragi.
I’m genuinely worried about her future.
I have to care.
I have to be careful.
I can’t even imagine what she’ll be up to this time next year… The wheels
are always turning in that head of hers, but she’s always turning them for the
wrong reasons.
Just spinning her wheels.
It was only thanks to managing the unmanageable mayhem of the Fire
Sisters’ brawn, that is, the over-engineered weapon of mass destruction known as
Karen Araragi, that Tsukihi Araragi paradoxically, or passably, functioned as the
Fire Sisters’ brains… But with the impending increase in her level of
independence, I couldn’t imagine what kind of schemes she’d concoct─or rather
I didn’t want to think about it.
Sure, how she lives her life is her own business, but it’s also human nature
for me to want to avoid any kind of situation where I would end up mobbed by
reporters.
Yes.
Taking all of these things into consideration, my first priority as I faced the
prospect of graduation was, it goes without saying, completing my exam prep,
but the second was rehabilitating my little sisters, particularly Tsukihi.
I hadn’t discussed it yet with my parents, but if I got into college I’d
probably be leaving home─and if I did, I couldn’t bear to leave behind two little
sisters like them.
It’d be irresponsible of their big brother, wouldn’t it?
Maybe of any human being.
To repeat, I could care less what happens to those two. They can go ahead
and live whatever kind of life they please, but I’m going to do what I need to do
to avoid any sort of blame down the line.
So, for the time being, I began that day by running a morning bath for
Karen, who would inevitably return home drenched in sweat.
I felt triumphant at the prospect of being able to say: No way, I’m not
irresponsible, I never shirked my responsibilities, I mean look, I drew a bath for
her and everything.
Keheheh.
A hot bath, just the way she likes it, how about that.
But my pseudo-villainous attempt at kindness backfired because the
scalding temperature Karen prefers is how I like it too. As I cleaned the room
and prepared all the amenities, I got the urge to take a bath myself.
Some of you might wonder what’s up with a guy who takes a bath in the
morning even when he hasn’t gone for a run, but they say a person releases a full
cup of sweat during the night. Jogger or not, there’s nothing wrong with taking a
bath in the morning. And it wasn’t just that particular day; while I was studying
for exams I often took a shower in the morning to clear my head after I woke
(was woken) up.
“…”
Consider this.
The warlords of the Warring States period employed cadres of poison
tasters. As a result, the food was all cold by the time it reached the warlord’s
mouth, but this serves to illustrate how precious his life was. Our anecdote might
be apt to elicit laughter at the expense of the poor warlords, whose
overabundance of caution meant they never had tasty meals, but that’s totally
wrongheaded, that’s merely the condescending attitude of a peaceful age. Some
poison tasters must have made the ultimate sacrifice, which goes to show just
how many more lives were riding on the shoulders of the soldiers’ commander,
on his wellbeing.
Upon reflection, didn’t this mean that if I really wanted to look out for
Karen, if I really cared about her welfare and her future, I shouldn’t let her take a
bath without getting in first and ensuring that there was no danger?
From what I’ve heard, the bathroom is where the most fatal accidents occur
in the supposed safety of our homes, so before letting my sister enter that danger
zone when she was back from her run, I needed to confirm its security. I had to
taste the bath for poison, so to speak. I had no choice.
And so I decided to get into the bath.
I decided to take a nice, hot bath.
Damn, it’s hard being a big brother, forced to take baths against my will for
my little sister’s sake─but as I quickly began to shed my clothes in the changing
room.
“Oh.”
Tsukihi appeared.
And she was only half-dressed. In other words, she was half-naked. She
must have shed her yukata in the hall before coming into the changing room.
Which she did all the time. Just disrobed wherever she pleased. The easy-on-
easy-off aspect of traditional Japanese clothing was to blame. And naturally, she
never picked up after herself (I did, mostly).
Fixing me with her severest glare, the half-naked Tsukihi accused, “You’re
the first! I mean, the worst! You said you were getting a bath ready for Karen but
want to get in ahead of her! You’re the worst, the worst, the worst, the worst!”
“Um, given your state of undress, I can only surmise that you had exactly
the same intention…”
In fact, since she was hoping to hijack a bath that she hadn’t even prepared,
that I had prepared for Karen, who was the real villain here? Trying to scold me
about it on top of that─I was seriously concerned about her future.
How had she made it through fourteen years unscathed with her sorry
excuse for a personality?
In any case, Tsukihi had a strong metabolism, which meant she sweated
easily. She took a bath every chance she got, kind of like Shizuka, to put it in
Doraemon terms.
She wasn’t about to let this opportunity pass her by.
How shrewd of her.
How shrewd and rude.
“Just stand aside, big brother. I’m getting into that bath, and no one’s going
to get in my way, brother or not.”
“What a line. You’re willing to fracture our family over who takes the first
bath, and a morning bath at that…”
Frightening.
My sister lived entirely in the moment, didn’t she?
“But I’ve already gotten completely into the bath-time mindset,” she said.
“My body may be out here, but my spirit is already in there.”
“Oh, shut up. The tub’s still only half full.”
“Don’t forget to add my volume to it.”
“Like that’s something to brag about.”
Yet I, myself, was too deep into the bath-time mindset at that point to yield
my turn. Well, my heart may not have been in the tub like Tsukihi’s, my body
and spirit were still there in that changing room, but surrendering the bath
without a fight just because my little sister told me to would be a stain upon the
honor of big brothers everywhere.
Shoving her out of the way so I could be first might in fact be appropriate,
but the alternative was unacceptable. It could only be described as a dereliction
of my duty as a big brother.
So I puffed out my chest (I was shirtless by then, incidentally. It was a half-
naked sibling standoff) and gave Tsukihi an ultimatum.
“Little sister, if you’re determined to get into that bathroom, you’ll have to
take me down firwatchit!”
I barely managed to dodge the shampoo bottle that she unhesitatingly
hurled at me. The cheeky little middle schooler apparently brought her own
shampoo. She was at least classier than Karen, who’d happily wash her hair with
a bar of soap, but a truly classy person doesn’t throw (with a spin, no less)
shampoo bottles at other people’s faces.
“Tsk.”
And classy people don’t click their tongues.
But man, was she a frightening little sister.
What was she thinking? Or was she not thinking at all?
“What the hell?! Someone could get hurt!”
“You told me to take you down.”
“No, no, I meant mentally. Physically, you don’t take me down, you respect
me and kneel before me.”
“You’re a pain in the ass,” Tsukihi said, closing the door behind her. She
didn’t actually lock it, but her meaning was clear: I’m not budging from this spot
no matter what. And she started forward to reclaim her personal bottle of
shampoo, which had landed behind me.
And what’s more, that motion flowed naturally into a nonchalant attempt to
slip past me into the bathroom, so I rushed to block her.
Putting my body on the line, like a real man. Protecting the door to the
bathroom as if it hid a gaggle of wounded children.
“You shall not palookout!”
This time she went for the eye-gouge.
An attack the old Senjogahara would have gone for (and did).
At least in Senjogahara’s case she was so stubbornly combative because of
all the issues she was dealing with. Tsukihi just wanted to get into the bathroom.
“Enough already, big brother, don’t get heated. Heating up the bath was
enough, your work here is done.”
“That’s an unspeakable line.”
“Move.”
“No.”
There was no point in being so stubborn, but what kept me standing there
was my pride as an older brother, my not wanting to bow before or fall behind
my little sister.
Or you could say I was frozen with terror.
I mean, Tsukihi was glaring at me for real.
She wasn’t a yandere, but still over yonder in the psycho ward.
When you take away the sweet dere part, all you’re left with is the
pathology.
“I’m the one who heated up this water, so the first bath is mine by right.”
“I allowed you to heat it up for me, and you should be satisfied with your
lot.”
Our arguments ran perfectly parallel, never intersecting.
Which is to say it didn’t even constitute an argument.
We weren’t engaging with each other at all; if anything, the first
engagement was yet to come, as in a battle.
Somewhere along the line, the premise that I’d prepared the bath for Karen
had gotten lost.
In fact, the very existence of Karen, off happily running along somewhere,
had vanished from our minds.
While she was enjoying the refreshing morning breeze, an internecine
family struggle was unfolding, a sordid sibling rivalry that perhaps rendered her
the real winner among the three Araragi children.
Sooner or later, that very Karen would come home from her run and appear
in that changing room, ready to cleanse the sweat from her body─she would
waltz in there drenched in sweat, dripping with perspiration.
And in that three-way contest, the winner would undoubtedly be her.
Circumstantially speaking, she would obviously arrive plenty sweaty enough to
warrant a bath by anyone’s standards, and if it came to blows, Tsukihi and I
combined couldn’t beat her even if she had one hand tied behind her back.
Indeed, Tsukihi and I were at this impasse because our combat levels were
more or less evenly matched. Naturally, I was a boy and had a boy’s strength, but
Tsukihi had a crazy streak that I lacked. The craziness to unhesitatingly go for
the vitals.
In other words, it was a stalemate.
I couldn’t but envision a future where Karen came in and snatched the prize
out from under us while we maintained that equilibrium─and I’m sure Tsukihi
saw it too.
My little sister wasn’t so oblivious to her actions’ consequences that she’d
overlook that eventuality─okay, she was oblivious, but her wheels turned
quickly. I bet she arrived at that conclusion well before I did. It’s just that her
emotional brakes were shot, by virtue of which she was only able to deal with
the situation on a par with me, who had only just realized the danger.
“All right then, big brother. We’ll meet in the middle.”
“Meet in the middle?”
A compromise?
Ah ha.
A proposal worthy of a strategist.
They say war is customarily conducted with a middle ground in mind.
But in this case, what middle ground─what point of compromise could
exist between us? The right to take the first bath was a one-of-a-kind item, so to
speak, and the competition for it a zero-sum game. One person wins, the other
loses. So I didn’t see any room for compromise, anything to compromise on.
But I underestimated Tsukihi.
Not for nothing had she managed to become the idol of every middle
schooler in town despite her boundlessly irritating personality. The Fire Sisters’
brains proposed a plan that no ordinary strategist could have conceived of.
“Let’s meet in the middle and go in together.”
004
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.
“Become.”
I had mutated─into an aberration.
That was the end of Koyomi Araragi the human being, and the beginning of
Koyomi Araragi the vampire─and those two weeks of spring break were hell on
earth.
Fourteen ghastly days.
The upshot is that, as you can see, in the end I became human again─there
were some lingering side effects, but I went from being a demon to being a
person once more.
What I had to give up in return was not insignificant, the price I had to pay
was a heavy one indeed, but at any rate─if nothing else, at least I became human
again.
Happily, proudly.
I revere Tsubasa Hanekawa like a second mother, like my own personal
Mother Teresa, because of the debt I owe her for saving me back then─but if I
start in on that story we’ll be here all night, so shameful as it is, I’m going to
skip that part for the moment.
The hell came to an end.
It came to an end after fourteen days.
Or I thought it had, anyway.
Of course I’m not trying to say that everything was wrapped up tight with a
neat little bow on top, that there were no hard feelings and no more troubles
waiting for me down the line. My experiences over that spring break became the
catalyst for a catalogue of catastrophes─but at least that single issue, of me
personally becoming a vampire, well, that at least I thought had been sorted out.
I thought I’d become human again─but if I had.
Then why the hell didn’t I have a reflection?
Isn’t the lack of a reflection one of the primary characteristics of a vampire?
Immortality, drinking blood, turning into a shadow, turning into mist,
shapeshifting, flying, using bats as servants.
And.
No reflection.
Not appearing in mirrors.
That made it seem like I wasn’t a misbegotten, half-assed vampire─but the
real deal.
Wasn’t that the inescapable conclusion?
“…”
“What’s wrong, big brother?”
I’d fallen silent without realizing it, and naturally enough, when I clammed
up all of a sudden, Tsukihi sensed that something was wrong and nonchalantly
turned to face me─with her eyes still closed, since I’d just been dumping buckets
of water over her head, which meant she’d yet to notice my lack of a reflection.
It would be a disaster if she ever did.
So I took Tsukihi’s face, turned towards me as it was, in both hands and
held it there.
Not massaging it.
Holding it firmly in place.
Reflected in the mirror beyond her, needless to say, was just her body. Just
the nakedness of her developing body. My reflection, which should have been
visible beside her nakedness, was nowhere in evidence.
The wall of the bathroom was reflected instead as if nothing stood
there─just the towels on the towel rack affixed to the wall.
Nothing else.
No one else.
“Wh-What are you doing, big brother?” asked Tsukihi in consternation.
And consternation seems like the reasonable reaction if your big brother
grips you by the head when you idly turn around. However fast the wheels in
there might turn, no other spin you could put on that turn of events.
Well, if your wheels turn quickly enough, apparently there’s one conclusion
that might, in its own way, present itself─
“I see. It’s okay, big brother, go ahead,” Tsukihi said, gently closing her
eyes and puckering her lips.
How is that okay?! would ordinarily have been my comeback, but under the
circumstances I had no choice. The time had finally come to bring to bear on my
little sister the ol’ act─by now so routine a part of Koyomi Araragi that it has
been granted citizenship─of silencing her with a kiss. I squared myself.
“There─”
Now that I’d made up my mind, I didn’t hesitate (since this wasn’t a first,
scarily enough) and moved to steal a kiss from my little sister, four years my
junior. But at that moment fate intervened.
The work of the Skytree, perhaps.
“Phew! Man, am I sweaty! Thanks for getting the bath ready, big brother!
I’ll come say a proper thank-you afterwards─”
With that, the door to the bathroom banged open and a jockish girl whose
high-rise, I mean, height rose to almost six feet traipsed in buck naked and
covered in sweat, clutching a towel in one hand. It was Karen Araragi.
“─The fuck are you trying to pull!”
As befits a hand-to-hand combat specialist.
She was freer of hesitation than I was.
The second she appeared she unleashed a spontaneous spinning jump-kick
perfectly geared to the cramped bathroom and sent both me and Tsukihi flying
into the tub.
In other words, the first bath was a cozy shared affair, after all. Tsukihi’s
mental wheels may spin faster, but Karen spins faster in the body
department─uh huh, yeah.
Then the three Araragi siblings, Tsukihi and Karen and I, all got to know
one another a little better as we took a bath together for the first time in
forever─is not what happened next. Karen just threw me out.
No, this is about a big brother’s duty, compunction, point of honor, pride,
story development─I attempted logical counterarguments, but she expelled me.
“Are you a moron?! Use your common sense! Use your lack of common sense!”
Use your lack of common sense.
That little nugget of constructive criticism fit me like a glove.
Well, the older brother who’d been expelled from the bathroom was
pathetically tragic in his own way, but compared to the girl who had to stay and
get a serious earful from her older sister, I’d say he got off pretty light.
Speaking as a brother, it was truly painful to leave Tsukihi alone at the
mercy of an enraged Karen, but well, I had my own issues, and it was actually a
favorable outcome to be driven out into the hallway where there were no
mirrors.
No, forget favorable.
Things were pretty goddamn unfavorable for me at the moment─
“Hey, Shinobu. Shinobu. Shinobu, are you awake? C’mon, wake up,
Shinobu, I need you.”
Alone in my room, I checked the mirror in futile desperation, but no
reflection in that one either, so I leaned in close to where my shadow fell on the
carpet and called for Shinobu.
Shinobu being Shinobu Oshino.
The merest specter of she who was once the vampire Kissshot Acerolaorion
Heartunderblade, the one who attacked me over spring break─now a little girl.
An eight-year-old.
In other words, she was, in her own way, no longer a vampire─but now, as I
was now mysteriously manifesting the “symptoms” of a vampire, I feared that
something was happening to her as well.
Well, it was a totally realistic fear─since whatever else was going on, our
souls were paired.
Shinobu and I were like a single entity.
The pseudo-vampire hidden in my shadow.
She who dwells in the shadows─Shinobu Oshino.
“Shinobu! Shinobu!”
Gave no response at all.
Unable to determine whether this lack of response was basically a holdover
from the nocturnal habits of her vampire days or the result of something
happening, my distress continued to mount.
Shinobu.
What’s wrong, Shinobu.
“Rise and shine, Shinobu! Come on, you can’t sleep all day!”
For no particular reason I tried imitating my little sisters, but as I feared, I
got no reaction. Here I was, unexpectedly learning firsthand the hardships those
two endure in trying to get their sleepyhead brother out of bed.
Vowing to leave off manufacturing weird excuses in my head and to leap
out of bed awake and refreshed from tomorrow on, I continued calling into my
shadow.
“Shinobuuu! I’ve got donuts, Shinobuuu! Your beloved Mister Donuuut!
Golden Chocolaaaate!”
“For reals?!”
A little blond girl, making her entrance accompanied by this recycled line.
Casually, guilelessly.
When she appeared she had her fist in the air for no apparent reason, like a
lively character from an old anime. Since I was leaning in close over my shadow,
the pose became an uppercut to the jaw, and I tumbled over backwards.
Like a dead bug.
“The Golden! Where be the Golden Chocolate, my lord?! If thou hast
played me false, shalt die for it, I shall tear out thy carotid artery!”
“…”
My head hurt from banging it against the floor when I fell over backwards,
but that was the least of my worries, since Shinobu herself was about to kill me.
Her lively energy was seemingly enough to keep her from feeling the
damage she should have experienced through our link.
At least nothing appeared─nothing disappeared to be out of the ordinary
with Shinobu. Consoling myself with this fact, whilst simultaneously dealing
with the fresh anxiety of being excoriated and possibly slain by Shinobu, I raised
my torso off the floor and said, “Something’s horribly wrong, Shinobu! I don’t
appear in the mirror!”
“What sayest thou? Speakest of the tale of Snow White? Fair ye may be,
my lord, but sadly not fairest of them all, methinks.”
Shinobu’s gaze darted about the room as she said this.
I’d hoped that raising my voice would force her into following my script,
but it didn’t seem to have worked. I’m pretty sure the only reason her gaze was
darting about the room was because she was looking for donuts.
Don’t tell anyone, but it made me surprisingly happy that she called me
“fair,” even if she was just bullshitting.
“…”
Shinobu’s glance ceased its darting.
Having likely ascertained that she wouldn’t find any donuts no matter
where she looked, she fixed me with an icy glare.
Terrifying.
Terrifying enough to make me stop worrying about that piddling no
reflection thing.
Is that any way to look at your “lord and master”?
“Heed these words, my lord. Art thou aware?”
“Of wh-what?”
“That in this world there be lies which may be told, and lies which must
ne’er be. Lies which concern not the immortal soul fall into the former camp,
whilst those which do fall into the latter.”
“Get real, the only thing you’re worried about are lies that concern donuts,
right?!”
What, is your immortal soul a donut?! Complete with a void in the center?!
“’Tis just so…” said Shinobu, moving languidly─and laughing gruesomely.
Don’t bust out your signature expression for this!
“This place be devoid of donuts… Devoid of donuts, as unto the center of a
donut itself. Wherefore I shall pierce thee bodily and make a donut of thee, my
lord!”
“The Donut Effect!”
Joking aside, Shinobu really did come at me, but ever since spring break
she had lost almost all of her vampiric power, and her attack was nothing more
than the pretty little Bodyattack you would expect from an eight-year-old. I
simply caught her in a gentle bear hug. A simple display of my hugging prowess.
Still, my blood ran cold for a moment.
Her expression, at least, was deadly serious.
“Ahh. To be so embraced by thee, my lord, I feel my anger cooling even
now.”
“You’re too soft on your lord.”
While not being turned into a donut was certainly something of a relief, at
the same time it engendered another feeling quite apart from that.
You see, up to that point, whenever the physical and mental “after-effects”
of having been a vampire─my symptoms─grew stronger, Shinobu’s vampiric
“nature”─her symptoms─grew stronger in direct proportion.
At present, however, Shinobu’s vampiric power remained lost despite the
fact that I was in vampire mode, me and me alone─this had never happened
before.
No, it wasn’t just─that it had never happened before.
It was something that could never happen, no matter what. Wasn’t it?
Never─under any circumstances.
“Shinobu. Please listen.”
“Mmm. If thou dost not embrace me further, I shall pay thee no heeeed.”
“Listen!”
You can’t always let your body rule your mind!
You’re a little girl, for crying out loud!
I summed up that morning’s events from the time my sisters woke me
up─or no, I didn’t sum anything up. I went on and on, blah blah blah, telling her
every single thing in excruciating detail.
As she listened, Shinobu’s face indeed underwent a transformation from
soft and sweet to something much more serious. Seemingly the gravity of my
predicament had gotten through to her.
“…And that’s what happened.”
“Hmm. I see,” Shinobu nodded. “At long last thy relationship with thine
own sisters hath crossed a certain line.”
“Nope, that’s not the important bit!”
“It may not be important, but ’tis most serious indeed. How wilt thou fix
this mess thou hast made? Or hast thou already given up hope of further anime
adaptations?”
“Shinobu, please, work with me here. We can talk about my sisters later.
I’m seriously confused right now─it’s the first time this has ever happened,” I
implored her, my tone becoming more and more frantic. “I mean, it’s really
tough not having a reflection. How can I put this, it really hits me where it
hurts.”
“Indeed? And yet a mirror is naught but a reflector of light.”
Shinobu, for whom it was probably the most obvious and banal thing in the
world not to have a reflection, wasn’t sharing my agitation. She just gazed
blankly back at me. I don’t think she meant it maliciously, but I couldn’t help
feeling frustrated by her lackadaisical response.
I wanted to get us on the same page, but how to do it?
Without my having to do anything, however, Shinobu received the wireless
signal of my angst, if not my thoughts, through our soul linkage. With a light
shrug she said, “What,” finally seeming ready to engage with me, “hast my lord
turned without giving me to drink of his blood?”
“Yeah, that’s it, that’s what I’m trying to tell you…or no, not quite. Here,
look at the nail on my pinky toe. It’s split, right?”
“Aye. Didst say ’twas crushed by thy sister.”
“If it hasn’t healed, then we can assume I’m not in vampire form right
now.”
“Aha,” said Shinobu, taking hold of the ankle I had proffered for inspection
and roughly rolling around the toe in question like it was a perfectly natural
thing to do.
“Owowowow!”
“Calm thyself. ’Tis distracting.”
“…!”
I didn’t think she could possibly be doing it just to mess with me, so I
looked on silently as this scene, ripe with a certain kind of sadism, unfolded─I
endured the pain as I waited for the results of Shinobu’s “examination.”
“Hmm. I see.”
“Y-You figured it out?”
“’Tis hard to say─nay, I discerned what is afoot, but cannot for the life of
me determine why it should be so─”
How vague.
Not that I’d had my hopes up.
From her reply, it didn’t sound like she’d actually figured anything out─the
matter would go no further than a little girl torturing my toe, and I wasn’t about
to let that happen. The only thing that would go down was my favorability
rating.
“What the hell, Shinobu. If it’s hard to say, forget about that part and just
tell me what you discerned, and in a way I can understand.”
“Aye, so I shall─but first, my lord,” said Shinobu. “Clothe thyself.”
006
“Cutting to the chase, my lord, thou art most definitely a vampire at present─just
as thou didst suspect. Lacking a reflection is a purely vampiric phenomenon, it
has naught to do with any other sort of aberration,” Shinobu explained. As she’d
commanded, I was dressed in whatever clothes had been lying around. What had
been lying around, or hanging on the wall, getting aired out, was my school
uniform, which I wasn’t wearing lately since I wasn’t going to school.
You might call my look Naked Uniform.
Sexy? No?
“A vampiric phenomenon… But Shinobu, see for yourself, my toenail.”
“Quit thrusting it at me. I shall only torture thy foot once a day.”
“That’s not what I’m asking for, is it? It’s not like I enjoyed it, did I?”
“’Tis I who ought to say, see for thyself.” And she did as much. “Thy toe.
’Tis healed.”
“Huh?”
Hearing this, I grabbed my foot and peered intently at it─I had to force
myself into a kind of yoga pose, but anyway, I examined the toe in question.
The nail was split, and there were traces of blood─no, it didn’t look healed
to me at all.
“That is naught but a superficial view─internally, ’tis quite another matter.”
“Internally?”
“I was not there to witness the scene with mine own eyes, so I cannot be
sure, but I have reason to believe that when thy sister didst stomp upon thy foot,
the bones of that toe were well and truly broken.”
“Broken?”
She really did crush it!
Super painful, right?!
What the hell was that hair-washing devil thinking?!
“Calm thyself. ’Twas naught but an infinitesimal fracture.”
“An infinitesimal fracture…”
What the hell is that?
An infinitesimally small fracture?
Or does it mean the entire bone was fractured into infinitesimally small
pieces?
Because the latter sounded hard to bounce back from…
“When I perpetrated my torture…er, palpitated thy toe, it felt as if the bone
had been broken but had since set─which is to say, ’tis healed. Even if not
entirely.”
“I see…”
Come to think of it, Senjogahara or somebody was telling me about that.
About banging your pinky toe on the corner of the dresser and curling up in
pain─it might sound like just a funny story, but in fact a lot of the time people
shatter the bone in their toe like that. Because a broken pinky toe doesn’t
actually affect your life all that much on a practical level, it often heals up
without the person ever realizing it had been broken─something like that,
anyway?
Incidentally, when I tried out the “banging your pinky toe on a corner”
subject on Hanekawa, her only response was, “Huh? I’ve never banged my
pinky toe on a corner.” That aside, if what Shinobu said was true, it all added up.
Which reminds me, by which I mean, now that she’d said it, the
excruciating pain from when it happened had vanished without a
trace─interesting.
So this─was a form of healing as well?
“But it’s totally different from my impression of how a vampire’s body
heals…”
“Thy impression.”
“Yeah.”
To be honest, I’m loath to compare it to spring break, when I was
transformed into a full-on vampire─but back then, if my arm, or leg, or even
head got blown off, it’d heal a second later.
No, the already overblown phrase “a second later” doesn’t even cover it.
If a part of my body was destroyed, it regenerated simultaneously─is, I
think, closer to the truth. Hard to believe if you haven’t seen it with your own
eyes.
But it’s true. I know because I didn’t just see it, I experienced it,
experienced it personally─the vampiric healing factor is, how can I put this, a
bat-shit crazy, fucked up, out of control, jaw-dropping thing.
Or at least I’d thought it was.
“Hmm…thou hast the right of it. But ’tis also true that no human being
could heal a fractured bone in a mere hour.”
“Yeah…”
Though with Karen, all bets were off.
Not to mention Karen’s sensei.
Though never having met her sensei, I’m really just speculating on that one.
“Then I shall perform a simple test for thee. Proffer me thine arm.”
“Like this?”
“Scratch!”
Accompanied by this sound effect (?), Shinobu scratched my arm.
Like a cat.
In a feat of bodily manipulation, she’d suddenly extended her fingernails
into sharpened claws.
“Owww that─doesn’t hurt?”
“I should think not. I merely grazed thy skin.” Shinobu flashed her claws
for me to see. “’Tis the same level of damage as scraping the inside of thy cheek
for a scientific experiment.”
“How does a vampire know anything about scientific experiments?”
“I have lived lo these five hundred years.”
It was more like six hundred, actually.
Not that I was going to hassle her about fudging her age.
It’s bad manners to talk about a woman’s age.
Not sure about an aberration’s, though.
“Okay, so you scraped my arm, now what?”
“Observe.”
“Hm?”
Unbelievably.
Or should I say inevitably?
The wound on my arm where Shinobu had scratched me vanished─well, it
was never exactly a wound, but any sign of it vanished without a trace.
“Look there. Thy body hath healed itself.”
“Mm-hmm…no question about it.”
Somehow the unimpressive healing of that unimpressive wound didn’t
sweep away all my misgivings, but there was no question that my healing factor,
my physical regeneration, was somewhat enhanced.
“Nay, I know thy mind is not fully at ease, my lord, but be wary─I advise
thee to draw those curtains closed. For should a vampire with such a meager
healing ability be exposed to sunlight, he would be reduced to ash without even
catching flame.”
“Oh, uh huh…”
Shinobu’s dire words filled me with dread. I rose, and contorting my body
to keep it out of the sun’s rays, closed the curtains. This naturally made the room
pretty dim, so I turned on the light.
“’Tis merely a precaution… ’Tis possible, nay probable, that ye might walk
openly beneath the sun in safety. Simply because thou hast manifested some
ability to heal meanest not that thou art fully become a vampire once more, my
lord. Here now, say eee.”
“Hm?”
“Say eee.”
She said it so childishly that I failed to take her meaning, but the second
time, Shinobu just did it for me─it was super cute─spreading my lips apart on
the side like I was saying, “eee.”
Okay, it wasn’t that cute.
Holding my lips in that position, Shinobu inspected the area closely, then
concluded with, “Aye. For now, at least, thou hast not grown fangs.”
“Really?”
“Aye. If thou believest me not, look in the mirror.”
“But the whole point is that I don’t have a reflection!”
“Ah, of course.”
Heh, a smile rose to Shinobu’s face.
Gimme a break.
On purpose or not, it was pretty annoying.
But also super cute.
“Then touch it and see,” she suggested.
“Like this?”
“Who told thee to touch mine chest? I’m talking about thine own tooth.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Her cool reaction made me feel like a plain old pervert. No, regardless of
her reaction, I was a plain old pervert.
“Mm-hmm.”
“And?”
“It’s hard, feels normal.”
“’Tis not a question of texture.”
Shinobu didn’t seem too impressed that I’d remembered to throw in a nice
little joke even at a time like this. “Well, it isn’t pointed. My teeth are definitely
regular teeth─and very fine teeth at that, if I do say so myself. Let’s see, what
other vampiric phenomena can we check for right now…”
“Why not try eating garlic for thy morning meal?”
“I don’t want to have such an intense breakfast… Wait, but if that tested
positive, wouldn’t I just keel over and die?”
“Like as not.”
“I’m not liking like as not.”
It was no joke.
Sure, I was living a life where I might die at any moment, but I could never
face my parents if I died just because I ate some garlic. Nor could I face
Senjogahara. And not because of the garlic breath.
“Such experiments can be left for another day. At present, ’tis the most dire
of scenarios to which we ought turn our minds, my lord─’tis not a reality that
thou might wish to face, but in my judgment, thou art at present a half-baked
vampire. If thou canst,” and here Shinobu’s tone turned serious, “I ask that thou
dost trust my judgment. Lest we waste time in pointless investigations.”
“Okay. I’ll trust you.”
Which didn’t mean that my misgivings had vanished.
While my toe and skin had indeed healed, neither one seemed like an
impossible occurrence, which meant that the only phenomenon of note, and my
predicament at the moment, was “lacking a reflection.”
Definitely insufficient evidence to say that I was a vampire, or at least, it
would be a premature conclusion─Mèmè Oshino, the expert, might even call it
imprudent and rash─but.
But nonetheless.
I trusted Shinobu.
I’m embarrassed even to say it, I can’t believe I’m putting it in print, but it
felt only right.
“Then it’s really you I’m worried about. Are you okay? Nothing’s
happening with your body?”
“Nay. And judging from mine earlier inability to pierce thy body, my lord,
my power hath not returned─”
Wait a minute, she really tried to put a hole in me?
Not a shred of mutual trust to be found in that thought.
“And what is more, our link is born purely of the drinking of blood─save
for if I should bite thy neck whilst half-asleep and drink thy blood, no
connection should be possible.”
“Well, I never wanted to say so, but I’ve always thought that seemed like a
strong possibility.”
“Impertinent lout. Never in all my five hundred years have I been half-
asleep.”
“Oh really…”
I let that one pass.
If further investigations were a waste of time, using that time for our
comedy routine definitely was too. Just this once, we had to abandon the stance
that the idle banter was the real point of these books.
What mattered now was whether there’d been some change in Shinobu’s
body.
“Shinobu, first things first, take off your clothes. So I can take a look.”
“What dost thou intend with me?”
“I want to torture your little girl feet.”
“Thy sisters have not crushed them.”
“Shit…useless little sisters. They couldn’t even manage to give her a little
wound like that?”
“I have ne’er even crossed swords with my lord’s sisters, but… That’s it,”
said Shinobu, clapping her hands.
The kind of clap where you slap your fist with your open palm.
“I know who to ask.”
“Huh? Who?”
“Well, ’tis certain that some manner of change hath been wrought upon thy
body, my lord─and if that change is, as I suspect, some manner of vampiric
phenomenon, ’twould be best to consult an expert.”
Her arms crossed, Shinobu sounded strangely reluctant.
At least it didn’t seem like the attitude of someone who’d just been struck
by a brilliant idea.
“By an expert…do you mean Oshino? Mèmè Oshino─but we don’t even
know where to find him.”
“Nay, I suspect this is outside that brat’s ken─for had he harbored
apprehensions that such might befall thee, he would most certainly have shared
them with me.”
Shinobu wasn’t overly fond of Mèmè Oshino, the parent whose last name
she bore, the master who had bound her with that name, but judging from what
she just said, it wasn’t like she didn’t recognize his competence.
At least, she recognized that he wouldn’t skip town─if he knew there was
still some kind of crisis lying in wait for me.
In other words, in Shinobu’s considered opinion, this situation was beyond
Oshino’s control.
And of course I had no objection to that opinion. I agreed wholeheartedly.
“I know not how to grapple with thy circumstance, my lord. Which means
that neither would it profit us to turn to that Aloha brat for aid, even if we knew
where to find him. He is naught but useless grime upon my boot heel.”
“…”
She recognized his competence, but apparently that was it. I guess she still
hated him.
Fair enough, but…
“Then who are you talking about? Who’s this person you think we should
ask?”
“Thou knowest full well. When I say ‘who’ with such a nuance, ’tis clear of
whom I speak,” Shinobu replied with real revulsion.
Far more revulsion even than when she spoke of Oshino, who was one of
the main causes, one of the architects of her transformation from a bewitching
beauty into a helpless little girl.
“I speak of Yotsugi Ononoki.”
007
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.
“Sorry about this. Thanks for coming with me.”
“I am not doing it for thee. We have ever shared a common destiny, we
merely act as though ’twere otherwise.”
“Guess you’re right.”
I lifted Shinobu off the ground where she was walking beside me and put
her on my shoulders. I figured it’d be tough on a little girl to trek all the way to
the station and was being considerate in my own way.
Man, was she light.
Like she was made of paper.
But even if she’d become almost entirely human, there was no partner I’d
rather have by my side.
“As a precaution in the face of the two we go to meet, wilt thou not make
me a vampire? If ye let me drink only as much as would be taken for a blood
test, we can at least flee should dire circumstance arise.”
“Ummm… But if I make you a vampire, then I’ll become vampirified as
well, and my current symptoms will become indistinguishable from everything
else… I might not be able to get an accurate ‘diagnosis.’ Plus, Ms. Gaen’s
message only said that Ononoki would be waiting for us, she never actually said
anything about Ms. Kagenui being there as well…”
“Didst bid farewell to thy lady?”
“No, I didn’t bid her farewell…”
But I’d gotten in touch with Senjogahara.
And after her instantaneous response of I’m coming too, it had been a
backbreaking labor to convince her otherwise.
I definitely don’t think I was just being selfish in not wanting to let her meet
that onmyoji & shikigami duo.
“To be honest, though, talking to her did make me feel a little better.”
“Hmm. Because─in comparison to her former ailment of weightlessness,
thine own lack of a reflection is in fact of no great concern? My lord.”
“Umm, that wasn’t exactly it…”
Though maybe that was exactly it.
“I think it was more because Senjogahara gave me a bunch of advice─and
also helped me confirm a bunch of details. Like what happens if I look in the
mirror with clothes on.”
“Hmmm…”
“When I tried it, turned out my clothes were just floating there in the
reflection, so it seems like I have to do everything in my power not to get near a
mirror. She also told me to watch out for cars. If I don’t appear in their side-view
and rearview mirrors, the chances of my getting hit increase drastically.”
“The lass truly doth take note of the smallest details… How cautiously she
must have lived these two years gone.”
Saying this, Shinobu threw her arms around my head. Being as small as she
was, embracing my head like that was enough to completely fill her arms.
Just as I was wondering what she was doing, she announced, “I shall sleep a
bit more. Wake me when we encounter Ononoki.” And just like that she closed
her eyes, her breathing slowing until it was clear that she was asleep. The
thought did cross my mind that if she was going to sleep, she could do it in my
shadow, but maybe she figured that with what was coming, events could turn on
a dime. Sleeping outside would cut out the time it’d take her to emerge from my
shadow.
That very morning Tsukihi had likened holding someone’s head in your
hands to holding their life in your hands, but maybe by embracing my head like
that, Shinobu was actually protecting my life with her hands.
“Now then…”
I’ve heard that in order to develop a refined posture, aristocratic young
women practiced walking with a cup of water balanced on their head, and this
was something close to that: don’t spill the water, don’t wake Shinobu.
And so, walking with my most refined posture, I arrived at my destination,
the department store near the station, at 6:55 p.m., just before the appointed
time─though depending on how long the elevator took, I might actually end up
being a little late.
Picking up my pace, I entered the building.
I thought maybe it’d be faster to take the escalator or run up the stairs…
Running up the escalators would be quickest, but they’re not for running.
So I chose the stairs.
Not that you’re supposed to run up the stairs either, but I couldn’t keep
Ononoki waiting. I’d probably be out of breath after racing all the way up to the
fourth floor─but while some people might be taken aback if the person they
were waiting for showed up all out of breath, that wasn’t a concern with
Ononoki.
She would let it go expressionlessly as always, guaranteed.
“She said the arcade, right? The arcade, the arcade… Is there even an
arcade here?”
Wait, it was ringing a bell.
A while back Kanbaru was telling me about this game Love and Berry that
she was addicted to, and I could swear she said it was this department store
where she played it…
I arrived at the fourth floor and began wandering around with that
recollection in mind─and hit pay dirt almost immediately.
Since it was in a department store, though, it was tiny, just a place for
parents to put their kids while they shopped, patterned after an arcade but really
an arcade in name only. In that sense you could say it was a fitting place for a
rendezvous with Ononoki. Plus it wouldn’t be weird to have a little girl like my
partner Shinobu with me.
“Hunh? She’s not here.”
I got there at seven sharp, but not only was Ononoki not there, there wasn’t
a soul in sight.
“Of all the… Empty. I did exactly like Ms. Gaen said, followed her
instructions to the letter…”
I started to worry that maybe Ononoki had gotten into some kind of trouble,
but that somewhat paranoid concern vanished when my eyes fell upon the game
next to a Love and Berry-like cabinet.
It was what they call a UFO Catcher.
The kind made famous by Toy Story.
Though they would probably be famous even without Toy Story.
The kind where you put in a coin, move the arm, and try to pick up the
prize─and, all alone, inside the glass case.
Was Ononoki.
Her legs splayed out in front of her, like a doll.
Not even a twitch of movement, like a doll.
“…”
Huh?
Wait, it was Ononoki…wasn’t it?
It had to be Ononoki, didn’t it?
How did she end up as the prize inside a crane game? I wondered,
approaching the machine.
Easy now. I was trying not to transmit my impatience to Shinobu who slept
atop my shoulders. Easy does it now.
“Ononoki?”
I tried rapping on the glass, but no response.
No response.
No expression, no emotion.
It was weird, she looked like a real figurine.
No, a figurine is an imitation of the human figure, so maybe calling
something a real figurine is itself weird. Plus, Ononoki was always
expressionless and emotionless and unresponsive, so her lack of response didn’t
prove anything.
“Yotsugi? Yo-o-otsugi-i-i!”
No response.
“Yotsy!”
No response.
Hmmm, maybe they’d just produced a figure of her and I’d missed it
somehow… But this was life size.
Big enough that if we were talking Ichiban Kuji Premium, it’d be the Last
One Prize… It seemed like there was nothing for me to do but play the game.
I took my wallet out of my pocket. I didn’t think I’d be able to do it with
only a hundred yen, so maybe a five-hundred…
Nope, don’t have any. Okay, gotta break a thousand.
I went over to the change machine to break a one thousand-yen bill into ten
one hundred-yen coins, and then hurried back over to the UFO Catcher.
Since there was no one else around, maybe I was just being overly anxious,
but with this kind of machine you hear stories all the time about people poaching
your prize while you’re running to get more change.
“Though I’ve never really played this kind of prize-type game myself… I
wonder how it works.”
I should’ve brought Kanbaru after all.
Despite being a wildly talented athlete, she was deep into this kind of
stuff─a perfect superwoman in a totally different sense than Hanekawa.
Musing about that, I inserted one of my newly changed coins into the
cabinet. It wasn’t crunch time yet, but the department store did close at eight.
I didn’t imagine it’d take me an hour to get the prize, but still, no sense in
dilly-dallying.
“Let’s see… First move the arm sideways with the ① button, then forward
with the ② button… Mm-hmm. Got it. The rules aren’t too complicated. Awright
then, let’s give it a shot.”
Apparently you started it by pressing the ① button.
I sent the crane arm flying over to where it could pick up Ononoki’s body─
Hm, I think that’s a little too far. That’s not gonna cut it, glad I noticed.
Now, how do I bring it back?
Just a slight adjustment… Wait, you can’t make adjustments?
I couldn’t find a button anywhere with a reverse arrow on it…
Feeling abashed, I pressed the ② button─I’d blown it that time, but now
that I knew there was no reverse button, I wasn’t going to repeat the same
mistake twice.
Definitely seemed like the strategy was to stop the arm a little bit before the
prize, then inch your way towards it─WTF? As soon as I took my hand off the
button, the arm started to drop!
No, not there! Not there, I’m aiming for deeper in!
But my internal screams did nothing to control the arm, and it came up
empty, tracing a path back along the route of my failure almost as if it was
mocking me.
“Thou art an abject bungler, my lord.”
“Hmph. So you’re awake, huh, Shinobu?”
“’Tis the jangling of that obnoxious background music… My lord’s head is
indeed a comfortable pillow, yet the constant racket renders it inferior to my
usual place of repose.”
Did she mean my shadow?
Treating someone’s head and shadow as nothing more than beds… She
might have lost her vampiric power, but her haughtiness still knew no bounds.
“But have a care, my lord. Approach not too closely unto the glass.”
“Huh?”
“’Tis reflective.”
Ah, in an excess of enthusiasm I’d sidled right up to the glass and was
virtually pressed against it, and the light would cause me to be reflected there.
No─would cause everything but me to be reflected there.
Just my clothes would be reflected.
“Hm? Shinobu, you’ve got a totally normal reflection… Maybe not normal,
since it looks like you’re floating in midair, but is it because you’ve lost your
vampire powers?”
“At present ’tis so. But at the height of my powers, I could give myself a
reflection whenever I so chose. No weakness is truly a weakness for one such as
I.”
“…”
But of course.
The legend herself.
She left me speechless─but at that point, I should have picked up on what
her words implied. True, I guess even if I’d picked up on “it” then, the timing
wouldn’t have changed anything.
“It.”
By which I mean the difference between us as vampires.
Anyway, time for my second attempt.
“So basically, I only get one shot at going sideways and one shot at going
forward?”
“Aye, ’tis so. Though ’tis written plainly enough, if thou wouldst only read
the explanation.”
“I’ve always been hopeless at reading the instructions… Not that it
matters.”
With any game, you’ve got to learn by doing.
I pressed the ① button with the utmost deliberation.
I backed away from the glass slightly so I wouldn’t be reflected there, so
what wasn’t being reflected wouldn’t be reflected there. But if I backed up too
much my sense of distance would be off─I adjusted my position until I was
standing in the right spot, or at least a spot that I judged to be the right one, and
released the button.
Yup, right there. No question.
“Heheh, I think I might have a gift for crane games.”
“Methinks ’tis too early to say, but even were it so, how might such a talent
stand thee in good stead in the future?”
“I’ll become the mysterious old man who wins stuffed animals for little
children in arcades.”
“Mayhap a little too mysterious.”
As the words Is that a sufficient future for thee, my lord? floated down from
above, I pressed the ② button. This wasn’t some RPG, and I didn’t have time to
mess around.
“Okay, right there!”
With the split-second timing of a god among master swordsmen, I released
the button. The claws began to descend precisely where I wanted it, directly
above Ononoki’s head.
“Hey! Look, Shinobu!”
“I am looking… However, should it descend as such…”
“Hm?”
Before Shinobu could finish, the wide-open claws struck Ononoki, or her
figure─legs splayed out in front of her─directly on the noggin.
With a dull thud.
I unconsciously released a sighing “Ah…”
Dealt an overhead attack, the figure of Ononoki crumpled, her upper body
losing its equilibrium and teetering before finally falling backwards. In other
words, she ended up flat on her back in the glass case and was staring upwards
with her arms and legs spread wide.
Her expression changed not at all.
I could observe no physical response.
She remained expressionless when the crane struck her, when she toppled
over─well, since she was always expressionless, you could say like her usual
self, but this expressionlessness really made me wonder if the prize in the game
might not be a doll made to look like Yotsugi Ononoki, after all.
“’Tis not a question of her expression, her movements be utterly like unto
those of a marionette…a doll. She made not the least movement to ready herself
for the coming impact.”
“Uh huh… Ms. Gaen couldn’t possibly be messing with us…could she? I
didn’t think she was that kind of person, it’s not like she said, ‘There’s a doll that
looks like Ononoki in this department store.’ Man, that would piss me off. If all I
get after blowing this wad of cash is a stupid doll…guess I’ll have no choice but
to snuggle up with it when I sleep.”
“While ’tis true that mine own sense of money is a spot spotty, methinks
thou canst not term a few hundred yen a wad of cash, my lord. Get thyself a clue.
Truly, thou shalt end up as a mysterious old man who wins stuffed animals from
crane games for little children.”
“You’re right. I’ve got to do whatever I can to avoid that fate, even if I’m
the one who brought it up in the first place…”
Putting that aside.
And while I may have already become an extremely mysterious teenager
with a little blond girl sitting on my shoulders, racing the clock in a closing
department store to try and win a life-size doll of a young girl from a crane
game, definitely putting that aside as well.
My second attempt had ended in failure─all I’d done was knock Ononoki
down so she was splayed out flat─and the crane arm had returned to its original
position. Third time’s the charm?
“Well, at least that blunder wasn’t a waste… I’ve learned something. Seems
like it’s not as simple as just positioning the arm directly above the prize. You’ve
got to consider the way the claws move too. I bet not a lot of people realize
that.”
“Would not those of superior intuition realize it before they even made their
first attempt?”
“Don’t you think the computer should just make those adjustments for
you?”
“What would be the point of such a forgiving prize game?”
“Before, it would’ve been best to drop it around her thighs, but with the
position she’s in now…her waist would be best, I guess. If I can hook her waist
with a claw, I should pick her right up.”
“I wonder, be the arm powerful enough for that?”
“GO!”
I went.
I inserted the coin and started moving the arm─aiming for Ononoki’s waist.
If everything went according to plan, the crane would pick Ononoki up by the
waist, pull her up, raise her up, and provide the perfect angle for me to get a full
view of the contents of her skirt.
I was planning to fine-tune my own position in addition to the crane arm’s,
but in the end, my aim was thwarted.
The arm did begin to lift Ononoki by the waist, but her mass wrenched the
claw open, and she fell back into her original spot─this time on her side.
And the arm returned to its original position.
“This arm’s got no strength at all!”
“Did I not tell thee? I believe I did. Thou shouldst heed my advice.”
“Sure, yeah, that’s true, but…”
I was all out of protestations.
Apparently I sucked at UFO Catchers (I take back everything I said), so
maybe I should let Shinobu do it for me?
No, she was more of an armchair quarterback…
“Still, the crane just let Ononoki drop without even putting up a fight! It’s
too weak! It didn’t even get her off the ground for a second!”
“Mayhap the screws are loose. Though that too may simply be a question of
the generosity of the house, or lack thereof. The power of the arm is in truth
theirs to dictate as they see fit.”
“You can’t be serious… That’s not fair.”
What the hell was I going to do?
The game was rigged against the player.
The only thing I could control was the movement of the arm─and that
incompletely, while the house had full hegemony over the arm’s power. I was
helpless.
“Nay, my lord─while ’tis true that the claws’ power to close, hold, and lift
be paltry, there is yet one thing the house cannot control.”
“Yeah? And what’s that?”
“The power of the arm as it falls─its descending force. Erst struck Ononoki
from above, did thee not? And that had, if nothing else, the requisite force to
alter the lass’s position.”
“…And?”
“Ergo─” Shinobu pointed by way of explanation, “just as one might use a
stick to push a rock into a river, thou canst use the arm to trundle Ononoki over
to the hole without ever raising her up.”
“…”
That might be a “feasible” strategy for a UFO Catcher, but Shinobu’s
phrasing made it a cheat without an ounce of affection for the doll in question.
Trundle.
“Well, I guess that’s the only hope we’ve got left…but I’ve only got seven
coins left. I wonder if seven’ll do it?”
“My lord. By the by.”
“What is it?”
“It appears thou mayest play four times if dost insert three coins at once.”
“Why didn’t you say so sooner?!”
The battle certainly didn’t get any easier from there on out. We’d figured
out a back door, but of course things didn’t go according to plan, and time and
again the arm banged ineffectually against Ononoki’s body.
Her lack of reaction was somehow painful to look at.
It was just too pitiful.
Even when I did succeed, the distance she moved was so incremental that it
was extremely unlikely I could pull it off with the coins, the credits, I had
remaining─seven coins meant nine plays.
My coffers were slowly but steadily dwindling.
Trundling towards oblivion.
“Hrk… What am I gonna do when these credits are gone…”
“Change another thousand-yen bill. Thou art carrying that much, art thou
not?”
“What’s with the lukewarm comeback? Heat things up for me, like in an
arcade manga in CoroCoro Comics.”
“Dost such manga still exist?”
And while this banter was going on─at last.
At last, with my final credit, I succeeded in using the arm to nudge Ononoki
into the hole─she landed in the retrieval drawer with a thud. It was more than
just a dull sound, though, it sounded like something somewhere in there broke.
“I did it, Shinobu!” I pumped my fist, pretending I hadn’t heard that sound.
“It’s a happy ending!”
“Why do I feel as though our original goal hath been forgot…”
“Original goal? Wasn’t our original goal to get Ononoki?”
“Nay.”
“That’s ridiculous. What higher goal could there be in this world than to
win a tween girl?”
“If that is all thou desirest, my lord, then there, take the lassy and go. ’Tis
nigh on the time for this store to close its doors.”
She was right.
I’d thought we had plenty of leeway, but all of a sudden it was past
7:45─any second now they were going to start playing “Auld Lang Syne” over
the speakers.
Obviously not having forgotten my original goal─of dealing with the
mysterious phenomenon afflicting my body─I moved to retrieve Ononoki. I
mean, whether or not I’d forgotten, either way we weren’t going to get anywhere
unless I got her out of there.
I pulled the handle on the drawer.
“Mph… It’s stuck, I can’t get it open.”
“Grit thy teeth and pull with all thy might. She may lose an arm or a leg,
perhaps, but even so.”
“You think I can just ignore that ‘perhaps’?”
Ononoki, probably a little too big for the opening, had gotten hung up… If
this was an ordinary prize, I could just call over an employee, but that didn’t
seem like such a good idea if it was the real Ononoki.
Jiggling the handle back and forth, I pulled the drawer out little by
little─kind of like sifting flour into cake batter.
That’s purely a metaphor, I’ve never actually baked a cake before─but
nonetheless, my stratagem worked, and I was able to get the thing open.
Ononoki was stuffed in there in a crumpled heap─like one of those sponges
that regain their shape when you add hot water.
“Yo-o-otsugi,” I tried calling to her.
Like I was on a children’s television program, for some reason.
…No reply.
The expression like a dead body was a little too fitting for Yotsugi Ononoki
given that she’d been made from a corpse, but there you go.
“What took you so long?”
Finally she replied.
In a placid, emotionless voice that reminded me of the way Hitagi
Senjogahara used to be─though it differed from Senjogahara’s voice in being
totally mechanical, artificial in every way.
“How long could it possibly take to win me? You suck at games.”
“And you’ve got a big mouth for a doll…” I said, pulling Ononoki out and
flipping up her skirt to make sure everything underneath was okay.
“Chop.”
Ononoki’s karate chop came down on the back of my neck.
And it was a backhand, like in tennis. A chop that wove skillfully between
Shinobu’s legs.
“Don’t get fresh, kind monster sir. Monstieur.”
“No no no, I was just wondering what’s going on under the skirts of
beautiful girl figurines like this one. I just thought I’d check.”
“If that’s your excuse, at least get it out there before I’ve spoken. While
there’s still the possibility that I’m just a common doll.” This fierce retort was
delivered in an endlessly placid voice─a monotone so unnatural it was almost
like it was processed. “That is, I’m not just a common doll─but I am a doll. An
uncommon doll, dolled up to look like a real person.”
“…”
“Yaaay,” she flashed a sudden sideways peace sign.
A sideways peace sign that said, To hell with the flow of this conversation.
Her pose was ludicrously, lethally cute, but her expression was expressionless,
totally unconcerned, and totally unchanged from when she was in the glass case.
The gap was surreal.
Not gap moé, surreal moé.
“Anyway, haven’t seen you in a while, monstieur.”
“Don’t call me that.”
“Haven’t seen you in a while either, sis,” Ononoki said, raising her gaze
from my face to the space above my head─where I imagine it came to rest on the
little blond girl riding on my shoulders.
“Address me not as sis. What meanest thou, what thinkest thou our
relationship to be?”
“My apologies. I’m not ashamed to admit that I forgot what our relationship
was like, Ma’am Vampire.”
“’Tis more like it, thou forgetful lout,” spat Shinobu.
I guess that first impression had been seriously negative, and Shinobu’s
attitude towards Ononoki was severe─the little girl really knew how to hold a
grudge.
While we’re on the subject, the tween girl standing before me didn’t hold
onto much of anything. That is, her character was unstable. I knew as much from
the time we’d spent together up to that point, but─her personality was totally
indefinite.
Blurry as all hell.
Although she did have something approaching a characterization every time
I saw her─or it appeared that way, anyway, but it could diffuse at a moment’s
notice, evaporate like mist, and transform into something else entirely.
Which in a sense just marked her as an aberration, and maybe blurry wasn’t
a very precise way to describe her.
Now then.
What the hell kind of character was she at the moment? Seemed like she
had an acid tongue, or a bad attitude…
“Ah. I don’t suppose, Ononoki. Miss Yotsugi Ononoki.”
“What is it, monstieur. Kind monster monstieur.”
“Too much monster.”
“Aren’t you playing Dr. Kawashima’s Monstrous Training?”
“Since I’m studying for exams I do have an interest in the game, but forget
the monster connection. Don’t connect us. Anyway, I don’t suppose,” I brought
the conversation back around.
To my baseless supposition.
“That you’ve seen Deishu Kaiki recently?”
“I haaave,” Ononoki replied with a calm nod.
Interesting…
Ms. Kagenui had told me that the “ki” in “Ononoki” came from
Kaiki─from that ominous swindler’s name.
This was apparently because he’d had a hand in her “production,” but I
didn’t know much more than that.
So my conjecture had been more or less pure guesswork. But, to my
surprise, bingo.
Not that it was a bingo I was pleased by.
Quite the opposite.
That swindler, exerting his malign influence on this innocent young girl.
“Well, fine. I’ll let that go for now.”
Influence was nothing but influence, after all.
Even a malign influence was still just influence.
Light-years better than the man himself.
“Haven’t seen you in─it actually hasn’t been that long, has it, Ononoki.”
“You’re right. How long’s it been, I wonder. And since the three of us were
all together─oh, yeah, when snail girl─”
“…”
“Hm?” Ononoki cocked her head.
Not in response to her own insensitive words, seemingly─but that time, that
time that brought together the little girl and the young girl and the tween girl,
was definitely very memorable.
In various senses.
In many senses─in every sense.
Very memorable indeed.
“Well, we’ve got a lot to talk about. We’ve got a lot to talk a lot about, but
this is no time for chitchat, is it, monstieur. I’m not here to hang out with my
friend this time, I’m here on business. I’d forgotten, sorry sorry sorry.”
“Ononoki.”
I was secretly thrilled that Ononoki casually made it clear she thought of
me as a friend, but it pretty much turned to ashes in my mouth with that last “I’d
forgotten.”
I guess I’m a forgettable friend, I thought─but it was definitely true that this
time around, we weren’t just hanging out and eating ice cream together.
To the outside observer, a teenager standing in the arcade at a department
store with a little girl and tween girl probably appeared to be their babysitter
(god help me if it looked like anything else), but that wasn’t the case.
I was there to ask this girl.
To save me.
This expert─this expert’s familiar.
This tsukumogami, Yotsugi Ononoki.
“So, Ononoki.”
“What is it, what is it? Yaaay.”
Even with Kaiki’s influence, her absurdly sunny disposition remained
relatively intact, making Ononoki’s personality even more frustratingly
complicated and strange, but I aimed my words between the spread fingers of
that sideways peace sign. “There are two things I want to ask you.”
“Ask me anything. I want to answer my most favorite monstieur’s questions
even if he doesn’t ask them.”
“…”
I hated to think that this part of her personality might derive from Deishu
Kaiki…but it was the kind of frivolous thing he might very well say.
The same line could have a completely different effect coming from this
lovely young girl’s lips rather than from that ominous man in his funerary suit,
though.
There would be nothing charming about Kaiki saying it…
“Ononoki, why were you inside the UFO Catcher?”
“I was waiting for you. We had an appointment. Isn’t it common practice
for businesspeople to arrive five minutes early?”
“Well…”
“Or are you an advocate of Hakata time?”
Hakata time refers to being slightly late for an appointment (apparently).
“Or heading a little further south, do you hold to Okinawa time?”
Okinawa time refers to being very late for an appointment (apparently).
“Sorry, monstieur, I don’t mean to brag, but I was here fifteen minutes
early. Big Sis is like a drill sergeant when it comes to practical life skills.”
“Practical life skills…”
What I’d wanted to know was how she got inside that glass case (and
furthermore, why she thought it was a good idea to wait for me inside a UFO
Catcher), but before I could get an answer, the words “Big Sis” forced me to
move on to my second question.
My second question.
Big Sis.
“Ms. Kagenui, she─” As I spoke, my glance darted casually all around.
“Isn’t here, is she? In other words, you’re alone, right, Ononoki?”
“Nope,” she said, pointing her finger at me.
Why’s she pointing at me, I wondered, but her finger arced smoothly
upward─to indicate Shinobu.
Which raised the question why’s she pointing at Shinobu, but Ononoki
wasn’t pointing at her either.
That finger.
That finger, the vehicle for Ononoki’s finishing move “Unlimited
Rulebook” and therefore potentially a most lethal weapon, wasn’t pointing at
me, or at Shinobu─but even further above us.
Further above us.
Above us?
But there’s just empty space above Shinobu─I thought as I raised my eyes.
The human body isn’t constructed so that you can look directly upwards, but it
can look “almost directly up,” which in this case was enough.
Shinobu Oshino, riding on the shoulders of Koyomi Araragi.
A vampire, riding on the shoulders of a human.
And above them both─her.
Yozuru Kagenui.
The latter-day, ultra-violent onmyoji.
Standing on one leg atop Shinobu’s blond mane.
Ms. Kagenui hadn’t even bothered to take her shoes off.
“Make yerselves at home.”
You’re welcome.
009
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.
If Shinobu was made of paper.
Ms. Kagenui was a paper balloon.
Maybe as a master of the martial arts she can erase her weight by shifting
her center of gravity─indeed a match for Karen’s sensei, I thought, trying to
force the situation to make sense, but it felt too illogical.
The reasoning was unreasonable, unremittingly unrealistic.
Well.
This was an illogical person I was dealing with.
Despite being more human than anyone─
She was more un-human than anyone.
“First off, mightn’t we up stakes and take ourselves someplace else, young
man─seems this department store’s fixing to close. And darn if I don’t have just
the place. The ruins of that cram school where you and I had a ball slaughtering
each other─”
She didn’t seem to be psyching herself up or prettying things up as she said
this in her Kyoto dialect─even the disturbing part about “slaughtering each
other” came out of her mouth as naturally as could be.
I guess that’s how it must be for her…
That’s how it is.
Just another day.
Good enough for me, I decided to go along with her suggestion. Having a
conversation about aberration-related phenomena after hours in a department
store seemed somehow unappealing─it would be a hell of a setting for a ghost
story. But the security guard would be coming around, so we couldn’t stay there
either way. Well, I imagine Ononoki and Ms. Kagenui could, but…
I preferred to avoid a fight scene.
It would be an unmitigated disaster if this turned into a battle. I’d much
prefer if we could figure things out calmly and maturely, without incident
indecent or otherwise.
That sentiment, that laudable sentiment, might have gone to shit the second
the pair showed up, but─anyway.
We left the department store arcade and headed to that ruined cram school
so redolent with memories.
That ruined cram school.
The adjective “ruined” had taken on a slightly different nuance after
summer break─before, the spot had been occupied by “an abandoned building
that used to be a cram school,” still standing even if it was totally rundown (it
was inside that abandoned building that Ms. Kagenui and I, and Shinobu and
Ononoki, had done battle); but at the end of August, it had burned to the ground,
and been reduced to ashes, leaving no trace behind, not even a ruin─so at
present, it was what you might call a vacant lot.
Empty land with a “No Trespassing” sign.
Either way, though, visiting that place at night was not for the faint of heart.
That much, at least, hadn’t changed─but it was also still devoid of human
activity and remained a good location for a confidential conversation.
On the way there, I sized up Ms. Kagenui as she walked ahead of me─or
didn’t walk, didn’t set foot on the ground; she rode the whole way on Ononoki’s
shoulders.
When you were little, didn’t you play that game on the way to school where
you pretend that “the ground is an ocean, and if you step on it you’ll
drown”─and the one rule is that you have to stay on top of walls or benches or
whatever?
I didn’t know why she did it (I was pretty sure she didn’t really believe
she’d drown), but Ms. Kagenui absolutely would not set foot on the ground─the
first time I met her, she was standing on top of a mailbox.
At that moment she was riding on Ononoki’s shoulders─not the way I’d
been carrying Shinobu a little earlier, but standing dexterously on tiptoe astride
them.
When I saw it for the first time over the summer, I was floored by
Ononoki’s inhuman strength, but having now personally experienced Ms.
Kagenui’s ability to nullify her weight, I realized she was the extraordinary one.
Granted, Ononoki was by no means ordinary herself, but─that said.
Whatever impression it might leave me with and however it worked, aside
from her decidedly oddball habit of “taking the high road,” which was pretty
much impossible to leave aside, the impression I got of Yozuru Kagenui was the
same one I’d gotten when I first met her: that of “an attractive woman who was
my elder.”
Like a dignified teacher.
Or a diligent businesswoman.
At least, she didn’t appear to be of the same ilk as the middle-aged man in
the Hawaiian shirt and the ominous guy in the funerary suit─she didn’t look at
all like she would’ve been friends with them in college.
She didn’t, but strictly in terms of dangerousness, she far outstripped either
Oshino or Kaiki─far transcended them. Unlike Oshino, who was open to
conversation, and Kaiki, whose attention could be bought, there was no dealing
with Ms. Kagenui.
And that made her more trouble than any aberration or anyone else─which
was precisely why she was an aberration-slaying, aberration-employing onmyoji,
I imagine.
The fact that her very appearance on the scene could drive the former
Kissshot Acerolaorion Heartunderblade, once the king of aberrations even if she
had lost her power, into hiding so easily, so disappointingly quickly─forcing her
back into my shadow, spoke to the extent of Ms. Kagenui’s true power.
Shinobu was the Aberration Slayer.
But Ms. Kagenui was an expert, known as the Aberration Roller─and
specialized in immortal aberrations.
“I─” I began when we reached the vacant land, er, wasteland where the
ruins of the cram school had been. There’d been an awkward lack of
conversation on the way there. Though maybe I was the only one who found the
total silence awkward. “─bid you welcome. You. To my place. Ms. Kagenui.”
“Mm-hmm. Kakakak.”
Her policy of “taking the high road” seemed to allow walking inside
buildings (the floor isn’t the ground), but this was just a wasteland, very much
the ground, so while she stopped, she didn’t alight from Ononoki’s shoulders,
and when she responded she did so from that position.
Ms. Kagenui herself had suggested this place for our talk, and I figured it
had probably been her idea of a “fair suggestion”─conducting our consultation
in an open space where she couldn’t touch the ground created a “difficult combat
environment” for her, so there’d be no sudden eruptions of violence─though if
push came to shove, it seemed like that ball was entirely in her court.
Or maybe I was just overthinking it.
But this lady─
“I go wherever I please, my young friend─where I please throughout Japan
or this here entire world of ours. Slaying immortal aberrations, as is my wont.”
“…”
Yup.
All this lady wanted to do was kill immortal aberrations.
I didn’t understand why, I didn’t know why, and in fact I didn’t even know
if there was a reason in the first place, but Yozuru Kagenui hated immortal
aberrations with a passion─despised them.
So consulting with her on this matter was extremely risky, even if I kept
various aspects of the situation to myself─she’d come to see me personally, but
I’d have felt much more at ease if she’d just sent Ononoki to act as a kind of
carrier pigeon.
It’s a sad fact, though, that human beings know the things they hate better
than the things they love, which meant that at the moment, whatever form this
might take, Ms. Kagenui was unmistakably the most appropriate and logical
choice for a consultation.
She of all people could do something.
About my unnatural transformation into a vampire.
Naturally I had high expectations.
“Though of course I’m here now because Gaen-senpai was keen I should
come─you’ve caught her fancy something fierce, I reckon, young man. What’d
you do?”
“Nothing…worth mentioning. I haven’t done anything, or, I don’t
remember doing anything. In fact, it’s more like she did a bunch of things to, I
mean, for me…”
No good.
I sounded way too nervous.
I was obviously on my guard─that is, I was shaking in my boots.
Over summer break, Ms. Kagenui had beaten the living shit out of me right
here, though at a different altitude, and I guess my body hadn’t forgotten.
Well, since I was asking her for help, I was in no position to be anything but
humble towards her, whether I dragged our past enmity into the present or not…
“Hmm… Well, fair enough, I reckon. No need to fuss ourselves over it. You
have yourself whatever relationship with Gaen-senpai your little heart desires.
And yet, a body─never mind.” Ms. Kagenui gave a little shake of her head.
Like she was about to say something but thought better of it.
Or like she cut herself off?
“Enough of that, I’ll not speak on it any further. Whatever plans Gaen-
senpai may have, whatever her motives─a body’s just keen to slay immortal
aberrations. So long as I’m allowed that, I reckon I’ve no complaints.”
“…”
I doubt she was going to say anything good, but it always nags at me when
someone breaks off in mid-sentence, you know?
“Well then? What seems to be the trouble? I find I’ve yet to hear the whole
story─I heard tell of an immortal aberration in these parts, so I just dropped
everything and hightailed it here.”
“Oh…”
She was operating on some seriously vague information.
To put it another way, this lady seriously wanted to kill some immortal
aberrations─she seemed less like an expert and more like an executioner.
Though when it comes to facing a vampire─just like with that trio of
specialists─maybe that’s only proper.
But this was really going to make things tough, just like it had been with
those three.
“It’ll take a long time to explain everything…or maybe not actually all that
long, but can I ask you something first?”
“Anything you please,” Ms. Kagenui said with seeming satisfaction, her
overwhelming gaze pouring down on me from on high. Just the difference
engendered by Ononoki’s height was enough for it to feel plenty oppressive, and
I was like a deer in the headlights.
I had half a mind to call for Shinobu and cajole her into coming out of my
shadow so I could make myself taller than Ms. Kagenui, but I gave up on the
idea. I could see at a glance that even if I stood on Shinobu’s head, I wouldn’t
measure up to Ms. Kagenui.
“You and Ononoki are, well, experts?”
“I reckon we are. Though strictly speaking, it’s me that’s the expert, and
Ononoki here is a shikigami, my subordinate, you might say.”
“Which means that you have─a price, don’t you?”
A price.
Oshino used to talk about it all the time.
Not that he was an extreme miser like Kaiki, but when it came to the price
of his labor, Oshino was severe, or you could say he lacked a spirit of
volunteerism, or maybe that he was a stickler─he pretty much never did
anything for free.
Ms. Gaen wasn’t after money per se, but she demanded payment in kind,
which was an even more troublesome bargain than money─and this time was no
exception. Her price was returning the favor─a price of some sort or another was
the rule in their business, as far as I could tell.
And if it was a rule, I assumed that even the iconoclastic Yozuru Kagenui
would abide by it.
“I won’t beat around the bush… How much will you need? To be frank, I
don’t have all that much money.”
“Eh? I’ve no use for filthy lucre, what’s more trouble than it’s worth. I
reckon I’m no good with such fiddly calculations. It don’t make no nevermind to
me, so get on with your jawing.”
“…”
Total anarchy!
What the hell kind of attitude was that?!
Even an easy-breezy lifestyle has its limits!
Not having to pay was a godsend for a student like me (whatever Shinobu
might say, using up a thousand yen on the UFO Catcher was a hard blow), but
danger lurked in that unsociability, and I didn’t want to accidentally get too
close.
It wasn’t that she had no material desires.
She was wearing classy clothes, after all.
Ms. Gaen’s payment in kind was plenty frightening, but this “make no
nevermind” attitude was frightening in its incomprehensibility. Kaiki’s obsession
with money was “insufferable,” but insufferable was something I could wrap my
head around─this was simply “inscrutable.”
Insufferable, and inscrutable─similar according to the Nuance Proposition,
but…
“Young man, seems as though you’ve been spending a good deal of time
with Yotsugi here, which is plenty good enough for me. But if that won’t do for
you, then, well, I’d reckon it a kindness if you treated her to some ice cream
again next time round.”
“Häagen-Dazs.” Ononoki had remained silent up to this point, but here she
unexpectedly joined in─no need for her to give in to her desires quite so fully,
but yeah, when you just come right out and say it like that, it’s clear as day. Easy
to get.
Made me want to throw in a Klondike Bar along with the Häagen-Dazs.
I wonder, though.
In that sense, Ms. Kagenui’s “desire” seemed to me like nothing but the
overt bloodlust of wanting to kill immortal aberrations─which was maybe what
freaked me out.
“Do you also have a favorite food or anything, Ms. Kagenui? If you do─”
“I don’t. So long as it’s edible, I’m not fussed about it.”
“…”
There was no way in, that is, she acted disinterested in a way that made me
think, She really isn’t interested in anything but “that,” is she.
When most people say they don’t have any preferences when it comes to
food, you’ll turn up an ingredient they really like or a something that puts them
off if you hassle them about it long enough, but Ms. Kagenui’s curt response
gave no such impression, not even a crumb.
Ultimately, she was “scary” not because she was violent or hard to talk
to─it struck me at that moment that it was because she lacked the little things
that make people human.
Un-human─was that it?
In which case, closing the distance through small talk or attempts to create a
friendly atmosphere would be totally futile with her… Sure, not paying a price,
not needing to, made me feel ill at ease, but forcing money on someone who
didn’t want it would be no less weird.
Deciding that my malaise was a personal problem that I would just have to
deal with (along with treating Ononoki to some Häagen-Dazs sometime. And
I’m not talking about a cup, but a cone), I broached the real subject with Ms.
Kagenui.
“It’s mirrors.”
“Huh?”
“Mirrors─there’s no reflection. Of me. In them.”
“…”
From that point on, Ms. Kagenui listened to what I had to say without
giving any polite encouragement, but also without making fun of me, basically
with a serious expression─she heard me out about my half-baked transformation
into a vampire that didn’t correlate to Shinobu Oshino.
The Aberration Roller was totally absorbed.
“Now I’ve got the picture,” she nodded, after I finally finished speaking.
“Your sister. Your little sister. Sounds like she’s fit as a fiddle. Tsukihi Araragi,
little Tsukihi.”
“Uh, no, that’s not the point…”
“After listening to you jaw on about all that, how could a body not be
concerned about your deviant bath time with little sis? That’s one long bath, I
reckon.”
But that aside, said Ms. Kagenui, changing the subject even as she jabbed
me where it hurt.
It seemed that even she couldn’t resist quipping about The Battle for the
First Bath, but apparently her interests really were confined to immortal
aberrations, because she changed the subject almost immediately.
“I’m fixing to ask a few questions, that all right with you?”
“Please do. Ask me anything at all.”
“Just answer best you can remember. When was the last time you reckon
you saw your reflection in a mirror?”
“?”
“Listen here, there was likely a mirror in the changing room─when you
stripped down to your skivvies out there, did you have a reflection? And in the
bathroom itself, surely the mirror wasn’t fogged up right from the get-go. What
about when you first got in there? When you were giving your sister a
pompadour, for instance, you reckon there was anything then? Or if you don’t
remember that too well, how’s about before bed last night? When you were
brushing your teeth, or─”
“…”
Now that she was asking these questions, I realized I should’ve thought of
them right away. I was so fixated on the mysterious phenomenon of my lack of
reflection─that I hadn’t thought about when in the world, when in hell it had
started.
Even if I was panicking, that was still pretty negligent of me.
I searched my memory.
I searched─but came up empty. Humans take “having a reflection” for
granted, after all, so we don’t pay it any mind.
Even if we’re aware of it in the moment, it’s not going to form a lasting
memory─though of course, if I hadn’t had a reflection while I was brushing my
teeth the night before, you’d think I would have noticed then and there. I figured
we could say I’d still had a reflection at that point.
And probably also when I undressed in the changing room─if I hadn’t had a
reflection then, I would’ve noticed. So, I guess.
“We should assume that the last time I had a reflection was right before it
happened…I think. Before the mirror got fogged up… So I think the moment in
question was the first time I didn’t have a reflection.”
“Hmm…your toenails.”
“I’m sorry?”
“Your nails. Let’s see ’em.”
I let my hands droop like a ghost’s and displayed them to Ms.
Kagenui─who grimaced in displeasure and said, “Your toenails.”
Oh right.
Why would Ms. Kagenui be interested in my nail art?
They weren’t even decorated in the first place.
That being said, I honestly didn’t know how to show her my toenail when I
was standing in the middle of a vacant lot and she was up in the air on the
shoulders of a tween girl.
Well, nothing for it but to improvise since I didn’t have time for a
rehearsal… I took off my sneaker, removed my sock, balled the sock up and put
it into the shoe─then, taking a pose like the Y balance in rhythmic gymnastics, I
extended my foot towards Ms. Kagenui.
“That’s just about the strangest pose I’ve ever laid eyes on.”
What’s that supposed to mean, you’re the one who asked me!
But before I could even think that, Ms. Kagenui grabbed hold of the foot I’d
raised partway off the ground (I hadn’t actually made it to a full Y balance. I’m
not that flexible) and pulled it close to her face─I thought I was going to go head
over heels, which is to say I almost did go head over heels, but Ms. Kagenui kept
that from happening, by brute force.
In other words, she was able to support my entire body weight simply by
holding my ankle with one of her hands─just how strong was she?
Maybe they hadn’t exaggerated her brutality in the anime after all.
“Mirrors─”
“I’m sorry?”
“It’s plenty frightening not to have a reflection─sure enough it is, but
there’s an aberration what only appears in mirrors as well, I reckon.”
“Ah…you’re right.”
I couldn’t bring a name to mind─but I did recall hearing about ghosts that
only appear in mirrors, evil spirits that live in mirrors, aberrations that are
themselves mirrors.
There were too many to count.
I don’t think that had anything directly to do with the matter at hand,
though, I imagine Ms. Kagenui just brought it up to fill the time while she was
examining my toenail.
“What’d that child─that vampire, the former Kissshot Acerolaorion
Heartunderblade, have to say about this here toe?”
“Let’s see… That little girl, who’s sulking now thanks to you…said there’d
been an infinitesimal fracture that slowly sealed from the inside out, and that the
bone was fully healed─that was this morning’s diagnosis.”
“Was it now? This morning, eh? Well, take a looksee.”
“Sorr…eeeeee?”
Ms. Kagenui pulled my leg up even further and shoved the nail right up to
my face. My stance was now well past a Y balance, and more like an I balance.
Yes, it hurt.
The joints in my crotch groaned.
Or maybe it was just my voice I was hearing.
“See there. All better.”
“…”
To be frank, the pose was neither stable nor settled enough for me to
ascertain the state of something as small as my pinky toenail, but when I forced
my eyes up to look at it, sure enough, it seemed to be just as she said. The split
in the nail had repaired itself, and the scab was gone.
This may sound a bit overblown when all we’re talking about is a pinky
toenail, but─it was definitely a full recovery.
Yes, as though…as though a vampiric healing factor was in effect.
“It’s hard to tell from a purely external examination whether or not a
fracture has healed, but we don’t need an X-ray to see that the nail, at least, is
back to normal… And it’s definitely out of the question for a nail to repair itself
like this in just one day,” I summed up the situation for everyone’s benefit,
recapping the parts that added up, and the parts that didn’t. “But the weird thing
is, Ms. Kagenui─when I was putting on my socks to leave the house, my toe
wasn’t in nearly such good shape. It was pretty much like it’d been this morning
when Shinobu made her diagnosis… Superficially, at least, it hadn’t gotten better
at all.”
“The reason’s obvious, oblivious monstieur.” This response came not from
Ms. Kagenui but from below her, from Ononoki. She extended one finger
(probably just out of habit, but knowing the power inherent in that finger made it
a terrifying gesture) and pointed at the sky.
At the sky─the night sky.
The dark night sky, the sun having already set.
“Oh, I get it. A vampire’s power gets stronger at night─”
“And you’ve probably gotten plenty of moonlight. Moonbathing, not
sunbathing, salves a vampire’s wounds. Yaaay.”
The instant she said yaaay she got a kick from Ms. Kagenui. It was a
violent form of discipline, but I can’t say I didn’t see where she was coming
from.
Not that I’m in much of a position to talk, being partially to blame for that
yaaay.
“So that means Shinobu’s diagnosis was right. Her deduction that I’m
currently in vampire form means…”
It wasn’t just regular healing, it was creature-of-the-night healing─vampire
healing, in other words. No question about it.
“Well, I’ll not render judgment quite yet, I reckon─not having seen the
original wound and all. Here now, Yotsugi.”
“What is it, Big Sis?”
“Take a gander.” With that Ms. Kagenui tugged me around by my ankle
once more─not back to my original position, but to an angle slightly lower than
that of a Y balance, somewhere in the neighborhood of ninety to a hundred
degrees.
And just like that she jammed my bare foot up to Ononoki’s face. Right up
to it. She pushed the sole of my foot onto the tween girl’s face and rubbed it
around, which was pretty kinky in its own way.
I wondered what the onmyoji was doing, if it was to please me or
something, but then Ms. Kagenui instructed her familiar to “investigate.”
“Okay, okay.” With this somewhat recalcitrant response, Ononoki took my
ankle from Ms. Kagenui─come on, guys, my leg isn’t a relay baton.
Realistically, having it held by Ononoki instead of Kagenui should’ve been
scarier, beyond scary in fact, but at that moment I was somewhat relieved that
the baton had passed.
My relief only lasted a few seconds, though, really just the time it took for
Ms. Kagenui to pass me off to Ononoki, who quickly put my toe into her mouth
like a pacifier. This made even an inveterate veteran like myself quake with fear.
Shinobu tortuously torturing my foot was one thing, but putting it in your
mouth and sucking on it? That was something else entirely.
It didn’t even tickle.
“It’s crunchy.”
“Hey, no teeth! No biting, no biting!”
“Don’t get so cranky, it’s just a pinky toe.”
“Cranky─!”
Sensing imminent, potentially fatal danger, I pulled away my leg─while
Ms. Kagenui’s hold had been so tight that my leg probably would’ve torn right
off, Ononoki, despite holding it with both arms, was so intent on sucking on my
toe that I was able to extract myself easily.
“What d’you reckon, Yotsugi?”
“Results pending.”
“Well then, Araragi, my boy. While Yotsugi’s processing the flavor of your
foot, how’s about we move on to the next step? Your hand, if you please.”
“My hand?”
“Uh huh, just make believe I’m a fortune teller.”
I’d mistakenly offered her my hands when she wanted to see my toenail,
couldn’t she just have checked then? Proper sequence is crucial, was that it?
Actually, Oshino might have said something along those lines at one point.
Ms. Kagenui’s next step, however, didn’t refer to any crucial sequence.
It was probably about time to stop assuming that she and Oshino had
anything in common.
I put out my hand like she asked.
And she took hold of it gently, softly, indeed much like a fortune teller
would─so much so, in fact, that I wondered if she actually was going to read my
palm, like maybe my palm could elucidate everything about my current
situation. But that wasn’t what was going on.
“And a-one, and a-two.”
Ms. Kagenui took my outstretched hand and held my index and middle
fingers. Then she bent them back to an untenable angle. So it wasn’t my fingers
that she’d counted…
“G…
Gyaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!”
“What a ruckus, I do declare. Well, I’ve put up a barrier around the place,
so you can writhe and scream all you like, it won’t make a lick of difference.”
When?
It didn’t seem like she’d had an opportunity to put up a barrier, but I guess
that’s the kind of skill you should expect from a disciple (?) of Ms. Gaen’s. Not
that I had the leeway to be impressed.
I couldn’t even work up the energy to ask what she meant by a barrier.
Now, since I’ve been wounded so many times, and who even knows how
many times I’ve died, you’d think I’d be accustomed to pain. But pain isn’t
something you ever get accustomed to. When a vampire’s wound heals, it “goes
back to the way it was,” just like for a normal person; when you break a bone,
it’s not like it gets stronger than it was originally.
So I didn’t hold back. I collapsed and, just as Ms. Kagenui had offered,
writhed screaming on the ground.
“Owwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwwww! Wh-Wh-What are
you doing, Ms. Kagenui! You can’t suddenly owowowow─”
“Now this won’t do at all. Don’t only writhe around down there─turn your
mind to healing those fingers for a spell. Believe that they’ll heal. This is a test
of your healing ability.”
“T-Test?”
So then─
This act of violence, this unforgivable brutality, was just Ms. Kagenui’s
version of Shinobu scratching me with her claws─just a trial of my body’s
ability to heal itself?
Fine, I saw how this step couldn’t come first, but hold on a goddamn
second.
She was more ferocious than any aberration.
“You’ve got to put your mind to the grindstone. Think of your fingers
healing, conceive of it. Look here, those fingers are on your right hand, aren’t
they? And the way I broke them, the way they broke, it’ll take them plenty more
than a few piddling months to heal. You won’t be able to get back to a little thing
called exam prep with fingers like that, now, will you, unless you heal them
yourself.”
“Guh…”
Not exactly the best motivation.
In fact, broken fingers were a great excuse not to study─well, I’m injured,
nothing I can do about it.
Never underestimate a high school student’s desire to slack off.
Plus, without a better motivation for wanting to heal my broken fingers
ASAP─I could die from the pain. Maybe broken fingers didn’t kill you, but the
pain was killing me.
I mean, the fucking color they were turning.
What did you do to them, Ms. Kagenui?
Forget a few months, these fingers wouldn’t heal in a lifetime.
“G…
uuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuh
!”
Think about it.
Think, think, think.
Picture it with everything you’ve got.
If these fingers don’t heal. If these fingers don’t heal. If these fingers don’t
heal. If these fingers don’t heal. If these fingers don’t heal. If these fingers don’t
heal.
“If these fingers don’t heal…I won’t be able to fondle Hanekawa’s breasts!”
Well.
Even if they healed, I still wouldn’t get to.
Apparently, though, this incentive was more than adequate; it was perfect.
My two fingers, which had turned a blackish purple thanks to internal
hemorrhaging, healed instantaneously─went back to normal.
“Just how pubescent are you?” Ms. Kagenui said, smiling despite her
words.
Wasn’t she a broadminded sis. Not even appalled.
“But thank you kindly for demonstrating your healing factor, your manner
of regenerating. Now, Yotsugi, a body’s keen to hear the results of your
inspection.”
“Results still pending…I’m about 84 percent done. I’ve got the basic
picture, though. Big Sis Shinobu’s interpretation that he’s become a vampire is
probably correct. But…”
“But?”
Thanks for the worrisome conjunction.
“But─no, I can’t say the rest.”
“Hey, you’re making me worry,” I butted in. “Why’re you acting like that?”
“For my part, I’d rather talk to your parents first if possible.”
“…”
Ononoki was as expressionless as a doll, as a corpse, so it was always
impossible to tell if she was being serious, but I really hoped this was a joke.
I felt like I was being sentenced.
“So…that’s a joke, right, Ononoki? You’re kidding,” I tried to confirm.
“Um, the bit about your parents, yes… But maybe you’d better call Big Sis
Shinobu. Get her out of her hidey-hole in your shadow. I’d like to get that
demon’s opinion on this one.”
“I reckon that’s a good idea,” seconded Ms. Kagenui. “If I ruffled her
feathers by standing on her head earlier, I’ll happily apologize, so come now,
young man, summon the former Kissshot Acerolaorion Heartunderblade.”
“Okay…”
That all made good sense. I had some things I wanted to ask my buddy as
well, so I had no reason to refuse their request. But then, I’d already used up my
trump card that morning.
If I lured her out with fictitious donuts twice in one day, I really might end
up donutized─when night fell, she would’ve regained some of her power, maybe
enough to put a hole in me if she wanted.
Therefore.
“I’m sorry, Ms. Kagenui, but if I’m going to do that, do you mind if I make
a quick run to Mister Donut first?”
“What in tarnation?!”
A comeback in Kansai dialect!
Now, that was a treat.
“Don’t waste my time, young man, call her out of there lickety-split. I’ll not
wait around. If it seems like it’s fixing to take too long, I might just stick my
hand into your shadow and pull her out like some intestines.”
“Like some intestines?”
Was that a common figure of speech to go with “pull out”?
“I’m of a mind to rip that whole head of blond hair out at the─hm?”
Before Ms. Kagenui could complete whatever disturbing thought she was
about to express, Shinobu Oshino finally appeared from within my shadow.
Good timing, almost as if she’d heard what Ms. Kagenui was saying.
Unlike this morning when she popped out all lively with her fist in the air,
this time she rose out solemnly with great pomp and circumstance. She’d even
revamped her outfit into some kind of classy dress.
Her eyes seemed puffy, and knowing her as I did, I wanted to ask her if
she’d been crying herself a river in there, but as she made her entrance, arms
folded, her chin thrust high in the air so she could look down her nose at us, that
gruesome smile plastered on her face, there was no way I could rib her about it.
“Ah, the former Heartunderblade. Sorry ’bout having the audacity to stand
on your head earlier and all.”
“…”
“…”
“…”
Man, could she not read a room.
Some grown-up.
Sorry ’bout? Come on. And she didn’t seem the least bit contrite… This is
just a guess, but I bet Ms. Kagenui never once in her life admitted that she was
wrong.
“K…Kakak.”
Nevertheless, Shinobu did her best to laugh.
Such courage, it brought tears to your eyes.
“Kakak. It seems as though thine investigation of my master hath reached
its conclusion. Ye have my thanks for carrying it out in my stead. I suppose ’tis
true what they say, that to everything there is a season, if even ones such as you
can be of use to my lord.”
“Hahaha, my apologies. Truly, for having driven you to such ludicrously
untoward posturing. That was never my intent. Your head simply seemed a likely
place to come in for a landing.”
“…”
Enough already.
Daring to read other people’s minds when you can’t even read the room.
Seemed a likely place to come in for a landing… This was probably the first
time in her almost six hundred years that someone had made that particular
remark to Shinobu, and there was no question that it was an almost unthinkable
insult.
“Ka…kak.”
And yet she laughed. What backbone. Or she’d missed her chance to back
down, more like.
“W-Watch thy tongue, human─an expert ye may be, and an expert in
immortal aberrations at that, but do not for a moment think that means thou
knowest aught of me. Forget not, the only reason I have not slain thee on the
spot is so that thou might help resolve this physical malady that besets my lord
and master. Kakak.”
“Which is exactly why I’m apologizing to you, for stepping on your head
and all. For someone so short, you sure are long on pride. Come on, now, let’s
bury the hatchet. You nightwalkers are such gloomy folk. I’m real sorry, I’ll be
sure never to step on your head again.”
“…”
Gritting her teeth, Shinobu finally fell silent.
This was where I put on the brakes, worried that she might stay silent for
months like she did last time. “Stop it, Ms. Kagenui, please.”
At this, Ms. Kagenui looked stunned─apparently, she hadn’t been trying to
be mean and just didn’t have a clue. What an unpleasant person.
Everyone─and I mean everyone, even Kaiki─disliked her.
“You too, Shinobu, let it drop. No sense in opening up old wounds.”
“Y-Yet…”
Don’t clutch my sleeve with those tear-filled eyes.
It’s simply too pathetic. And adorably sympathetic.
“You bravely volunteered your own head,” I told her, “to protect mine from
the tread of Ms. Kagenui’s feet. That was a selfless act of devotion and personal
sacrifice. You can rest easy, your pride is intact, okay?”
“Huh? Oh, aye! ’Twas just as thou sayest, I protected thee, my lord. I am
badass indeed!”
Her mood improved in an instant─pathetic, adorable, but also a pain in the
ass and kind of a dodo.
“I can’t believe I lost to her…” muttered Ononoki, but Shinobu seemed to
be on cloud nine and didn’t hear her. Thank God for small favors. Favors both
large and small aside, everyone besides Ms. Kagenui was having a shitty time.
“Well now,” she said, “we have all the players, we have all the
information─time for all the answers, I reckon. It won’t do to leave the readers
with a mystery, so let’s get to the solution, shall we? Time to solve the riddle.”
“Solve the riddle…”
Something about her words bothered me.
My lack of a reflection wasn’t a riddle, it was just something that was
happening…
“Excellent. Proceed,” urged Shinobu.
Her mood improved, she seemed to be feeling generous─well, she’d tasted
the humiliation of being stepped on, but I imagine that the erstwhile king of
aberrations still had so much self-confidence, not to say self-conceit, that Ms.
Kagenui and Ononoki had nothing on her. Whether or not her self-image held
water was a different question.
“Koyomi Araragi─kind monster sir,” Ononoki began. “You are, at
present─or in the present progressive, turning into a vampire little by little by
little. That’s, well, the situation.”
“Turning into a vampire…”
“From human to vampire, little by little. I believe it’s what biologists call
metamorphosis, Latin mutatis, Japanese hentai. Hmm, only too appropriate for
you, monstieur.”
“…”
Was I supposed to laugh?
Not on your life.
My turn to be expressionless.
But it didn’t come as a surprise, Shinobu’s inspection that morning having
already told me as much, and Ms. Kagenui’s inspection (if that’s what you want
to call that outburst of violence) having just confirmed it.
“Turning into a vampire… Mm-hmm.”
“How now, young man. You don’t seem particularly put out.”
“Well, I’ve become a vampire so many times at this point… I’m obviously
not going to be as freaked out as I was the first time, over spring break. I don’t
want to brag in front of experts like yourselves, but I’ve had more on my plate
over the past year than you might think…”
The past few months in particular had been pretty extreme.
The stuff with Hachikuji, the stuff with Sengoku─
And.
That transfer student.
“I’m sure you have,” Ononoki agreed.
In an insinuating tone.
“You held that plate out like a moron.”
“What?”
“Nothing,” the familiar shook her head.
Her barb, loaded with a scathing sarcasm that could only have come from
Kaiki, was too indirect, too roundabout, for me to understand what she was
getting at.
When I said I didn’t want to brag, was I actually bragging? Had an expert
been offended by the remarks of a noob who was still in high school? No,
Ononoki wasn’t the type.
Whatever the case, the fact that her personality was different every time we
met made her tricky to deal with. It’s hard to get accustomed to such a mercurial
character.
“Don’t be so harsh on the boy, Yotsugi. I’ll not deny the young man here
may have behaved moronically, but I reckon some part of that responsibility lies
with us,” Ms. Kagenui covered for me, if that’s what she was doing, for
whatever reason─okay, fine, I have no clue what she was pulling there.
Suddenly I realized it was past nine o’clock.
Sure, everything had taken a while, but our meeting had been set for seven.
Could we get to it already?
“As for why you’re metamorphosing, monstieur. As for why the hentai is
being perverted into a vampire…”
Not gonna let that one drop, huh?
What’s the deal, got a bone to pick with me?
“It has nothing to do with your interrelationship with the former Kissshot
Acerolaorion Heartunderblade─I think you probably already knew that, but it’s
important enough that it bears repeating.”
“Nothing to do with Shinobu…but can I really be turning into a vampire
independent of the fact that she used to be one?”
“You can. There’s one last thing I want to clarify. Sis,” Ononoki turned to
Shinobu, “do you really not have some inkling? Of why─this is happening to
kind monster sir, your lord, your master?”
Shinobu seemed displeased. “Had I, I would not stoop to asking the likes of
thee for aid.”
“And Oshino never said a word about it?” asked Ms. Kagenui.
“Nay. ’Tis true that I cannot recall everything he spoke of─most of it
washed over me like a cool breeze, but had he touched on something of such dire
import, I would remember.”
“I reckon you would,” Ms. Kagenui took Shinobu’s somewhat cocky
remark in stride. “Yes indeedy, I reckon even Oshino missed this one. It was
irregular, or, an oversight. If he’d known things were going to go this way, he’d
never have let such misgivings go unheeded.”
“An oversight? Oshino? Is that even possible? How can that be, how can a
guy who acted like he saw through everything─”
An oversight.
Just thinking about it freaked me out.
“He didn’t really,” Ms. Kagenui corrected me. “And for what it’s worth, he
might see through to the truth of the matter but not take care of it for you. He’s
like Gaen-senpai in that way. Strict, or businesslike when it comes to that sort of
thing, wont to operate solely on the basis of profit and loss. If’n you ask me,
even a capricious contrarian like Kaiki at least has a little more warmth to him.”
“…”
I had some reservations about calling it “warmth,” but true, while a pain in
the ass about money, Kaiki’s petty accounting was also very human.
“Still and all, I reckon this time around it was nothing but a plain old
oversight─in other words, it was opaque to Mister All-Seeing, to Mèmè
Oshino.”
“Opaque─to Oshino.”
Saying those words out loud made me realize just how anomalous they felt.
Maybe it was plausible to Ms. Kagenui, who’d known Oshino since college and
seen her share of his failures, but to me, after everything he’d done for me this
year─after watching him “see through” everything time and time again, it
sounded like a bad joke.
A bad joke. A bad reality.
A bad─paranormal phenomenon.
“Isn’t that a big deal? Something that’s never happened before is happening
in my body─something unprecedented, something that my accumulated
experience is useless in dealing with─”
“Keep your shirt on. It’s certainly unusual, that much is true. For Oshino’s
predictions and judgments to be wrong, I mean─but still, young man, it’s a hoot
to see you so shocked by it.”
“A h-hoot?”
I guess from Ms. Kagenui’s perspective as a fellow specialist and old friend
of Oshino’s, my level of shock seemed pretty ridiculous─no need to come right
out and say it, though.
It hurt my feelings.
Man is she oblivious, I started to think, but apparently that wasn’t what was
going on since Ms. Kagenui went on to say:
“But the fact that this particular matter was opaque to Oshino was entirely
your fault.”
“…? Huh?”
I was shocked again, if you want to talk about shocked, but more than that,
I was bewildered.
I simply didn’t understand what she meant, but if she was saying that
Koyomi Araragi was opaque to Mèmè Oshino, that was impossible.
I was like a flimsy piece of tracing paper to him─so transparent you could
see right through to the other side.
I had always been the insubstantial, weak Koyomi Araragi to him.
Always and forever, consistently─I had never once stymied his predictions.
I’m not like Hanekawa. And not even she threw him off all the time─
“Please tell me what you mean, Ms. Kagenui. How did I throw Oshino off
his game? I think you must be wrong about that… But if something of the sort
happened─I need to know.”
“I’ll let you know the moment I do. That’s what I’ve come here to find
out─but one thing’s certain, there’s trouble brewing. We could very well─that is,
if things keep on this way…”
Me and Yotsugi here. We might have no choice but to kill you, she stated.
She did so without lowering her voice or changing her tone perceptibly, as
though it was just part of the natural flow of the conversation.
“…”
“No choice but to kill you─if things go south, that is. Now then, young
man. It’s easy as pie to see why your body’s metamorphosing into a
vampire’s─why you’re clearly headed in that direction. Honestly, it doesn’t take
an expert, it’s so simple you should’ve figured it out all by your lonesome.”
You could’ve been self-aware enough to awake to the reality, she chided.
“What, do you mean?”
“You turned into a vampire too much.”
Ms. Kagenui said this in, you guessed it, the exact same tone─and from
there, Ononoki took over, you guessed it, expressionlessly, speaking in her
overwhelmingly placid voice.
“You just kept piling more on your plate─you moron. In the course of
solving all those problems, you relied too much on your power as a vampire, and
so, irrespective of the former Heartunderblade, your immortal soul inexorably
ended up approaching vampiredom.”
“Approaching─”
“You’ve been literally transforming yourself into a vampire.”
010
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
Week. The end of April and into the beginning of May─a nightmare. Tsubasa
Hanekawa, who’d played a central role in restoring my humanity, was bewitched
by a cat.
It took more than a spritz of water in the face to repel that malicious,
murderous feline assault on Hanekawa─on the world itself. I did it by exploiting
my vampiric power.
The might of a vampire.
I employed the vampiric strength that I lost over spring break, which you’d
think I would’ve abhorred, that power I risked my life to escape, and defeated
the cat─well, temporarily sealed it away, anyway.
Incidentally, I regained my vampiric power by giving my blood to Shinobu.
By letting the little girl bite me in the neck. It all comes down to this. At the
time, Shinobu was not yet bound in my shadow, so I had to give her blood at
regular intervals, but on that occasion I let her exceed her usual dosage─and so
was able to turn into a vampire, or more precisely, a thrall of the Aberration
Slayer.
I was able to─for better or for worse.
But then, during the subsequent school term─when Oshino was still around,
in other words─the only time I really used my vampiric power was that time
with Kanbaru, the thing with her and the monkey.
With Senjogahara, who met a crab.
With Hachikuji, waylaid by a snail.
With Sengoku, entangled by a snake.
Not to mention the second time Hanekawa was bewitched by the cat─on
each occasion I dealt with the aberration-related phenomenon in question solely
as a human being.
If Ononoki was right and I in fact leaned too hard on my power as a
vampire, it had to be later on─like when Karen Araragi was stung by a bee.
When she was stung by a bee thanks to Kaiki’s scheming─I used my
vampiric healing factor to absorb some of the blistering fever that wracked her
body.
And then it was Tsukihi’s turn.
The matter both concerning and involving Tsukihi─it was Obon, and that
was when it came to blows with Ms. Kagenui and Ononoki. In order to battle the
Aberration Roller, slayer of immortal aberrations, I transformed myself into an
immortal aberration. A vampire.
To tell the truth, even having commandeered the strength of a vampire, I
was no match for Ms. Kagenui─but regardless, that must’ve been the inflection
point.
When I stopped being human.
And began metamorphosing into a vampire.
A rapid-fire series of aberration-related phenomena cropped up since the
last day of summer break and throughout second term─and each time, to deal
with them, I turned into an immortal vampire.
I got used to using my vampiric power, relying on my vampiric power,
wielding my vampiric power to deal with these unreliable and unwieldy
aberration-related phenomena─sometimes I even used it to deal with other
things.
I leaned on it most heavily when Sengoku was entangled by a snake for the
second time─no, when she was the one who entangled the snake.
That was when it really started.
I wanted to save Sengoku.
So I turned into a vampire almost every day hoping to resolve the
situation─which wasn’t very effective as it turned out, and in fact effectively one
hundred percent counter-productive, but anyway, that went on for a month, two
months.
And that brings us to the present moment.
The present situation.
The present phenomenon.
“Basically, monstieur, you spent too much time as an immortal aberration.
You overdid it, blithely bouncing back and forth like that. I imagine that as far as
you were aware, you weren’t ‘overdoing’ anything, let alone ‘blithely,’ but
still…” said Ononoki.
I sensed something like sympathy in her tone, but that had to be my own
self-serving imagination─she was speaking in her quiet, placid voice like
always.
Placid, and expressionless.
“No…I did do it blithely.”
I had to admit it.
I had to acknowledge it.
It wasn’t the first time someone pointed this out to me─Senjogahara and
Hanekawa and others from the female camp had warned that I was blithely over-
relying on my power as an immortal ever since Oshino’s disappearance.
Not that I was self-aware about it.
But it was definitely true that any reluctance I’d once felt about using my
vampiric power─about becoming immortal, had slowly but surely faded. Not
only that, but I felt a strange sense of connection every time I used my vampiric
power to fight alongside a reinvigorated Shinobu.
Euphoria?
Well, there was certainly some of that.
Of course there was.
Anyone with a pulse would feel the same way.
Any average high school student who got to wield a power that transcends
the human realm, transcends human knowledge, and denies the thrill of it would
be full of it─as would anyone who denies getting lost in all that power.
“So you’re saying that because I borrowed Shinobu’s strength too
frequently, I myself fully transformed into a vampire? But I was being so careful
to avoid that!”
Oshino had cautioned me over and over again, after all: to maintain
Shinobu’s existence in this world, I had to keep giving her my blood in
perpetuity, but I also needed to be super-careful about the dosage.
He strictly enjoined me that if I gave her too much, if I let her drink too
much blood, Shinobu would become an aberration once again─the aberration-
slaying king of aberrations.
At the same time.
He enjoined me (just as strictly) that I would transform into a vampire as
well. So even when I let Shinobu drink my blood so I could fight, I never once
exceeded the proper threshold─at least I didn’t think I did.
“You’re not listening, it’s not about your relationship with Big Sis Shinobu.
It’s totally unrelated to you giving her your blood. Well, it’s indirectly related, of
course, but…the why and how and who-drank-your-blood of your
transformations into a vampire isn’t really the issue. Until now you’ve been
‘metamorphosing’ by borrowing Big Sis Shinobu’s power, but it would’ve been
the same if you’d borrowed from a different vampire each time.”
“…”
“Let me give it to you straight, monstieur. I’ll put it as plainly as I can. It’s
not that you became a vampire too often, it’s that you became too comfortable
about becoming one. You got too used to using the power. You got too good at
it─at this point you could become a vampire even without Shinobu.”
“Wait.”
Wait a sec.
I couldn’t keep up─no, that wasn’t true, I was keeping up, or in fact, I’d
finished the upkeep on my mental filing cabinet a while ago. I was convinced.
So if this were somebody else’s problem, I would’ve totally agreed with her
here. I’d probably have praised her to the skies: Great deduction, Ononoki.
But this was my problem.
No matter how true, if it was also tragic, if it was also a failure I didn’t want
to acknowledge─I couldn’t swallow it just like that.
“But Ononoki. Is it…is it really that easy to become a vampire? You just do
it too much, get too used to doing it, and then you’ve done it?”
“Dance with the devil, and you’ll become the devil─play with a demon, and
you’ll become a demon. And you really took the initiative playing that game.”
“I…didn’t feel like I was playing.”
“Of course you didn’t, young man, that’s just a manner of speaking. You
were dead serious. I reckon I can vouch for that myself, having battled you in
your vampire form. Otherwise, a body wouldn’t have backed off,” Ms. Kagenui,
silent all this time, finally interjected.
Well, Ononoki was only ever acting as her mouthpiece anyway, and as her
familiar the opinions she expressed were most likely hers and Ms. Kagenui’s,
there being no difference between the two.
“Or maybe I ought to say you were seriously off your rocker. It might sound
strange for me to go around jawing about what’s normal, but normal sure as
shooting doesn’t include becoming a monster to protect your little sister.”
“…”
“Listen, young man, this might seem to you like it’s coming out of left
field, but it’s not as uncommon as all that─it’s not easy, but it’s not all that
uncommon either. There are even those among us experts what end up becoming
aberrations themselves. It’s a particularly marked tendency among my closest
colleagues, by which I mean onmyoji. Which is why, to avoid it,” Ms. Kagenui’s
gaze dropped to Ononoki beneath her feet.
A chilly gaze, her eyes cold.
“I employ this here stand-in.”
“…”
“That’s how dangerous facing an aberration head-on can be─Oshino
must’ve told you? That once you’ve dealt with an aberration, you’re much more
liable to get drawn in again.”
He did tell me that, yes.
But what he didn’t tell me…
“If I transformed into a vampire too often, I’d end up as one myself─that,
he never mentioned.”
“Because he failed to see it. What kind of a person you are, I mean. That
was where he miscalculated. No, maybe never calculated at all─can’t
miscalculate if you never calculated in the first place. Sure enough, that’s why I
say it was an oversight. He never predicted that you, young man, would
transform into a vampire so frequently in such a short span.”
“That…”
That definitely wasn’t a miscalculation─nor was it an oversight.
Uh-uh.
That was an error in judgment.
“So you’re saying…I betrayed Oshino’s faith in me? Is that what it boils
down to? He never expected me to do it. To keep on borrowing the power of an
immortal aberration so blithely─to rely too much on a vampire─”
Shinobu.
He entrusted the former Kissshot Acerolaorion Heartunderblade to me,
entrusted her to my shadow, and I betrayed that trust.
I couldn’t live up to his expectations.
Shinobu’s power, Shinobu’s existence.
I used them like convenient tools─and that was something not even he
could’ve seen.
Which is why he never informed me of this possibility.
Nor did he inform─Shinobu.
He almost certainly.
Thought it’d be rude.
“…”
“’Course, we can only guess at what Oshino’s intentions might’ve been─for
all we know, he just plumb forgot. And what about this, young man: supposing
he’d told you about this possibility, would you have shrunk from making use of
the vampire’s power? Even if you’d known it would cost you your humanity,
you’d’ve done it anyway, no?”
Words of comfort.
Were something I’d never expect to hear from Ms. Kagenui. She was too
violent, too careless, too oblivious. Probably she was just thinking out loud.
There’s really no way of knowing what I would’ve done.
If I’d known beforehand, maybe I could’ve done something about it, or
maybe I’d have been well and truly scared off.
“So you’re saying the reason my healing factor is so slow…or that I have a
healing factor at all, even if it’s non-existent compared to when I was Shinobu’s
thrall over spring break, the fact that I have some level of immortality, is proof
that my transformation into a vampire is unconnected to Shinobu? In other
words, I’m not transforming into Shinobu’s thrall, but into my own brand─my
own breed of vampire.”
“That’s about the size of it. Though, typologically speaking, I reckon you’d
be treated as a natural vampire.”
“There are two types of vampires, monstieur. Two breeds. Natural
vampires, and human beings who become vampires after being bitten by one─it
might seem like you belong in the latter category, but as it happens you’re
classified as the former. Someone who transforms into a vampire, who becomes
one, is a natural vampire.”
“I don’t really understand that reasoning…”
I never really understood what I was told over spring break either, but this
seemed even more confusing.
Or rather, viewing vampires as organisms and trying to understand their
ecology already seemed outside the framework of human understanding.
“Seems like the incident involving the serpent deity was the biggest
problem─you really, really, really, really, really overdid it there, monstieur─you
turned into a vampire almost every day. ‘High frequency’ doesn’t even begin to
cover it. You spent more time as a vampire than you did as a human during that
period, didn’t you?”
“Sure…”
It was my fault that Sengoku had done that─that she ended up like that. Or I
felt responsible, at least─so that’s why.
That’s why.
“I think I’ve got some kind of grasp of the situation. I wouldn’t call it a firm
grip, but…what do I do, Ononoki?”
“Do about what?” she threw the question back to me so ingenuously that I
fell silent for a moment─and a bad feeling washed over me, but I quickly
dispelled it, interpreting her response as a request to be more specific. I
rephrased my question.
“What do I do to become human again?”
When was it?
It must’ve been over spring break that I’d asked Shinobu more or less the
same question─what had her answer been?
Whatever, that was the past.
How she answered back then was irrelevant─what I needed to know.
And the one thing I knew I didn’t want to hear─was Ononoki’s hopeless
reply.
“Kind monster sir,” she said.
Like a doll, looking at me with those doll’s eyes.
Without hesitation or consideration.
“There’s no way to fix this.”
011
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, the
implications go beyond “just telling it like it is.”
In other words, human beings.
Can be self-aware about the boundaries of what they know─however, they
can’t always and in every circumstance be self-aware about the boundaries of
what they don’t know.
By way of example, I can state with certainty that I don’t know French─no
question about it. This is an example of “knowing” what I “don’t know.”
But let’s say there’s a country somewhere that I don’t know about because
I’m a lazy student and I’m weak in world history, and a language that’s only ever
spoken in this country (call it “Araraginospeakese”). Naturally, I wouldn’t know
that language─but wouldn’t even know that I didn’t, because I wouldn’t even
know that it existed.
Even a student as lazy as me has heard people talk about the wisdom of
realizing your own ignorance. It’s the Socratic Paradox: “I know that I know
nothing.” But it’s virtually impossible to articulate the actuality of this aphorism.
Probatio diabolica, the so-called Devil’s Proof. If some stubborn middle
schooler pressed Socrates, Do you really know everything that you don’t know?
he’d have to admit defeat─though of course, I’m pretty sure they didn’t have
middle schoolers in Ancient Greece.
Now, what was I talking about?
Oh yeah.
About how maybe people don’t actually know anything about the things
they think they know─because they don’t know what they don’t know. And
about how maybe some chance encounter is what it takes for them to realize
what they don’t know.
Hanekawa might put it like this: “I don’t know anything about what I don’t
know.”
If you know what you don’t know, then maybe you can learn about it, but if
you don’t know what you don’t know, then you can’t act to remedy the
situation─now I’ve gotten myself all confused, but anyway.
The message contained in the string of cranes that Tadatsuru Teori left in
Suruga Kanbaru’s alcove indicated that the appointed place was Kita-Shirahebi
Shrine─apparently the message employed some kind of code used between
experts, so that no matter how smart you are, you can’t figure it out unless you
know the keyword.
I’m only going to reveal the bare minimum about how Ms. Kagenui
deciphered it, though, out of consideration for everything she did on my behalf.
First she performed the maddening task of unfolding all the cranes one by
one─flattening them back out into simple sheets of origami paper, an
unproductive activity if there ever was one, never mind that there were a
thousand of them.
Given the scale of the endeavor, it seemed like I could’ve helped, and I
even offered to, but she refused me flatly, and rather impolitely at that. Ms.
Kagenui seemed to be the kind of person you encounter in school sometimes,
you know the type, who hates being helped no matter how banal the task─in
fact, Senjogahara used to be exactly that type. And it’s easy enough for a person
like me to understand not wanting someone to throw off your rhythm, even if it’s
less efficient.
Though given the circumstances, it made me antsy to watch someone doing
something so obviously inefficient─as luck would have it, Ms. Kagenui was at
least adroit at it. She briskly unfolded the origami cranes with an almost
mesmerizing dexterity. To the point that it actually did seem more efficient for
her to do it without my help, after all.
The majority of the one thousand unfolded sheets of origami paper (and
there really were a thousand. Exactly one thousand. Usually a string of a
thousand cranes is only about half that) were just that, sheets of origami paper.
No, majority isn’t the right word; nine hundred ninety-nine of the thousand
cranes were plain old origami paper, plain old paper cranes.
But the other crane.
The other sheet of paper.
Had a message written on the back in felt-tip pen─and deciphering this
message, which looked to me like nothing more than a hasty scrawl, yielded:
Kita-Shirahebi Shrine.
“Seems like there’d be no way for an ordinary person to even realize that
this message was here… Leaving a code on one paper crane among a thousand,
it’s so inefficient it makes my head spin…”
“Now, that there is precisely the warped aesthetic sense I’m talking
about─it’s a question of patience. The pursuit of efficiency alone is hollow, and
it ain’t no picnic to make one of these, a string of cranes.”
Tadatsuru made these all himself, finished Ms. Kagenui, sounding
protective of Tadatsuru Teori for the first time─probably completing the task had
relaxed her, or she’d let her guard down a little in the glow of accomplishment
she felt for unfolding a thousand paper cranes. She’s human after all, I thought to
myself.
“It doesn’t say anything about a time?”
“’Fraid not. Just a place. But I reckon it’s got to be tonight─otherwise the
police would be apt to get involved. Three young fillies getting kidnapped is
clearly a criminal matter.”
“What would Tadatsuru do then?”
“What, meaning?”
“Um…meaning, in that case, what would Tadatsuru do to my sisters and
my friend?”
“Well.”
One short word.
But that one word was more than enough.
“The one thing I can say for sure is that Tadatsuru knows I’m here─knows
I’ve come to this town. Because otherwise he wouldn’t have used a code that
only other experts would understand, an inefficient means of communication that
you, young man, wouldn’t even have known to look for.”
“O-Oh yeah. Of course. You’re right, of course.”
It had taken me a while to get there, but once she said it, it was obvious. If
I’d been alone, I would’ve just picked up the crane and jumped when it became a
string of a thousand, and that would’ve been the end of it.
If Ononoki hadn’t been there to tell me it was an “advance notice,” I might
have let my anger take over and crumpled the whole thing up into a ball.
Folding a thousand paper cranes was hardly worth it for Tadatsuru if the
objective was just to startle me.
Interesting.
That meant that just as Ms. Kagenui already knew about Tadatsuru from
Ms. Gaen, Tadatsuru somehow knew that Ms. Kagenui was here in town, and
probably also that she was accompanied by her constant companion, Ononoki.
In which case.
“Hm? So is this Tadatsuru calling me out knowing full well that you two
are my sort-of allies? Knowing who you are, he’s antagonizing you? No way.
Would anyone really do that?”
“Come now, young man, how dangerous do you think we are?”
Well, incredibly.
More than anyone else in the world.
Was not something I was about to say.
That would’ve been like sticking out my head so someone could chop it off.
“I’ve told you a thousand times, I use violence only in the service of slaying
immortal aberrations─never against human beings. Generally speaking.”
“Generally speaking? That’s a terrifying caveat… But how do you plan to
apply that? Oh, wait, is that what you’re saying? That even if Tadatsuru
antagonizes you, he has absolutely nothing to worry about?”
“I wouldn’t say that, monstieur. Since I don’t operate under the same
constraints as Big Sis,” Ononoki interjected as placidly as ever, “I’ll fucking
blow Tadatsuru to smithereens.”
“Watch your language.” From atop Ononoki’s shoulders, Ms. Kagenui
kicked her in the head. Again with the violence. But then, Ononoki’s an
immortal aberration, so maybe it was okay? “Say, I’ll respectfully encourage him
to become smithereens.”
“Come on, who’s ever heard of such a genteel character,” muttered
Ononoki, before turning to look at me. “Listen, monstieur. It’s not like little old
me doesn’t have some small connection to your sisters. So you can count on my
complete cooperation─provided that you under no condition commandeer Big
Sis Shinobu’s power, of course.”
“I intend to abide by that condition, sure…but why go to the trouble of
bringing it up again right now?”
Did she have so little faith in me?
Well, I didn’t have much faith in myself either, but it was a straight-up
shock that a character as ingenuous, as unworldly, by which I mean as gullible as
Ononoki, wouldn’t have faith in me.
“It’s obvious, isn’t it? It’s because I have no faith in your powers of restraint
or self-control… And the truth is, I don’t relish the thought of Big Sis and me
having to fight you and the former Heartunderblade because you turned into a
vampire, a full vampire.”
“…”
She threw that in without changing her intonation at all, so it took me a
minute to understand that all she meant was, I don’t want to be your enemy.
And while it may have been no more than Ononoki’s personal take…it was
really heartening that someone would say that to me under those circumstances.
What the hell was wrong with me? I found it so heartening that I wanted to
cry.
“Then again, I can only assume Tadatsuru has taken precautions against me.
Taken every precaution he can. Originally─”
“No need to finish that sentence, Yotsugi. Sometimes it’s easier to keep it
on the need-to-know. Anyway, we know where he is, and we know where he’s
coming from─nothing to do now but act.” Ms. Kagenui, having cut off whatever
Ononoki was about to say, looked at the watch on her left wrist. The band was a
slender chain. I’m relatively conscious of the fact that I wear a watch, so I end
up being conscious of other people’s watches as well… In any case, apparently it
indicated that it was “after one in the morning. We’d best have this settled before
daybreak─any way you slice it. In other words, young man, your mission,
should you choose to accept it, is to have your two little sisters and your friend,
Gaen-senpai’s niece, back home and snug in their beds before daybreak.”
Hmm.
Summed up like that, it all seemed so simple─and even “better” than its
simplicity was the fact that the mission didn’t include an obligation to defeat or
even fight Tadatsuru Teori─in other words, it was feasible for us to come up
with a plan to outwit Tadatsuru and get the hostages back without bloodshed.
Not just feasible, that was the whole idea.
That was what we needed to do.
Since I couldn’t currently use my vampiric power─the whole idea was for
me to face my travails using only human ingenuity.
To do my part as a human being.
“But once they’re back home and snug in their beds, I can’t just leave them
with the traumatic memory of being assaulted in their sleep and getting
kidnapped by some stranger.”
“Then make them forget. I reckon five or six blows to the head should do
the trick.”
“…”
Jesus, lady.
Well, Tsukihi had no memories of a similar experience she’d had over the
summer…but I had to wonder.
Would it go that smoothly this time around?
No, I could worry about that later─first I had to weather tonight’s storm, or
there’d be nothing to worry about to begin with.
Given how meticulously our opponent had prepared that code, not to
mention all those cranes, that would be no mean feat─but I had to do it. I had to,
because I was a person.
Because I was a human being.
“Okay, Ononoki. I’m sorry to ask, but do you think we can take another hop
to Kira-Shirahebi Shrine? It’s located…”
It wasn’t going to be so easy to look up that spot up in the mountains on a
smart phone, and we needed to be pretty precise in our landing point, so it was
going to be tough, but considering how little time we had and how long it would
take to get there otherwise, we had no choice but to travel to our appointed
meeting under Ononoki’s steam.
With that in mind I started explaining where the shrine was, but Ms.
Kagenui cut in. “You might as well stop right there. Tadatsuru sent us this
message knowing full well that Yotsugi is here, so approaching from above is
out. An aerial assault what comes from the clear blue sky’ll leave you too
exposed, it’ll be over before it starts.”
What would be over and why wasn’t clear to me─what, were we going to
be picked off by anti-aircraft fire? However, she was definitely correct that if we
wanted to catch him unawares, arriving at the appointed location from the open
sky (the fact that it was night notwithstanding) was not the most advisable
strategy.
“Fine, then Ononoki can jump to somewhere near the mountain, and we go
on foot the rest of the way…”
Going mountain climbing with Ononoki again?
We had a strange habit of getting lost in the mountains together.
Maybe we should join Wandervogel?
“I’ll take the normal route,” Ms. Kagenui declared, “and join up with you
by and by─but don’t delay on my account, start the rescue operation when you
see fit. Act on your own judgment. Even once I’m there, I probably won’t be
able to help out the team anyway.”
“…”
No, probably not.
Plus, if we waited for Ms. “can’t touch the ground” Kagenui to get there,
the sun might come up already.
“Roger. Okay then,” I said, putting my arms around Ononoki’s waist.
It occurred to me each time I did that it must be kind of an indecent sight.
“By the way, Ononoki. Do you think you might be able to keep to a lower
altitude? Just a teensy-weensy bit?”
“Can’t do a lower altitude,” Ononoki said.
Expressionlessly.
“But I can do a lower velocity. Want me to?”
“No.” With my face buried in her side and my arms wrapped around her in
a bear hug, I shook my head. “That’s okay. Blast off!”
015
“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
Hanekawa told me so, but what’s the mountain itself called, I wonder? Never
occurred to me to ask.
Hmm.
Is this realization that I don’t know something the wisdom of knowing my
own ignorance?
“Hm? What did you say, Ononoki?”
“Oh nothing─just a half-baked prediction. Even supposing it were true,
what would her motive be? Though I guess she said it herself: she wants to put
things right─but what does that even mean? What is right, anyway? I’m an
aberration, a shikigami, a corpse, a tsukumogami─that’s probably more than
enough to qualify me as wrong. It’s all smoke and mirrors anyway, I’m just
finagling my way through life─or death, I guess, using every trick in the book.
But even if I’m an extreme example, isn’t the same more or less true of human
beings too?”
“…”
“Like, just for instance, kind monster sir─you’ve fought in the past to
protect Tsukihi…right? You fought desperately to protect her secret─but I
wonder, did you actually pull it off?”
“What are you trying to say? That I fought for no reason?”
“No, not at all─not at all. I’m just wondering if there really is such a thing
as a secret in the first place, a secret that nobody knows. Whether it’s really
possible for Tsukihi’s parents and sister, her classmates and seniors and juniors,
in other words for all the people around her, not to know the truth.”
“Are you saying I risked my life to protect an open secret?”
If so, that would make me the biggest clown of them all─and yet I couldn’t
come up with anything to refute Ononoki’s theory, at least not right then.
But yes.
It was definitely absurd to imagine that I was the only one who knew my
little sister’s secret─even if no one knew the truth, the whole truth, how could
Tsukihi keep such a massive secret from everyone else? It seemed impossible
that no one would know.
In fact, it was much more realistic to imagine that everyone knew─but
wasn’t saying anything.
“I shouldn’t let that discourage me, though─because then I’m not alone,
then everybody’s out to protect Tsukihi.”
That thought gave me a thought.
A pretty shameless thought.
That if everyone found out about my situation─maybe they’d protect me as
well.
That was probably aiming a little high.
“Listen, I’m just spit-balling, all I’m saying is that maybe it’s possible,”
qualified Ononoki. “At the end of the day, even though everyone’s pretty glum,
they do their best to seem glib─just enough to make everything seem right with
a world where everything really isn’t. Just enough to make it seem like there’s
some kind of order to the universe, to their lives.”
“You make it sound like the world is made of papier-mâché.”
“More like the painted backdrop to a play─or maybe just a giant
international expo. Same goes for Tadatsuru, I bet.”
“…”
“Do you want to hear about him?” asked Ononoki.
Incidentally, our marching order was her in front, trailblazing a path
through the trees, and me following behind on the path she created, like a total
loser.
Totally reliant on her.
They say snakes bite the second person that comes through, so it’s not like I
had it easy. But when it came to the requisite power to forge a path up a
mountain, I couldn’t hold a candle to Ononoki. I had no choice but to follow
after her like a loser. How have the mighty fallen. Pitiful, just like Ogi said.
“To be perfectly honest, no, I don’t.”
“Really? Even though he’s abducted three of your dearest people?”
“Yup. For me, the ideal course of events is that we take this Tadatsuru by
surprise, snatch the three hostages from under his nose, and come back down the
mountain without him ever seeing us or finding out that we were there.
Conversely, nothing could make me happier than to get this over with without
ever seeing Tadatsuru’s face, hearing him speak, or generally knowing anything
about him whatsoever.”
“That would be wonderful. That would definitely be ideal, tonight, in light
of our plight. But that’ll just get us through tonight’s plight; it won’t actually
resolve anything. What do they call that─a game of fox and mouse, of tanuki
and mouse…”
“A game of cat and mouse.”
“Right. That’s the one. A game of cat and mouse…an endless string of
fruitless battles. Doesn’t feel like much of a game, honestly. Though I bet a cat
would have a lot of fun with an endless string.”
Ononoki unconsciously darted glances in every direction─maybe all this
talk of animals made her feel like they were out there somewhere, close by. Not
that I’d ever heard anything about foxes or tanuki or even cats on that mountain.
It felt like literally anything could appear out of that darkness, though─who
knew it would be so hard to walk at night when you couldn’t see in the dark?
It took all my concentration just to keep from tripping.
And I was covered in cuts… Would little wounds like that heal right away,
given my current state?
“So I think you’re going to have to ‘convince’ Tadatsuru like you’ve done
in the past─face him, talk it over with him, and make him give it up.”
“You might be right…but talking it over isn’t actually such a mature
solution. Lately I’ve been thinking that hashing it out is no different from
fighting it out, it’s just another form of violence. Which is why, to tell the truth,
after we recover the hostages I want to shut myself up in my room and let you or
Ms. Gaen or Ms. Kagenui take care of the rest.”
“That really is the unvarnished truth, isn’t it? It makes me happy that you
can be so honest with me. Well, it seems like Ms. Gaen is working to protect
you, monstieur…this time, anyway. She really seems to have taken a shine to
you. Or maybe she feels responsible, in her own way.”
“Responsible? For what?”
“Well, I bet she’s super-conscious of failing to prevent what happened to
Nadeko Sengoku… Ms. Gaen’s not the type to regret it, but maybe she’s trying
to make amends for it. Since the thing with Nadeko Sengoku has been one of the
main drivers of your precipitous descent into vampiredom these past few
months.”
“But that was just a matter of time anyway. Just a question of whether it’d
happen sooner or later─even without the whole Sengoku thing, other problems
would’ve cropped up. I would’ve borrowed Shinobu’s power to deal with each
of them, gotten complacent about wielding the unbridled fury of my vampiric
power, gotten carried away─and lost my humanity. Am I wrong?”
“You’re not wrong. Which is why you’ve got to stop now. Now’s the time
to give it up. Now that you can see─or, not see, the reflection of your actions,
this is your golden opportunity. You said it yourself, monstieur: you probably
wouldn’t have stopped until these symptoms manifested anyway─but still, I
want you to listen to me. I don’t want to intrude on your view of life, or death,
monstieur, I don’t want to trample all over them in muddy shoes, but right now
you don’t know enough about Tadatsuru. Since whatever happens, I doubt you’ll
get out of this without exchanging at least a few words with him.”
“…”
“Big Sis didn’t seem like she wanted me to blab about this to you, she even
stopped me from telling you about it earlier, but fortunately Big Sis isn’t here
right now.”
“Wait, hang on a sec, Ononoki. Since you’re a shikigami and she’s your
master, won’t anything you do be transmitted straight to her?”
“It sure will.”
“Then we’re S.O.L., aren’t we?”
“She can’t hit me if she isn’t here.”
Ononoki, bloodied but unbowed.
In this age of telecommunications, where people can stay constantly
connected regardless of distance, I was envious of her attitude.
Up to and including her indifference to the fact that Ms. Kagenui would
probably just hit her later on.
“Tadatsuru, well, it’s definitely true that he specializes in immortal
aberrations same as Big Sis, but the nuance of ‘immortal aberrations’ is slightly
different for each of them. Slightly, but clearly. Big Sis specializes in immortal
but still-living aberrations─because you can’t kill something that isn’t alive.
Tadatsuru primarily deals with dead aberrations. That’s the source of the
disconnect between them.”
“Living immortality and dead immortality? I think I heard something about
that somewhere before. The difference between ghosts and zombies or
something…”
“Tadatsuru’s love is reserved for life in the form of unliving
dolls─originally, anyway. But that alone doesn’t pay the bills, so he isn’t too
hung up on it, he does all kinds of odd jobs.”
“Yeah, makes sense…totally makes sense. Otherwise, why would he come
after a living immortal aberration like me?”
“I’m an artificial aberration, myself.”
“…”
I couldn’t immediately muster a response to Ononoki suddenly bringing up
the subject of her own origins like that.
“It was Ms. Gaen who drafted the plan, just as you’d expect from Izuko
Gaen, but it was Big Sis and Deishu Kaiki, along with Mèmè Oshino and
Tadatsuru Teori, who carried out the actual creation─I guess it started as a
summer research project for a bunch of college students with too much time on
their hands, in the beginning of the beginning.”
Though that beginning is too far back to have anything to do with
me─noted Ononoki. “An artificial tsukumogami─made from the corpse of
someone who lived for a hundred years.”
“Hunh? I don’t get it. I knew Kaiki was involved in your creation, but
doesn’t that mean Tadatsuru was part of Ms. Gaen’s group too?”
“Back then even Ms. Gaen was just a college student. A regular old college
student. She wasn’t the leader of that faction or group or whatever yet. Though I
don’t think she thinks of herself that way even now… People just drift apart over
time, even if there’s no specific falling out. That’s how it goes, right?”
Is that how it goes?
Well, the old me might have readily answered yes, but at this point I didn’t
want to believe it.
I didn’t want people, didn’t want groups of people, to drift apart.
But even if I didn’t want to admit it, I knew somewhere deep inside─deep
down in my core, that it was probably true.
Once I graduated from high school and moved away─the relationships I
have would change.
And we’d probably drift apart.
“The reason Big Sis and Tadatsuru have bad blood, the reason they still
have something like a feud going, the reason Big Sis maintains her
unpraiseworthy attitude─I’m the source of all of it. It’s a struggle over
ownership of this shikigami, of me.”
“…”
“Kaiki was the first to renounce his claim, followed by Mèmè Oshino,
but…I’ll skip that part. Different people have different takes on that part of the
story. There are three sides to every story, you know. The me at the beginning
and the me now aren’t the same aberration anyway.”
“Hmm…that definitely sounds complicated. But basically, you’re saying
that Ms. Kagenui and Tadatsuru ended up fighting over you, and Ms. Kagenui
won, like in the Judgment of Solomon.”
Though if we’re going to liken it to the Judgment of Solomon, it seems
highly likely that Ms. Kagenui would’ve won the tug of war and gotten Ononoki
by sheer strength alone. In which case Tadatsuru would have a legitimate gripe.
In any case, a friendship ending over who got to keep a doll reminded me of
kids playing house, and it seemed really childish.
“Actually.” Ononoki, however, refuted my admittedly very rude surmise
regarding Ms. Kagenui, even though I hadn’t actually said it out loud. “I picked
Big Sis.”
“…”
“She tried to push me on Tadatsuru, but─in the end she agreed to take me.
Ever since then, she and Tadatsuru have been estranged. Not that they were ever
the best of friends, but that was the decisive split…not that a stray like Tadatsuru
has much in the way of close friends to begin with.”
Just Mèmè Oshino, I guess─if anyone─added Ononoki. That took me by
surprise.
The idea of Oshino being close with someone had never occurred to me. He
seemed like the kind of guy who didn’t have friends─not that I was anyone to
talk.
And yet, Mèmè Oshino.
Seemed like the kind of guy who’d intentionally distance himself from
anyone who got too close─and that I couldn’t relate to at all, so maybe I was
someone to talk.
He was a natural-born hermit─who sucked at goodbyes.
“What I’m getting at─the reason I brought this up so suddenly, monstieur.
Is the worst-case scenario,” Ononoki said. “The worst-case scenario, where you
end up getting into it with Tadatsuru but are no match for him, and Big Sis isn’t
there in time, the hostages are in mortal peril, you’re in mortal peril─when every
other option is off the table, when there’s nothing to be done about it, I’m almost
positive that if I offered myself in return for your lives, Tadatsuru would accept.
That’s what I wanted to say.”
“…”
“He still desires me. I’m pretty sure that’s why Big Sis lent me to
you─whoa.”
Ononoki never looked back at me during this speech, she just went on and
on, up and up, walking towards the summit, but as she was saying that last part I
grabbed the hem of her longish frilly skirt and lifted it up.
Whoa.
That’s what kind of panties Ononoki wears?
That’s going to be a real problem when they make a figurine out of her.
“What do you think you’re doing, monstieur.”
“People who say stupid things get stupid things done to them─heheh.
There’s no way I’d ever offer you up just to save my hide. I’ll thank you not to
sell me so short.”
“And I’ll thank you not to look under my skirt.”
“And Ms. Kagenui,” I said, reining in Ononoki by her skirt, “didn’t lend
you to me with that in mind. Obviously, it’s because she knew she could trust
you with an undependable guy like me. Don’t you think?”
“The kind of guy who goes around peeking under tween girls’ skirts.”
“Come on, I made a good point, so let’s forget about the peeking under your
skirt part.”
“You want me to forget about it? Then let go. If you think I’m as shameless
as a doll, you’re very much mistaken.”
I was?
That sucked, it was Ononoki’s shamelessness that I was into… But then,
someone who isn’t shameless seeming shameless thanks to her expressionless
face might be even more moé…
With these thoughts in mind, I tugged harder on Ononoki’s skirt and pulled
her towards me. With her power, she could’ve just planted her feet and dragged
me towards her instead, but she didn’t offer any resistance, obligingly walking
backwards.
“Ononoki, if we’re going to come up with something resembling a plan of
attack, this is it: I’ll be the decoy, and while I draw Tadatsuru’s attention, you
take the opportunity to rescue the hostages. After you’ve got them, use
‘Unlimited Rulebook’ to get as far away as you can, doesn’t matter where─leave
me behind at the shrine and split, in low gear. Some of the girls may pass out
from the abrupt shift in elevation, but at this point we don’t have any other
choice. I don’t think any of them will die.”
“And if they die, they die. Got it.”
“No, it wasn’t meant to be a callous remark. If they die, do everything in
your power to bring them back to life.”
Well, Karen and Kanbaru had extraordinary cardiopulmonary systems, so I
didn’t think it would be any worse for them than it was for me. Which left
Tsukihi─and Tsukihi was Tsukihi, so…
“But if it comes to that, what will you do, monstieur? If I leave you there
alone…though I guess there’ll be two of you, if we include the former
Heartunderblade. But anyway, I’m your muscle, if I leave you alone at the shrine
with Tadatsuru, what’ll you do?”
“I’ll be fine. I’ve got my secret technique: The Kowtow.”
“You’d be better off keeping that one secret forever.”
Ononoki sighed, still facing forward. I would’ve liked her to turn and face
me for the sigh, at least, but even without seeing her face I knew it was
expressionless, so it didn’t hinder the conversation any.
“A little kowtowing isn’t going to work on Tadatsuru. Getting other people
to bow down to him is basically his hobby.”
“Sounds like a hell of a guy…but even a guy like that has probably never
met someone whose hobby is bowing down to other people.”
“I’m glad you’re so pleased with yourself…” Ononoki shrugged her
shoulders. It was weird, she actually seemed more emotive when you couldn’t
see her face. “If you’re thinking that a sincere─a sincerely sincere apology is
going to get you off the hook, monstieur, I’ll tell you right now that you’re being
too optimistic. Sure, Big Sis decided to let you off the hook for the time being,
even though you’re well on your way to becoming an immortal aberration, but
that was only ever her own provisional standard. By Tadatsuru’s, even if you’re
not a vampire right now, the fact that you’ve ever been one is enough to make
you a target.”
“Right, the harmless certification carries no weight with him, is that it?”
“More like the harmless certification might work against you. Precisely
because no one within Ms. Gaen’s network will touch you, he might feel like
he’s got to do it─he’s probably chomping at the bit.”
“…”
What, like vigilante justice or something?
If so, then I’d really been cast as the villain here.
“Plus, even if your pathetic pleas for mercy convince him not to kill you,
never forget that a little girl who used to be a vampire is lurking in your shadow
as we speak. On the one in a million, one in a trillion chance that he lets you
live, there’s no way he’ll do the same for Big Sis Shinobu. Absolutely no way.
There’s another route, though. If you offer up the aberration formerly known as
Kissshot Acerolaorion Heartunderblade to Tadatsuru, he might spare you and
only you.”
“That’s never gonna happen, Ononoki, though I might offer myself up for
her sake,” I said.
In fact, the proposal might have made me grab her by her lapels if I hadn’t
been prevented from doing so by the fact that my hand was busy holding up her
skirt─that, of all things, was out of the question.
“Didn’t think so. I wouldn’t expect you to offer her if you wouldn’t even
offer me.” Ononoki seemed to have already known what the answer would be
when she suggested it, and backed off readily. “But here’s the thing, monstieur.
You’re still talking the same way you always have─you haven’t grown up at all.
Retaking the three hostages safely, without offering him Shinobu or me, and
saving yourself in the bargain─that’s nuts. It’s like dining and dashing at a fancy
restaurant.”
“…”
“Everyone’s got to pay the appropriate price for their actions─right? Like
how you paid for your overreliance on the immortal power of a vampire with
your very humanity. As long as you don’t learn that lesson, monstieur, you’re
going to keep skipping out on the bill until finally you lose everything.”
Weighty words.
Beyond weighty, with the way things were going for me.
“And yet it’s hard to take you seriously,” I said, “when your panties are
showing like that.”
“The fact that my panties are showing is one hundred percent your fault,
monstieur.”
“Don’t go blaming everything on me.”
“Who else should I blame it on… Though maybe it’d be boring if you
became a real adult. Listen, monstieur. If that’s how you feel, then I have an
alternate plan.”
“Alternate plan?”
“No way I’m going to let you be a decoy. Actually, if you want to that
badly, I won’t stop you, but─if we can get close enough without being detected,
how ’bout I go in all Unlimited Rulebooks blazing. A surprise attack. If I can
take out Tadatsuru, then we can rescue the three hostages at our leisure.”
“Umm…” It did seem like a foolproof plan.
Much like my strategy, it didn’t involve talking with him and left no room
for bargaining, but her way everything would be settled in an instant.
Even if Tadatsuru had some countermeasures in place against Ononoki,
there was no way they could stand up to a surprise attack.
But…
“What’ll happen to Tadatsuru? Will he get off with just a flesh wound?”
“He’ll die.”
“No shit!”
“No good, huh? But he’s the kind of guy who kidnaps young girls. I feel
like getting blown to smithereens is no more than he deserves.”
“No…it’s just no good. It’s no good, and it’s going too far. That would be
murder. If we did that─then I’d really lose my humanity.”
Lose my humanity, I said to Ononoki─recalling as I did what Oshino once
told me.
“A murderer continues to be a human being, though,” the familiar
disagreed. “Well, I’m not against your pacifist worldview, and anyway, it’s
needed. I’m happy to hear you say that.”
“Hm?”
“I said I’m happy to hear you say that. Listen, monstieur. Do you think you
could let go of my skirt already? It’s getting chilly down there, I’m worried I’m
going to catch cold.”
“Catch cold? Can that even happen to a tsukumogami, a shikigami like
you?”
“No, but I feel like it’s going to. If you want to talk about catching or not
catching, though, I’m catching plenty of creepy vibes from you standing there
clutching at my skirt for so long, monstieur.”
“Oh.”
Once she said it, I definitely, or finally caught on to how creepy I was
being, and I let go of her skirt and stopped to take a breath.
But.
In retrospect, I really shouldn’t have let go of Ononoki’s skirt─I absolutely
shouldn’t have.
I shouldn’t have let go no matter what she said.
Because, with Kaiki’s influence so strong.
No, you know─forget about that.
Regardless of Kaiki’s influence, it would’ve been easy to figure out what
Ononoki was going to do if I’d only thought about it─but I didn’t, I just let go of
Ononoki’s skirt like she asked me to.
017
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 hadn’t
planned for the series to run so long. That is, I hadn’t even planned for it to be a
series at all. It really snuck up on me! Well, you might wonder, How could he
not realize what was happening, but I honestly didn’t. I still feel like
everything’s exactly the same as it was when I wrote the first short story, Hitagi
Crab, but that’s ridiculous of course. Generally speaking, consistency and a lack
of change are two different things, and I’d like to learn to recognize the
difference. I want writing a fourteenth installment to offer its own excitement,
just as writing the first one. And of course, I hope there’ll be a certain
excitement in bringing the series to an end. With that in mind, then, it’s time for
Koyomi Araragi to pay the piper, and this has been a novel one hundred percent
endward bound, TSUKIMONOGATARI “Chapter Body: Yotsugi Doll.”
She appeared first in the anime, but the cover of this novel is the first time
Yotsugi Ononoki has been visually rendered for the books. Thank you very
much, Mr. VOFAN. The only books left to go now are End Tale and End Tale
(Cont.), so please stay with me for the Final Season, kicked off by this
installment and featuring the tale’s concluding trilogy.*
* The next installment turned out to be the unmentioned KOYOMIMONOGATARI, which Vertical
will be publishing in two volumes due to its length. In the above, the original’s mention of a
“thirteenth” installment has been emended to “fourteenth” since the translated edition split
BAKEMONOGATARI into three rather than two parts.
NISIOISIN