LEVEL 3:Â Even the Best Laid Plans go Awry, but Such is This World
Chapter 14: Words Unspoken, Left Unsaid
The vending machine was one, maybe two minutes from his house. A little further up the road was a convenience store, but if he went there he would probably bump into someone he knew no matter what time it was. He didnât like that, so he took shelter in the refuge areaânot that it was for refugees or anythingânext to the vending machine.
It wasnât like he often wanted to run away, to get away or anything, but maybe once in a while, when he did sort of feel like getting away, or when he simply had to get away, he would leave his house and make his way to the vending machine and kill time for a while. He probably got into this habit around the time he was in elementary school. Maybe fifth grade? Probably.
At home, he shared a room with his older brother so it wasnât like he could get any privacy in there when he wanted to be alone. Whenever he tried to get his brother out of the room when he did want to be alone, his brother would always tell him to quit complaining and maybe threaten to kick him or something. But that didnât change what Haruhiro wanted.
So he started to retreat to that vending machine. Sometimes he would buy a drink, sometimes he wouldnât. Sometimes heâd drink the drink, sometimes he wouldnât. Heâd space out for a while and go home when he felt like going home.
The pattern repeated itself for a while until one summer day when he was in sixth grade. He was taking shelter next to the vending machine as usual when someone else came. He considered hiding but there was nowhere to hide, and then he considered pretending not to know them, but he did because she lived in the same neighborhood. Choco.
Choco always wore her hair in a short bob cut that made her look like a Japanese kappa creature. He had known her since she was small, and he couldnât remember a single time her hair wasnât cut like that. In fact, whenever he thought of the word âkappaâ Choco would immediately come to mind.
She wasnât exactly the open, friendly type, and even now Haruhiro had no idea what to think of her. Even at school, she was slightly distant and aloof. Well, just a little bit because it wasnât like she didnât have any friends. However, rather than having any close friends, she was the sort that was merely included in a group.
Haruhiro didnât understand why, but he had been interested in her since he was in preschool. Maybe because she was⌠different from all the other kids. Actually, it wasnât really a conscious thing on his part, it was a sort of subconscious interest that bordered on being a real liking of her.
Ever since he was born, Choco was the first girl he had ever liked and his feelings hadnât changed since. They were in preschool together and were in the same class several times in elementary school, too. They lived closed to each other and often talked about this and that. Haruhiro supposed that would make them close friends, but he never said anything about his like of her.
Not that he dared to, anyway.
When they were both in third grade, there was a rumor circulating that Choco liked a boy named Kawabe. One day, when Haruhiro and Choco were walking home together, he asked her offhandedly if the rumor was really true and after thinking about it in silence for a couple of moments, she told him yes.
Traumatized didnât even begin to describe Haruhiroâs feelings then. Kawabe was a slender kid who didnât exactly excel at sports, but he was learning the piano and seemed like he came from a refined household. And apparently, he was the type that Choco was into.
Really. Really now. Was she really serious? No wayâŚ
Kawabe was the polar opposite of Haruhiro, possessing all the qualities that Haruhiro lacked, but he and Haruhiro were friendly enough that they played together from time to time. Kawabe was a decent guy who didnât have anything unlikeable about him and placed pretty highly amongst Haruhiroâs friend ranking list. In fact, Haruhiro rather liked him.
So Choco likes him. Oh. Kawabeâs a good guy. Right. I need to help her out even if I donât know how. Yeah.
Or so Haruhiro thought and began to take steps towards it. Did Choco want him to deliver a note to Kawabe? Kawabeâs family was pretty strict so he didnât have a cell phone, but if Choco wrote him a note Haruhiro was sure Kawabe would read it. He would probably even write a response back to her because he was a nice guy like that.
Haruhiro asked Choco if she wanted to do that, but she declined, telling him that it was fine and that she didnât intend to do anything of the sort. When Haruhiro responded noncommittally, she went on to say that it was a casual kind of like.
A casual kind of likeâŚ? Well, it wasnât like Haruhiro didnât try. He did. Stuff like attempting to get Choco and Kawabe to talk to each other, setting things up so that they would be alone, etc. When he thought about it now, it all seemed rather silly, but it was serious business back then. Kawabe was a good guy and Choco⌠well, Haruhiro liked her.
At any rate, it was that summer day in sixth grade when Choco came to the vending machine. Haruhiro asked her what she was doing, but she told him not much, nothing, Iâm just here. Then she went on to say that it was hot so she wanted a soda but there were no sodas in the fridge at home, so here she was at the vending machine. They talked for maybe another ten or fifteen minutes after that and from that day on, they would bump into each other at the vending machine now and then.
Choco favored carbonated drinks, but during the winter she would buy canned corn soup. When she drank soda, she would make comments like, âOw, my throat hurts,â and when she drank the corn soup, she would yelp, âWah, hotâ and blow on the contents to cool it down. Yes, this was the Choco he liked. However, it wasnât some sort of desperate, intense like⌠more of a natural, mellow, matter-of-course like. Yes, he liked those things about her and that continued for a long, long time.
For her part, Choco was the type who was naturally attracted to boys. It didnât show on the surface, but she had a history of casually saying how nice X or Y boy was and for the time being, thought of no one else but that person. She would only realize that she liked the person after she admitted to herself that she actually liked him, so it was almost like her fondness for the person grew more as she thought about how much she liked him.
Haruhiro would ask if she wanted to go out with the person, and Choco would reply by saying that she didnât not want to go out with him, but she didnât really like him that much. No, not that muchâŚ
And it wasnât as if Haruhiro didnât not want to go out with her, if he could, but Choco was always in love with some other guy and Haruhiro found himself unconsciously asking her about who she currently liked. Even if he wasnât truly interested in knowing, she always answered him earnestly, which made him put effort into attempting to hook the two of them up or at least help them to get to know each other better, even though he never really intended to. Choco, of course, never asked him to; Haruhiro did it all on his own.
He often wondered why he did such things and couldnât find an answer. Probably because he was an idiot, he thought on more than one occasion.
Choco was always impassive and expressionless, but when she talked about the boys she liked, she all of a sudden became animated and lively. At the end of their conversations, her cheeks would be a little rosy, making Haruhiro believe that she enjoyed such conversations, which made him happy in turn. They had been friends for such a long time, but even so, he was always trying to think of ways to make her happy. He didnât even understand why himself.
Choco was a real mystery. She didnât like to read books, never listened to music, didnât watch TV, and even if she picked up a hobby now and then, she would soon lose interest and drop it. When he asked her if there was anything she absolutely loved doing, she answered him swiftly with, no, nothing. Haruhiro couldnât find anything that pleased her, which made him want to try more so that he could see her smile, but nothing he said or did ever worked.
That night, he was squatting next to the vending machine again, staring out into space when Choco came. He had a feeling that Choco would come⌠but all the times he had feelings like that in the past, she never did. Tonight though, she did, and he thought to himself, YES! It made him want to do a victory pose right there and then but he resisted the urge, forcing himself to calm down.
âHey,â he greeted casually.
Choco waved a hand at him. âHey.â
Her wave and return greeting was adorable and he was reminded once more of why he liked her. Currently though, Chocoâs crush of the week was one of her classmates, a boy with a rare name, Hidemasa. Hidemasa was also a decent guy and good looking too, which made Haruhiro wonder if Choco went for the attractive ones.
Hidemasa wasnât super popular with girls, but from a guyâs perspective, he was one of those people you had to admit was cool even if you didnât want to, so it made him wonder why girls couldnât see that in him, too. No, actually there were always one, two, a couple girls secretly in love with him. Choco was right to like a person like that. And Haruhiro couldnât blame her.
In fact, he supported her and wished her well. There was no way Haruhiro could win against competition like Hidemasa, after all. And in the long term, it seemed that Choco would be happy with a guy like him.
Choco bought a soda. Some sort of fruity soda. She pulled back the pull-top to pop the can open and took a sip. Then her face scrunched up as a small sigh escaped her lips.
âOw. My throat hurts,â said Choco.
âDoes it?â asked Haruhiro.
âYeah, it does.â
âIf it hurts, why do you drink it then?â
âBecause I feel like it.â
âOkay.â
âI heard soda isnât really healthy,â Choco said.
âI donât drink it that often,â remarked Choco.
âI see you drinking it all the time,â said Haruhiro.
âOnly when Iâm here.â
âOh.â
Then Choco went on to tell him in a bored tone about how she went to karaoke with Hidemasa recently. It seemed as if karaoke didnât interest her. Haruhiro also made it seem like he was equally disinterested as he listened but he was actually paying close attention as Choco talked about the songs Hidemasa chose. They were all songs from popular artists, so everyone knew the melodies and got really into it.
Apparently that was the type of person Hidemasa was, Choco said. And when Choco got tired after a little while into the karaoke session, Hidemasa approached her to ask if she was okay. That Hidemasa⌠he was a really cool guy.
âYou see,â Choco suddenly said. âIâm not really good with paying attention to how other people feel, so I think guys who can do that are great.â
âSo itâs like looking for things you lack yourself in others?â Haruhiro asked.
âHiro, you also think that Iâm insensitive?â
âI never said that. Itâs not like you go out of your way to make people feel uncomfortable.â
âI guess I donât,â Choco agreed.
âI donât think you do.â
âYou donât either, Hiro.â
âReally? You think Iâm a sensitive person?â Haruhiro asked.
âTo me?â
âYeah. Weâve known each other for a long time.â
âHiro, you donât have anyone?â Choco abruptly inquired.
âAnyone what?â
âThat you like. You know, a girl.â
Haruhiro had no idea how to respond and as he thought about it, his heart drummed hard in his chest. Even as he thought this was this big chance to tell her, a part of him was telling himself, Chance? What chance? This isnât a chance at all!
He thought he liked Choco, but what if he was wrong? He wasnât wrong, but he was. He didnât know how to put it. Or maybe what he felt went beyond a simple like. Maybe it surpassed the notion of like. It was almost as if what he liked or didnât like hardly mattered anymore, as long as Choco was happy. He felt like an idiot for thinking that, but thatâs the way he truly felt⌠or so he thought. Maybe.
It was because of the distance that they had always kept between them that he could talk to her the way they were talking now. Once she had a boyfriend, maybe these chats would come to an end too. Well, heâd cross that bridge when he got to it. It was an unrelated matter, anyways. Painful as it was, Haruhiro had always watched on the sidelines as Choco fell for other boys. He was used to it.
But, yes, he liked her.
âNope, no one. If there was, Iâd tell you,â Haruhiro said.
âWell, I donât really care anyways,â Choco replied.
âThatâs mean. I always listen to stories about your crushes.â
âDork,â she whispered inaudibly.[1]
âHuh? Did you say something?â asked Haruhiro.
âYeah, I did,â said Choco.
âSorry, I didnât hear youâŚâ
Haruhiro had no idea what that was all about, but suspected that Choco had noticed. There was no doubt she realized that he liked her. She must have realized. Maybe. Did she really? Suddenly, she crouched down next to him. Her shoulder was so close, it almost touched his. Her gaze was fixed on the ground in front of her.
âIf you ever get a crush on someone,â Choco started.
âUhâŚâ
âTell me, okay?â
âI thought you werenât interested.â
âYeah, but tell me anyway.â
âOkay, I will.â
Choco turned to look at him now, the corners of her lips curved up in a tiny smile while her eyes narrowed ever so slightly.
âHiro, you wouldnât lie, right?â Choco asked.
âI might, depending on the situation,â Haruhiro said. âBut probably not to you, Choco.â
âI know you wouldnât.â
Yet he was lying to her at that very moment. And she probably knew it. Because Choco, Iâve always loved you. Iâve loved you and only you for a long, long time. Not that he could tell her. Not that he would ever be able to tell herâŚ
[1]Note: This was previously translated to âchowderheadâ but after some internal debate, it was changed to âdorkâ. All previous usages will also be updated in the near future. We apologize for any confusion.