Utterly unaware of the events that had engulfed Naoe in Nikkou , Takaya had spent most of the night wandering the streets of Kabuki Town .
As the ornamented darkness gave way to the dawn of a tawdry reality in Shinjuku , the âNightless City,â Takaya awoke in a spacious hotel room.
His last memory had been of getting into a one-sided fight in Kabuki Town . Disoriented from sleep, he was disoriented even further to find himself in an unfamiliar place. He sat up abruptly on the bed.
âAnd moaned involuntarily at the pain lancing through his body.
The students using him as a punching bag had certainly left him a few marks to remember them by. Takaya looked dazedly around the room as he waited for the worst of the aching to subside.
(Where the hell am I...?)
The man from last night rose from his seat at the window. Though it was not yet fully light outside, he could see the Meiji Jinguu forests as dawn suffused the far horizon with a purple glow. He finally realized that he was in a hotel roomâa room in one of the upper-class hotels in western Shinjuku , in fact. Takaya blinked.
âHuh? ...um, yeah...â
The man must have brought him here. He looked younger in the bright room than beneath the dim light of the streetlights. He reminded Takaya of the kind of actor who was typically cast in detective dramas, but somehow gentler.
âYou must be thirsty. Let me see if thereâs any water.â
His watch told him that it was almost five. This man had found him beaten to a pulp on the roadside and brought him here. The briefcase he had been carrying was now on the bed, and Takaya suddenly noticed that the trampled cigarette box had been placed beside his pillow.
âItâs something you cherish, isnât it?â The man remarked, reading his thoughts. âYou should cut back on the smoking, though. Itâs not good for you.â
âCome take a look? Thereâs mineral water in the fridge. Would you like one?â
Takaya climbed out of bed. The next room turned out to be the living room. Even if the lavish interior design hadnât convinced him of the likely expense of these rooms, the unearthly view from the windows would have. The man was seated on the sofa, extracting the cork from a bottle of mineral water.
â...Is something the matter?â
âAh...no...â The manâs question jolted Takaya out of his frozen reverie, and he scratched his head embarrassedly. âI was just thinking that I...um...mustâve given you a lot of trouble...â
âDonât worry about it,â the man responded, giving him a good-natured smile. âI only brought you here because I wanted to. You werenât planning to go home last night anyway, right?â
The man gazed at the silent Takaya for a moment before asking, âWho do those cigarettes belong to? A friend?â
âFriend...â Takaya murmured before smiling bitterly and shaking his head. âNo. Not a friend.â
He turned the question over in his mind. Yes, what? What was he to Takaya?
That was certainly one answerâan answer for the part of him that was âKagetora,â perhaps. But what of Ougi Takaya? What was he then?
As Takaya stood there thinking, unable to come up with an answer, the man touched the heart of the question: âBut itâs someone very important to you?â
âImportant?â Takaya repeated, startled. âWhy should I give a damn about somebody like that? He could disappear tomorrow and I wouldnât even notice. Itâs not like I asked him to keep following me aroundââ
â...heâs just using me anyway...â Takaya trailed off, eyes darkened with emotion falling to the floor. The man studied him carefully, but Takaya was silent, lost in his thoughts. After a moment, he suddenly smiled. âThatâs right, I am just being used, arenât I? They saw something that gave them an advantage and they took it.â
The man eyed Takaya oddly as his shoulders shook with laughter and set the bottle in his hand down on the table.
âI just felt really stupid all of a sudden. Itâs not like me thinking about it is going to change anything, is it? Thereâs really no point in thinking about it at all.â
âI actually thought he needed me, but the one he needs isnât me. Itâs Kagetora. Everything he said, everything he did, that was all for Kagetora. He just wants me to be a substitute for Kagetora. I am such a fucking moron. I canât believe Iâve been so stupid, it fucking pisses me off.â
Maybe he wasnât as sober as heâd thought. The words kept pouring out, and he couldnât seem to get his feelings under control.
Tear drew glistening trails down Takayaâs face beneath the hand that hid his eyes. Tears from laughter? the man wondered. Or from something else? Takaya continued to shake with mirth.
âI get it now. Iâm just a substitute. Arenât I? I think I always knew it. Iâve been worrying over nothing all this time. It was all just me...all in my head.â The tears were overtaking the laughter in his voice.
âI am such a fucking kid.â
âHe was protecting âKagetora,â and I knew it, but I wanted to believe he was doing it for me. When he was kind, when he trusted me, that was all for âKagetora.â I only pretended it was me because Iâm a conceited idiot. Iâm so stupid. Iâm just a hopeless little punk! I start thinking Iâm all that as soon as somebody indulges me a little... Thatâs why...!â Bitterness filled his voice. ââI never should have let myself think it was anything else! Why did he have to be so desperate to protect me? Why did he have to be so kind? Why did he have to look at me like that? It made me think... it made me think... But none of it was for me...â
The man gazed at him in silence. Takaya panted for breath, shoulders shaking as he tried to calm himself, before slumping down on the sofa.
âWho are you speaking of?â
âThe owner of these cigarettes?â
Takaya smiled tiredly at the question. âThey only smell like him.â
Takayaâs face darkened in self-scorn, and he laughed again bitterly. âIâm such a kid that I start having all these stupid hopes as soon as somebody turns to look at me. I shouldâve just left it alone, but I had to go and think, âMaybe I can trust him. Maybe itâll be all right to open up to him...â Like an moron, I started messing my head up with all these useless thoughts. I was constantly terrified that he might throw me away... The truth is...â
âWhy does he have to be so different?â Takaya closed his eyes. âWhy did he have to go and get all torn up protecting a kid whoâs got nothing to give him? He was hiding all of that pain... He wouldâve done anything to protect me, and it scared me. So I put up walls between us, I pushed him away, but he...â
âNo matter how hard I pushed, he wouldnât leave. Anyone else wouldâve just given up, but not him. He always came back. He was always there. And that terrified me, because I started to think that maybe heâll stay. Maybe I can trust him to guard my back. I could never trust anybody, always had to look for enemies from every direction, but it wears you down, you know?â
âI started to hope that maybe with him at my back I wouldnât have to be on my guard all the time...but at the same time it scared me so muchânot of betrayal or being shot in the back...â
Takayaâs gaze fixed on the window. âIt wasnât betrayal that I was afraid of. Because if he wanted to cut me down from behind, I wouldâve been all right with that. Iâm not trying to sound like a tough guy or anything. Itâs just that if he was going to throw me away anyway, then betrayal wouldnât have mattered...â
The man gave no indication of agreement, only listened quietly as Takaya spoke. Takaya laughed again.
âIt was enough for me just to have somebody there at my back... But heâs such a fool that he wanted to protect me from everything.â
âYeah. All of me, from everything. Not like a shield, but...â
He saw the familiar face in his mindâs eye.
â...like wings. Gigantic birdâs wings. Enfolding me like...âhere is safety.â No matter where I was, being inside those wings meant that nothing could hurt me. Like they were telling me, âyouâll never be cold again.â But Iâm just a gutless punk, just a kid who canât stop wanting it all, and as soon as I felt that warmth I wanted to be inside it always... Because itâs something I never had, so like an idiot I...â
For the one who had appeared in his life offering it with both hands. The one he never wanted to leave. Never wanted to lose. Selfish as it was, arrogant as it was, he no longer knew how to live without it. That was why...!
âI canât go forward, and I canât go back! How could I have gotten this weak? Just because I had him there to protect me! Iâm so afraid of being abandoned, of him vanishing...! No matter what he does to me, no matter what his reasons are, I canât let him go!â
Takaya shook, teeth gritted and fists clenched, unable now to hold back the wild outpouring of words and emotions.
âI canât understand him. He wonât tell me anything... How the hell was I supposed to react, when I donât understand anything? All I saw was his pain and his suffering, and all I knew was that it was because of me...!â
Tears blurred his vision. He scowled fiercely, pressing his hands hard against his eyes, trying to hold them back. His chest felt pierced through by the arrow-sharp memories of that day, by the look in Naoeâs eyes, full of accusation and hatred for a Takaya who could not understand his pain. Who could not understand the heart of a man whose own tears had drawn glistening trails down his cheeks as he pressed all his stifled, violent emotions into Takayaâs lips, breathed them into his mouth.
Why couldnât he understand?
What was it heâd been trying to make Takaya understand?
â...What do you want from me?â he asked the memory of Naoe, opening his eyes. âWhat was it you wanted me to do?â
The man, sensing the strange shift in Takaya and realizing suddenly that Takaya was no longer speaking to him, half-stood.
âThe things you said, the things you did, how was I supposed to respond? What did you want from me? What were you asking me for? Why do you hate me?!â
âWhat did I do to make you hate me?! Iâno, it was never me, was it?! âKagetoraâ is the one you see, never me. Iâm just a substitute for him, arenât I? Itâs all conceit, itâs all arrogance, whatever I do! Iâm always the one flailing about! Nothing I do matters!â
âI donât get you! Why wonât you just tell me instead of holding it all in? I donât get anything! I canât...damn it! Damn all of this!â
The man shook Takaya lightly, and Takaya clutched at his arms, mind still caught in the turbulence of his emotions.
âHow he needed something to cling to!
â...What should I do...?!â
He grasped at the arms around him with all his might, desperately trying to restrain his emotions as they shot from one violent extreme to the other. Desperately looking for an answer.
The man held Takayaâs trembling shoulders, gazing at him silently as he sobbed. After a long moment, he finally answered calmly, âKeep thinking... Keep looking for your answers. Youâll find them.â
âHe...is there for you. Just as you are there for him. Believe that you will not turn from each other, and keep thinking. Keep reaching for your answers. Donât look away.â
Takayaâs head lifted. The man gazed at him and into him, deeper than anyone ever had before.
âWhatever he is seeking, it is encompassed within your existence. I believe the fact that you are here means everything to him.â
The man nodded quietly and smiled as Takaya met his gaze, face still wet with the tracks of his tears. Takaya closed his eyes once more, shutting the pain back in his chest as he murmured a name in silent longing.
I will be by your side. Always.
Yet he was not. He had left Takaya behind.
At rush hour, Shinjuku âs almost tangible energy focused and accelerated to an even higher intensity. To Takaya, gazing at the crowds of commuters being disgorged by the underground passageâs western exit, this was the truest face of Shinjuku .
Ah, of course. Today was September 1st, which meant he was already missing the opening ceremony for the second semester. If he was skipping school from the get-go, the rest of the year didnât bear thinking about, Takaya thought as he drained his coffee.
âSo. Where to next?â The man seated across the table asked guilelessly. He had reserved a table for them in the lounge for breakfast, and apparently was not inclined to let Takaya return home just yet. Yet his grin was so good-natured that Takaya felt all his wariness vanish.
The man was a mystery, and not just for the fact of his unknown identity. That Takaya, normally so violently distrustful of strangers, could open up to him was in itself extraordinary... or perhaps not âopen up,â precisely. It was as if this man had the rare gift of understanding the hearts of others so completely that it made their natural reserve superfluous.
âWe have lots of time. Is there anywhere you would like to go?â
Takaya laughed. True, even if he started back for Matsumoto right that minute, he probably wouldnât make roll-call. âLetâs see...â he rested his chin on his hands and gazed out at the hot city morning.
âWhatâs around here...?â
The famous places of Tokyo flashed through his head. But it wasnât as if he was a tourist from the countryside, and the usual attractions, like Tokyo Tower and the bus tours, didnât quite seem to fit the bill. And besides, what the heck was he doing here anyway? Doubt assailed him for a moment before he shoved it recklessly aside.
âI canât really think of anything... Maybe just wander around for a bit?â
âThen letâs wander.â The man seemed willing to tag along, though Takaya couldnât guess at his intentionsâor even his name. Didnât an adult like him have anywhere to be rather than knock about town with a kid?
âHow about we go sightsee the historical landmarks around here?â
âHistorical landmarks?â Takaya asked incredulously.
The man nodded, a smile lighting his eyes. Takaya realized that it was that boyish grin set in a face with enough years to have crowsâ feet that made him so personable.
âItâll be fun! We can go on a tour of the old Edo landmarks.â
âFun? You call going on a social studies field trip fun?â
âYouâre missing the point,â the man sighed in the theatrically exaggerated manner of a bossy child. âAll those Edo towns you see in historical dramas? They all existed right here once upon a time! Come on, I know you must be a little curious. Wouldnât it be fun to visit the actual sites of all those places you see in Chuushingura or Oooka Echizen?â The man peered at Takaya expectantly.
In actuality, Takaya hadnât seen that many historical dramas. What was the point when they were all alike, anyway? Still, he had to admit he was a bit curious about what the megalopolis had been like in the old days. The manâs expression put him in mind of a father who had taken the rare day off so he could take his kids on an outing. Why is he even putting this much effort into trying to get me to go along? Takaya wondered, but the amiability he felt for the man made it impossible to refuse him. He gave in with a wry, half-disgusted smile, no longer even able to care about his identity.
âAll right, all right already! Iâll come with you wherever!â
Takaya was a bit surprised to find that the man drove a Pajero. It wasnât that the car didnât suit him, exactlyâjust that it wasnât a car one usually saw in the city. But riding in it, Takaya thought it was rather cool. Tokyo was filled with cars at the best of times, but most people drove flat passenger models; it was nice to be able to ride above it all in the taller Pajero.
They drove through Oote Town along the moat of the Imperial Palace with the forest on their right.
âWe can take our time,â the man murmured, relaxed. He truly seemed to be in no hurryâor rather, he was, for whatever reason, making time for Takaya.
âI believe Edo Castle âs tower was around here. It was giganticâyou could see it from anywhere in Edo.â
âIt got burned down, didnât it? They couldnât rebuild it because there wasnât enough money...â
âSo I heard. A daimyoâs castle was a symbol of his power. Many of Japanâs modern cities grew out of old castle-towns. If you think about it in that light, then you have to conclude that the Edo Period formed the foundation for modern Japan.â
âAre you like a teacher or something?â
The manâs only response was a smileâa smile containing a trace of irony, Takaya saw.
â...One cannot refute that those who live through an era best know the truth of it. But perhaps only those who come after can teach its meaning.â
âYet only knowing what value there is to living for the sake of living...is meaningless.â
Takaya peered questioningly at the man in profile, and the man glanced back at him.
âDo you like history?â
âHuh...?â the suddenness of the question left him floundering. âUm, like...? Itâs a pain having to remember the names of all the eras, and it kinda feels like the people who write all that stuff in textbooks donât really believe it was all real,â Takaya replied, then added flatly, âBut I do know that I hate the Sengoku Period.â
The answer was obvious, of course. Because it was...too real.
But after meeting Naoe and all the other warlords, he could certainly feel the connection between the events of the distant past described in his textbooks and the modern era in which he lived. If only he didnât have to confront that past...
Takaya sighed lightly. âThe people who lived back then were all insane. Totally bonkers.â
âIs that right? So none of the Sengoku generals were in their right minds?â
âThat sounds unlikely, but youâre probably right. Perhaps the power to change an era is really the sum of a tiny piece of everyoneâs insanity.â
âSo âinsanity makes history?ââ
âHmm. Whose words are those?â the man asked admiringly.
Takaya propped his chin up in his hand and turned his gaze to the stone wall running along the moat. Where had he heard those words before? As he reached back, a strange image suddenly rushed forward from the deep recesses of his mind.
Takaya abruptly stilled. The image was followed by another and another, all coming back to vivid life.
The burnt field had once been a city. Now its people, countless blackened, unrecognizable lumps, littered the crumbling ruins.
The images crashed into Takaya like raging waves driven by a storm-tossed sea, freezing him in place. Yes. It had been that night. That night out of a nightmare.
The city had been bombarded by a rain of incendiary bombs and hails of machine gun fire. And its people had died. In scarlet flames, in the blasts of scorching wind hot enough to melt glass. Too many to count as fighter planes stormed the singed night sky. They could do nothing as they slipped past the wounded and dying wailing their agony, their unique powers as wisps of mist in their first taste of the flames of Hell. Even for them, it had taken everything simply to survive.
âWater, oh please...some water for my child...â a woman carrying a child on her back implored. He didnât know what kind of nightmare she had escaped, how far she had come through the raging flames. Her child was dead. The womanâs mind shattered the moment she saw the lifeless little body with its head torn off. Her crazed howls faded into the inferno.
The Sumida River had become a river of fire. Countless people trying to reach water died on its banks.
Everywhere he looked, there was only destruction. Their reality had been replaced by a scene out of Hell.
âPerhaps this country can only be saved if we all go insane...â someone murmured from behind him, embracing him with helpless desperation as he stood dazedly staring...
âIs there something wrong?â the man asked with concern. âPenny for your thoughts...?â
Takaya didnât hear him. His memories of that night had come to life in his mind. Memories of the massive air-strike against Tokyo. Those gruesome scenes repeating themselves over and over again. Takaya clutched at his head, shutting his eyes tightly.
Naoeâs voice. Asking how they could have let such tragedy come to pass. Wanting to despise all the world. His heart crumbling, surely, beneath the weight of his hatred for the enemy nations who had wrought such heedless destruction, regret and resentment and helpless rage against the inhumanity and injustice of it. Grief beyond words transforming into madness, into wings encircling him. Standing at the center of Hell, feeling Naoeâs tears burn into his shoulder, those arms had healed the unspeakable agony of his soul.
âLet us live, Kagetora-sama.â
The words Naoe had moaned into his ear within those flames now echoed there again in crystal clarity. The pure strength and steely determination he heard in them made him want to weep.Whatever happens, I will never turn from you.
"No matter what happens, I will survive.
Even if this countryâs future should be burned to ash in these flames, even if this nation called Japan vanishes forever from the world...
âI will look upon it all with my own eyes. I will live, and I will fix my gaze upon the crumbling path of this poor country and all its mad people,â Naoe had said, arms tight around him within the inferno.
Why did he remember everything so clearly? Why had it come back now, so many years later?
âWhatâs wrong?â the man sounded truly concerned. âAre you crying again?â
Biting his lip and shutting his eyes tightly, Takaya shook his head. After a moment, he turned to look at the buildings of the Marunouchi business district, the past still burning against the towering skyscrapers.
(How did we ever rise up again from those ruins?) Takaya wondered. How had they gained such strength? How did such a torn and tattered country ever regain its feet? How had it given itself rebirth, risen from its own ashes to rebuild a city such as this?
The stubbornness and resilience of human beings. So many had fallen along the way, but the rest had been able to climb over them and move on.
(How can I become that strong?) Takaya implored the souls still tied to the city.
What formed the strength that allowed the wounded to climb back to their feet after being dealt such blows by a bitter era? What gave them the will to walk on even while carrying the burden of a painful past toward a harsh reality?
Or was it a power bestowed upon all, something everyone was born with?
âIs it just that...Iâm the only one who is too weak?â he whispered haltingly.
The man, his own face full of pain, gazed with compassion at Takaya as he pressed his hands against his eyes. Takayaâs heart, always so lost in its insecurity, might truly be crushed with even the slightest pressure now.
âLet me take you home?...to the sea...â There was such gentleness in the manâs voice that Takaya slowly lifted his hands. The manâs gaze was far away, as if his mind had already raced there to that shore.
âLet me take you back one more time. To where we can see the water, hear the sound of the waves...â
Takayaâs eyes widened. âTake me...home?â
âYes. Home.â The manâs eyes were already focused beyond the steel and concrete city upon an illusionary sea.
âLetâs go home...to our sea...â