The next morning. Yuzuru had arrived at school earlier than usual to take care of some tasks for his club. He greeted Takaya, who had gotten there just barely in time, in their classroom. âGood morning, Takaya! Youâre safe by the skin of your teeth!â
âMorninâ.â Takayaâs brows were drawn, and he looked rather wan. Yuzuru peered at him dubiously.
âWhatâs the matter?â
âJust...a hangover. I shouldâve known not to mix drinks.â
âYou all right? You drank too much, didnât you?â
âWhen I got home I got yelled at by Miya. Yesterday was not fun.â
He sat down and sprawled across his desk. He didnât want to look weak, but for some reason he was really feeling it now. Takaya gave it some serious thought.
(... Maybe Iâve caught something.)
âOh, Chiaki, good morning!â
Takaya raised his head in reaction to that name and suddenly whacked his head against something hard.
âOw! Who the hell...â
âYou shouldnât drink like that when youâre underage!â
He looked up sharply to see Chiaki Shuuheiâs handsome, bespectacled face.
âGood morning, Ougi-kun.â
âDamn you... How dare you so casually...â
âSo has your amnesia been cured yet?â
Glaring at Chiaki sitting in the seat in front of him, he replied sullenly, âFor your information, I donât remember a damned thing.â
âHmmm...I seeee...â Chiaki grinned. âYou must really resent me or something if you forget your peerless best buddy like this, huh?â
âWhy would I resent you if Iâve never met you before?â
âEh, whatever. Anyway, you got assigned Fundamental Analysis for Second Period.â
âUgh!â Takaya exclaimed. âWhenâd that happen?â
âSince you werenât there for First Period yesterday.â
âYoshikawa, you bastard! Stop assigning me work when Iâm not here...!â
So this was the truant teacherâs retaliation. Chiaki chuckled too familiarly and rested his chin on his hands on the desk.
âWanna see my notes?â
âStop being so high and mighty. The one you got is an applications problem, number three. Itâs super-convolutedâyouâd never be able to get it.â
Takaya glared at Chiaki, annoyed. This face with its air of maturity, fringed with soft hair, framed with eye glasses that lent him an intellectual lookâand indeed, he seemed to have the brains to match, butâ
(I totally do not know this guy.)
âI dunno what you want, but stop bothering me with every little thing. Just looking at your mug completely pisses me off.â
âWoah. Completely...huh?â Smiling thinly, Chiaki added, â... Have you really forgotten me?â
Takaya gazed back at Chiaki, sensing some strange hidden meaning in his tone. Chiaki only looked at him, doubtful eyes narrowed behind his glasses. Takaya asked without thinking, âJust what the hell are you?â
âIs that something you say to a friend?â Chiaki gave a low laugh. âAt least, weâve kept each other company for quite a while.â
âQuit joking! Quite a while? Like I remember anyââ Takaya started to say, and stopped. He didnât remember anything like that? No...
(No, thatâs not...quite it.)
A strange sort of feeling brushed against his mind. It was not a sense of having been friendsâno, that wasnât quite it. Rather, it was the feeling that they had been together. It was not a clear memory, nothing concrete, but he felt like they had been together from a very long time before. It was...
âAnyway, have you heard, Ougi?â
âThat they appeared again in the north school building.â
âAppeared? What did?â
Chiaki dangled his hands in front of him and replied, âYou mean you havenât? They say that ghosts caused a big uproar over there.â
âGhosts? So, whatâd they do?â
âWhat, you donât know?â
Takayaâs reaction was probably a killjoy for Chiaki, who threw up his hands and leaned back in place against the wall.
âIt was yesterday after class, around 6:30. Looks like there was this big commotion because ghosts appeared in the north school building. They were violent here and there, too. It also happened four, five days ago. People are making a huge fuss about it right now.â
Takaya leaned forward. âWere there really ghosts?â
âGeez. Everybodyâs been talking about it. There were people there from this class, too. People who saw it.â
Now that he thought about it...
He actually did remember the girls clamoring about something like that two, three days ago. Heâd thought it was just the usual thing, and hadnât paid any attention to it. Some of the students who did club activities seemed to have gained some fame because of it.
âThereâs a very strange air around that school.â
Naoeâs words came to mind. And now multiple ghost sightings had occurred in the school.
âWell, a thickheaded guy like you probably wouldnâtâve noticed even if itâd hit you on the back of the head.â Chiaki teased in a light, sarcastic tone with a sidelong glance at Takaya. âAnyway, why donât you give the ghosts some thought too? Since you probably have some time to spare in that empty head of yours?â
âOops, thereâs the bell. Seeya,â Chiaki said, and walked to the rear. He exchanged friendly greetings with Yuzuru on the way and sat down in a seat in the back row. A seat which had certainly not existed the day before yesterday.
(Just what the hell is that bastard?)
A suspicious character, without a doubt. If Takayaâs unease around him was justified, then just what was this person who called himself Chiaki?
Could he be called a phantom?
And in any case, why was he the only one who could see through the pretense? Was it really because...
(Because Iâm Kagetora?)
Though he didnât know whether there was any connection. But if he thought about it another way, he did have the feeling that there had been a time in which heâd known Chiaki. Well, heâd been seeing a lot of strange things since heâd met Naoe, but what was the explanation for this?
âOugi. Is Ougi absent?â
âAck...! No, Iâm here,â he heard himself answering the roll-call. The teacherâmiddle-aged, with a receding hairlineâhad already come into the room and was standing on the platform.
He carried on down the attendance sheet disinterestedly: âLetâs see, Katou... Kogita...â
He continued reading the names intently in a monotone voice, giving no indication whether heâd heard any of the responses. Takaya began to lay his textbooks out on the desk with a feeling of listlessness. First period was Classical Literature.
(Well, but itâs not like Iâll get slapped any worse...)
That was just fine; if he thought about it a bit more, Doronuma was the type who waited. He deliberately saw nothing but defiant intent.
âTanaka. Taniguchi...â
(So is it a zashikiwarashi this time or what...?)
Surprised, Takayaâs hand paused in mid-air with his notes.
His eyes lifted. Taniguchiâs âtaâ, Tedukaâs âteâ...
(Chiakiâs name wasnât there...)
The teacher continued unconcernedly. Takaya turned to look at Chiaki, who was sitting composedly with his arms folded, doing nothing to call attention to himself. None of the other students had noticed that Chiakiâs name had been skipped.
Takaya gazed at Chiakiâs expressionless face from across the room for a moment.
Heâs the real thing, he thought.
(I guess thatâs decisive enough...)
Takayaâs face was unreadable as he looked at the table for the volleyball teams in his hand. The names of all members of the class were laid out on the team roster. Only Chiakiâs name was missing.
Takaya had come to the P.E. teachersâ office after Fourth Period. No attendance-type rosters had Chiakiâs name listed. (And of course Chiakiâs name was never called during attendance. None of the other students noticed this.) For verification, he had come to take a look at the volleyball team charts that had been drawn up just around two weeks ago.
(Chiaki really didnât exist until yesterday.)
But sometime yesterday, when heâd been late, Chiaki had insinuated himself into his class. And the other students sensed nothing out of place because theyâd somehow had their memories altered or something?
(Actually, Iâve read about something like that.)
Something called mass hypnotism. A person one hadnât known just a moment ago could in the next moment become an old friend with a suggestion. Heâd heard that it was possible...
But if his classmates had been hypnotized en-mass, what was Chiakiâs intention in doing it? And if he wanted to give everyone that suggestion, then why couldnât he have given Takaya the suggestion as well, even though heâd come late?
(Or did he try to hypnotize me, and I wasnât affected?)
But if it was true Chiaki hadnât been there until yesterday, then what was that feeling that heâd had earlier? Had it been because of a suggestion?
In any case, this character called Chiaki Shuuheiâ
The door opened behind him, and a familiar voice asked, âOh, Ougi-kun. What are you doing here?â
He turned. Saori and her friends from her club had come in together. Takaya grimaced, as if to say âHere comes the loudmouth.â
âWhat? Youâre still suspicious of Chiaki-kun, arenât you? Have you gone to the hospital yet?â
âWhat are you doing here?â
âI have club stuff. Whereâs Kawazoe-sensei?â
âKawazoe went out earlier.â
âWhaaat?â she said, exchanging looks with her friends. Then she seemed to suddenly remember something. âOh yeah, Ougi-kun, have you heard anything about the ghosts that keep appearing?â
âHuh?â Takaya blinked, and his eyes widened. Of course. Saori had club activities, so she would know about it.
âThere were people in our club who saw them too. I didnât actually see them myself, but Iâve heard about stuff like a desk rattling and collapsing in an empty room, or a faucet turning on by itself, or a florescent light in the corridor just suddenly going out. Oh, and Nakko saw it too!â
And Saori turned to look at her friend, who seemed more afraid of Takaya than of any ghosts. She nodded vigorously.
âWhat exactly did you see?â
âAh...um, in the locker room.â
âWhat?â Takaya asked in a low tone, which nevertheless still seemed to intimidate the female student.
She answered awkwardly in a small voice, âMidway through Club I went back to the locker room for something Iâd forgotten. ...Somehow, there was this strange shadow... When I cried out, thinking it was a thief, that person...turned towards me...and...â
âIt was a blood-stained old man.â
Takaya drew a startled breath.
âAnd then he disappeared just like that, right?â
Brows drawn, Takaya growled, âI never wanna meet a guy like that.â
âBut there arenât just male ghosts. In all the stories, there are woman ghosts and child ghosts and ghosts that look just like the common people.â
âThe common people? Howâs that?â
âI dunno. But in Mito Koumon they take the shape of common people...â
âLike Iâd know anything about that.â
âI have a bad feeling, Ougi-kun. Canât you do something about it?â
âDo something? Like what?â
âYou know...â She clutched at him. âDo that extermination thing like you did the other day. The power that you used on those skeleton ghosts. That weird âbaiâ thing. You can do it, right?â
âNobody believed me when I told them about it. Itâs true, though. Itâs true that you did it...â
And Saori looked at her friends pleadingly, but they only stared back at her with consternation. Takaya gained control of his expression and gave a heart-felt groan. ...Actually, itâd be strange if they did believe her.
âNaoe-san came too, didnât he? So do it, okay, please? And then everyone will believe me, too...â
âHow the heck could I do something like that?â
âOooooh, Ougi-kuuuun!â Saori wailed miserably, just as the door opened and the members of the soccer club trooped in. One of them was their classmate, Yazaki.
Noticing them, Yazaki called out, âOh, Ougi. So you were here.â
âYou wanna make something of it?â
âNo, I just havenât seen you since the end of classes. Um, I wanted to let you know that Yuzuruâs collapsed, and theyâve carried him to the infirmary.â
The loud shout had come from Saori. âWhat did you say?!â Her expression changing, Saori gripped Yazaki by the nape of his neck. âNarita-kun! Narita-kun! Whatâs happened to him?!â
âOw ow ow! It looks like anemia. They say that Chiaki brought him to the infirmary.â
Before Takaya had a chance to react Saori had already flown like a shot out the door.
âNarita-kuuuuun! Iâm coming noooooow!â
Takaya gazed after Saori, whose only remaining trace was the echo of her war-cry, and then exchanged weary looks with the others.
âIâm fine, I just felt kinda light-headed. Saying that I collapsed was a bit over the top,â Yuzuru said from the bed, and smiled. Saori, who had galloped to the infirmary, and Takaya, who had followed her, gazed at him worriedly. Speaking of whichâYuzuru had been feeling poorly since two, three days ago. And now, even while he was claiming to be fine, Yuzuruâs face was still white as paper.
âThatâs why I told you not to overdo things. This is enough for today; youâre going home. Right?â
âYeah. The teachers told me that, too. Chiakiâs getting my bag for me right now.â
Takaya crossed his arms and sighed, then took the opportunity to glare at the two people standing next to him. âWell? Whatâre you guys doing here?â
âWe saw you at the entrance hall.â
It was Naoe and Ayako, whoâd had the nerve to follow him here.
âThatâs not it! I asked what you were doing here at my school!â
âI said that we would stop by today,â Naoe replied curtly, and peered at Yuzuruâs face. âAre you all right, Yuzuru-san?â
âAhahah... Somehow you always catch me at my worst, Naoe-san,â Yuzuru laughed weakly.
Takaya said to Naoe in a hard voice, âAnyhow, you drove here, didnât you? Youâll give Yuzuru a ride home in that Benz of yours, right?â
âI will. But it was nice timing, wasnât it? If you are able to do some preparation, please accompany him to the entrance hall. I will bring the car.â
âWait a minute, youâre going to drive to the entrance hall?â
âThat will be all right, will it not?â
âYouâll totally stand out!â
âWill that be a problem?â
These two would stand out even at the best of times. Takaya had wanted as much as possible to keep people from knowing that he had anything to do with them, but he couldnât really think up an excuse to stop Naoe. In the end he had to face defeat and stay silent.
âSure, fine, do whatever you want.â
Naoe and Ayako left the infirmary first.
âWhat is with that attitude? And youâre doing him a favor, too! Was Kagetora that overbearing too?â
âShow some respect and use âsamaâ.â
âWasnât Kagetora much more of a calm, rational, and sensible guy?â
â... Perhaps.â Naoe said in a low, quiet voice, âThough in his previous life (the life before he performed kanshou), he was certainly like this. This Kagetora-sama feels much like that one.â
â? What do you mean?â
âHe has returned to his first form.â Naoe looked over his shoulder at the infirmary. âHe has sealed the whole of his personality as the Uesugi Kagetora who has lived until this point. It probably isnât much of an exaggeration to say that he has purified his own external personality. Haruie. This Kagetora-sama is not Uesugi Kagetora, but an ordinary high school student called Ougi Takaya. You must not seek Uesugi Kagetoraâs personality in his.â
âIn any case,â Naoe turned, cutting Ayako off. âThe young man we met today. What have you sensed from him?â
Ayako frowned in concentration. ââIf Iâm not mistaken, he is no ordinary person, but...â
âYou donât know either?â
In actuality, itâd been one of the reasons he had come to Matsumoto on this visit. Within their group, AyakoâKakizaki Haruieâparticularly excelled at the spiritual sensing called reisa. In order to unravel the riddle that Kousaka Danjou Masanobu had left him during the previous Takeda Shingen case, he had brought her here to see Narita Yuzuru for herself so that she could do an assessment in person.
âThat âNarita Yuzuruâs existence is a threat to the Roku Dou Sekai,â right? Those are not words to be spoken lightly. I wonder what he meant by them?â
â...I see. So even your powers are not enough...?â
Ayako pouted. âAnyway, itâs hardly surprising that only someone with such uncommonly strong reisa-nouryoku as Kousaka would know. That guy probably knows the previous lives of everyone in the world.â
âThatâs an exaggeration, donât you think?â
â...Well, I suppose not all.â Ayakoâs tone took on a trace of seriousness. âBut with his level of reisa-nouryoku, itâs not impossible that Kousaka would be able to discern a soulâs «nucleus». At least, he would probably be able to discern the pattern of the soul-nucleus of a person he had known previously even after purification and rebirth. Scary thought, isnât it?â
Naoe narrowed grave, intense eyes. âSo youâre saying that âNarita Yuzuruâ is the transfigured rebirth of someone Kousaka knew?â
âI donât know, but Iâm saying that the possibility exists.â
Naoe knuckled his chin thoughtfully.
At the time of a personâs rebirth, their soul underwent purification so that their personality and memories were removed, and the consciousness called âselfâ was made consistent. The âselfâ, the portion of the soul that formed its «nucleus», alone remained eternally unchanged even through purification.
Ayakoâs reisa-nouryoku could only recognize spirits who had not undergone purification, but it was said that there were individuals among those with higher spiritual sensing abilities for whom it was possible to recognize this «soul-nucleus». In any case, though it was not possible to obtain information about a personâs past lives from their «soul-nucleus», the pattern of a «soul-nucleus» could be used as a comparison for a person one knew in the past.
It could be said that though Kousaka Danjou, too, was a kanshousha, his reisa-nouryoku was on a completely different level. This was probably why he was able to see through to Yuzuruâs true self.
(Or could it even be something else entirely...?)
Ayako interrupted Naoeâs thoughts. âBesides that, Naoe...â
âWhatâs wrong with this school? This accumulation of spiritual energy is not ordinary. Itâd probably make a sensitive kid feel like running away.â
âYeah.â Naoeâs voice fell as he replied, âIt wasnât like this when I came here before. It seems that something happened after.â
âItâs because of this aura that that Yuzuru kidâs collapsed. Poor thing. If I had to stay here for a day, my body would probably go strange on me, too.â
âHeâs very sensitive, isnât he? But it is a very malevolent aura. What in the world...?â
Suddenly Naoe turned, and Ayako looked in the same direction. They gazed at the person walking towards them.
The two parties stared at each other for a long moment.
Without a word, Chiaki looked away from them first and slipped into the infirmary. The expressions on Naoe and Ayakoâs faces were equally cold as they gaze after him.
Naoeâs face was impregnable.
âYuzuru, Iâve said this before, but there really is something weird going on with you and your body. There must be a connection with this ghost brouhaha somewhere. There just has to be.â
Takayaâs suspicions apparently also leaned in that direction. Chiaki had returned with Yuzuruâs bag, and Yuzuru began to prepare to leave with willing haste.
âThat again? Maybe. But I also think that it could just be that Iâm tired.â
âStop being so obtuse. Jeez, this strong spiritual sensitivity thing is so much trouble.â
Chiaki interjected from one side, âEasy for you to say, when you walk around wearing dullness like a uniform.â
âWhat the hell? So are you saying that you have strong spiritual sensitivity too?â
Suddenly looking innocent, Chiaki crossed out the infirmaryâs registered name with a ballpoint pen. Saori, whoâd been acting like a grown up until that point, shouted, âOooougi-kun!â
âWoah, geez, you surprised me.â
Saori grabbed Takayaâs collar. âWait wait wait! Who is that woman? That woman with Naoe, who is she?!â
âShe was here yesterday, too...â
âLover? Friend? Iâm gonna go crazy if you say wife!â
âHis cousin, right?â Yuzuru answered unexpectedly. Takaya goggled at him.
âShe gives me that feeling. If Takaya and Naoe-san are cousins, then she is too, right? Your auras feel alike.â
âHmm. Speaking of which...â
Yuzuru turned to Chiaki, who was standing in front of the desk.
âChiaki. Something about you...is like Naoe-san, too.â
Chiakiâs eyes raised for a moment to gaze at Yuzuru, before falling back to his notes.
âMust be your imagination.â
âAnyway, we should go and wait for them, right? Letâs hurry?â
âYeah, okay. Oh, Takaya,â Yuzuru said, and extended several sheets of paper he extracted from his bag. It was the score for a wind instrument. âCan you deliver this to Hatayama in First Year, Group Five? I was planning to give it to him at noon practice today, so I didnât go earlier. I can take it to him now, but I donât want to keep Naoe-san waiting.â
âSure, itâs fine. Hatayamaâs the one I met yesterday? That half-Japanese guyâ...?â
âYeah.â Yuzuru smiled a bit. âCan you get it to him by the end of the day?â
Just as Takaya reached out to take the score from Yuzuruâ
The lone flower vase behind them fell.
They turned reflexively at the same time. The flower from the broken vase lay cruelly mangled upon the floor. For a moment the infirmary room was still as death.
âAh...oh no. What was that just now?â Saori muttered, just as the large broom behind them crashed to the floor. A sudden rush of cold air enveloped them.
â...Takaya...â Yuzuru said hoarsely. âSomething...is here.â
Crack! The light bulb in the mobile medical-use light stand next to Takaya shattered. The pens on the table stood on their ends before flying into the air. The framed oil painting hanging on the wall screeched as it tilted, and the shelves all simultaneously fell over.
Takaya concentrated on the surrounding aura cautiously. Saori was hiding behind his back. Yuzuru, still as a statue, was hardly breathing, and Chiaki stood rigid guard as well.
He reached a hand behind him to grab a book to throw.
He turned at Yuzuruâs sharp voice. In a corner of the room.
A woman stood there in a white kimono, her hair matted and disheveled.
âAaaaah!â Saori started screaming bloody murder. âOugi-kun, a ghost! Itâs a ghost! Get her! Do that âbaiâ thing! Come on!â
âUm... Yeah but...I forgot how...â
The womanâs pale face was framed by a mess of black hair that spilled down her kimono. Blood flowed from the area around her neck, and her chin was half-mutilated. She gazed over at them out of dark, bitter-seeming eyes. Takaya tensed and clutched his book more firmly.
âOugi,â Chiaki said, his voice full of command. âDonât move. I donât think she will do any harm.â
Takayaâs gaze turned to Chiaki, and he put the book down. Saori, behind him, was earnestly chanting a Buddhist prayer. Takaya turned around to face the female ghost once more.
âWhat is it you want to say?â
The ghost looked at them out of lifeless eyes.
âIf thereâs something you want to say, then try to say it, lady.â
Though her mouth opened partly, the ghost did not respond. He asked carefully, with even more intensity, âWhat do you want to say?â
Without replying the ghost faded away with a soft rustling sound from her feet upward. Almost simultaneously the chatter of voices from the school returned, and the cold air disappeared.
âWhat...what was thaaaaat! That thing just now!â
At Yuzuruâs side, Takaya gazed at the place where the ghost had stood. Suddenly his eyes swung to Chiaki. Chiaki was also glaring at that spot with a terrible expression on his face.
Takaya slowly folded his arms.