Chapter 1: The Chance Meeting of Swirling Flames
In the pre-dawn hours of the Sixth, the shrine of the daimyo Takeda Shingen in Iwakubo , Koufu in the prefecture of Yamanashi was found to be destroyed by persons unknown. Yamanashi police, determining it to be a malicious prank, sought the cooperation of area residents in tracking down the perpetrators.
The youth in school uniform who had just been thrown by the punch crashed into cases of beer piled against the edge of a wall and tumbled with a loud clamor along with the beer to the ground.
Yuzuru exhaled, and a shudder ran through his shoulders.
He returned to himself, still standing in the pose of someone who had just thrown a straight right punch.
For a moment he could not quite place where he was.
He stared at his clenched fist.
Looking around, he saw only four high school students dressed in navy-blue uniforms. They were lying limply here and there as if someone had knocked them to the ground.
Yuzuru blinked a few times.
The youths regarded Yuzuru with identical fearful gazes. Their faces had splotches of bruises as if someone had given them a beating, and their expressions were of elementary school children who had been bullied. They crawled together and began throwing jeers at Yuzuru with false bravado.
âDo-donât think you can get cocky, asshole!â
âW-w-w-weâll remember this!â
Having forced out their threats, they were off and running down the alley even before the echoes of their voices had faded.
Yuzuru stared after them, flabbergasted.
A bunch he didnât recognize. But from their uniforms, he guessed, (Students from West High? Why? )
Yuzuru looked down at himself. His uniform was in disarray and full of dust, and his necktie had come undone.
He suddenly noticed that the corner of his mouth stung sharply. His hand felt as if he had hit something, and there was a smudge of blood on his fingers.
Bewildered and stunned, he began to shake.
He hadnât recognized the West High students who had run down the alleyway. His fist throbbed with the dull pain that remained after punching someone.
No, he really must have punched someone. Then he and those high school students had been...?
(What have I been doing...? )
Yuzuru covered his mouth with his hand. He tried to think back. But he had no memories to follow. He couldnât rememberâeverything was a complete blank.
Yuzuruâs expression stiffened a little. He tried to rewind his memories and play them back. Where did they stop? Where did they disappear? He couldnât remember. What was heâwhat had he been doing? What was he doing?
Feeling anotherâs presence, Yuzuru startled badly and spun around. There.
Standing there was a tall male student dressed in the same tea blazer uniform as Yuzuru. He didnât know how long he had been there. Leaning against the white brick walls of the storehouse, he was looking over at Yuzuru. Then, with a cool, faint smile, he said, âNot bad.â
Yuzuru stared blankly, eyes round as acorns. This time it was a face he recognized.
â...Takaya...â he called the name without thought.
A cloudless blue sky stretches out above the city as far as the eye can see. The Northern Japanese Alps, its graceful skyward peaks glittering with the last of the winter snows, look down over the town.
A May quickened by the refreshing Kamikouchi winds.
Matsumoto City in the prefecture of Nagano .
Shinshuuâs Matsumoto : a city surrounded by beautiful blue peaks, famous for being the entranceway to mountain-climbing in the Japanese Alps, called the âmountain capitalâ; a city grown up from its history as a simple castle town.
Within the city there are many historical landmarks such as Matsumoto Castle , one of Japanâs national treasures, and the former Kaichi School . The city can be called the cultural center of Shinshuuâand now Nagano. It is now second in industry and commerce and population in the prefecture, and its residential areas had spread into the suburbs.
They are Narita Yuzuru and Ougi Takaya, second-year students here in Matsumoto at the prefecture school Jouhoku High.
âFish fillet and large fries. Oh, and a medium coke.â
The employee at the counter, who would ordinarily not have seen high school students loitering around at this time of day, clicked away as she listened to the order. Takaya turned to look behind him.
It was a fast-food restaurant in front of Matsumoto Station . They had somehow ended up coming back to the station, and, needing somewhere to calm down, had walked into one of their regular haunts.
Yuzuru, whom he had brought with him, leaned lethargically against a wall beneath a poster, his eyes shadowed.
Elbows resting casually on the counter as he took in the scene, Takaya turned back to face the restaurant employee.
The restaurant was emptier than theyâd thought. âbut then again, it was still before noon. The clock read just after eleven oâclock. Takaya carried the tray up to the second floor and dropped into a seat at a window facing the station terminal. He frowned up at Yuzuru, who had taken his seat after Takaya.
âWhat? Did you want the tacos instead?â
Yuzuru rested his chin in his hands and replied while gazing out the window, âI had tacos yesterday.â
Takaya leaned forward unintentionally.
ââYesterdayââI knew it! You were skipping school!â
âWhatâs with the âI knew itâ? And besides, what are you doing here at this time of day?â
Takayaâs lips tightened peevishly.
âI had self-study in Math, so I skipped out and came looking for you.â
âHow would I know? Guess he was feeling sorry for himself or something and didnât show up.â
âDidnât show up...? Oh, youâve been fighting with the teacher again, havenât you! You shouldnât, you know! Mathâthatâs the new teacher, Yoshikawa, right? Poor guy, getting bullied right from the start!â
âIâm not bullying him! He was the one shooting off his mouth.â
âYouâre pretty scary when that hot-headedness of yours cools down.â
âNone of your business.â Seriously annoyed, Takaya turned away and chewed at his straw. âMore important is whatâs up with you.â
âWhy the heck are you skipping?â
Yuzuruâs expression became slightly shadowed. Takaya waited patiently for him to speak, pushing the paper cup he had set down on the table to one side.
âHave you been stumbling around like this since two days ago?â
âGeez...â Takaya sighed. âI called your house, and your mom said that you âleft for school like alwaysâ. I wonder what youâre doing so I go looking for you, and I find you in a place like that, standing over four guys like you just beat them up. Youâre acting strange.â
âStrange?â Yuzuru leaned forward a little. âIâm strange?â
Takaya cast a serene gaze on Yuzuru, then leaned his chin in his hands and looked out the window. âWell, you were always weirder than other people.â
Yuzuruâs lips quirked slightly in a half-hearted reaction. It had been obvious from earlier that he had not been in good spirits and had few words to say.
âWe havenât changed classes yet, so it canât be start-of-classes blues. I guess thatâs the first time Iâve seen you fighting.... itâs not like you. Something like that...â It didnât seem like the mild Yuzuru who usually stepped in to stop fights. âIf thereâs something bothering you, why donât you try telling me? Even if I canât give you sage advice, Iâll listen if itâll help clear your head a bit.â
âSo why have you been skipping?â
âI havenât really been âskippingâ.â
â?â Takaya asked, âWhadaya mean? Then...â
âI donât know whatâs going on either,â Yuzuru said, covering his forehead with the back of his hand. "Like todayâI was heading for school when I left the house, and something strange happened againâthe next thing I knew, Iâd beaten up these guys Iâve never met before and had bruises like Iâd been in a fight.
âIt was like that yesterday, too. Everything was normal when I left the house, and the next thing I knew I was sitting in the middle of the street. And then the day before that...â
âAnd you donât remember anything in between?â
Takaya couldnât help but draw in a breath.
âI donât know whatâs going on at all. Whatâs wrong with me? Have I really, seriously gone mad? I canât remember anything. That time I was really headed for school. What was I doing?â
âBut that brawl earlier, I somehow donât think that it was me fighting. I donât remember anything, and it seems like it was someone else who did it.â
âI donât think youâd provoke a fight with someone.â
âTakaya.â Yuzuru questioned him, clinging eagerly to his words, âWhat could it be? I donât know much about it, but could it be something like a split personality?â
âSplit personality? Why would you suddenly become like that?â
âYouâre asking me why...â
Yuzuru, faced with Takayaâs scowl head-on, closed his mouth. Even so, the look in Takayaâs eyes was intimidating. Leaning forward deliberately, he began to question Yuzuru with the relentless intensity of a detective in an interrogation chamber.
âWas there anything that might have triggered it?â
Yuzuru, his index finger on his chin, turned his gaze slightly to the view outside the window.
ââTriggeredâ...?â
Pedestrians passed beneath the window, a steady stream from the terminalâs generous traffic. While gazing at this scene, Yuzuru made a âkuâ sound, and his eyebrows drew together.
To Takayaâs murmured reaction, Yuzuru responded as if speaking to himself, âI have this strange dream. When I woke up that dayâthatâs when it started. And then things started happening like today.â
âA dream? Do you remember it?â
âYeah. Very clearly.â
âWhy? Was it a funny dream?â
âYouâre always taking every opportunity to make fun of other people when theyâre being serious!â
âIâm not making fun of you! Iâm not, so why donât you tell me what kind of a dream it was?â
âA dream where Iâm engulfed in flames.â
Takayaâs eyes fixed on Yuzuruâs face. âWhat?â
Yuzuru sneaked a look at Takayaâs reaction, and the melancholy expression returned to his face. He replied, âIt was like the aftermath of a battle in a historical drama.â
âThe aftermath of a battle?â
âYeah. The sky overhead is reddish-purple. A desolate-looking plain stretches out all around me, and there are the bodies of many fallen warriors and soldiers...I donât know whatâs happening, but I walk there alone. Torn flags, broken spears and the like litter the ground. The moans I hear are like a rumble in the ground. I try to run away from that strange place, but the dead soldiers swarm up and seize my leg.â
Remembering the terror from that time, Yuzuru unconsciously wrapped both arms around himself.
ââDonât goâ. âYou canât leaveâ. And then suddenlyââ Yuzuru closed his eyes, expression strained. âSuddenly my body is engulfed in flames.â
A french fry dangled forgotten from Takayaâs lips.
Yuzuruâs voice was like a moan as he continued.
âItâs a pale purple flame, so hot that I really thought I would die. So hot that it didnât seem like a dream, and I would burn to death! Thatâs what Iâm thinking, when I wake up.â Yuzuru sighed deeply. âIt seemed frighteningly real.â
Takaya, staring at Yuzuru, slowly chewed the french fry in his mouth.
From the stairs the chatter of children floated up. Takaya turned a cold gaze towards the noise. It sounded like a mother with her purchases taking along a group of children, all clamoring exuberantly. Undeterred by the vast amounts of free space elsewhere in the room, she sat down with her children in the seat directly behind Takaya.
Takaya rolled his eyes at them disgustedly, but Yuzuru showed no reaction at all. He only stared down at the table, his face haggard and pale.
His gaze returning to Yuzuru, Takaya shut his mouth. Behind the table with the two silent people the children ran around noisily.
Unable to bear it any longer, Takaya stood up.
âLetâs go, Yuzuru.â
âHuh? Oh, wait. Takaya!â
Confused, Yuzuru chased after Takaya.
âYou know...Yuzuru. â
Walking along the bank of the Metoba River which flowed through the center of the street, Takaya spoke to Yuzuru walking at his side.
Yuzuru, chewing a leftover piece of fish fillet, lifted his eyes.
âUm, well, rather than having a split personality, doesnât it seem more like youâve been possessed?â
âI mean, itâs not anything like neurosis or the back-to-school syndrome, right? Thereâs got to be some explanation for why youâre having a hard time?â
âMaybe,â and his gaze fell to the asphalt. âBut...â
âI guess I canât laugh at you or call you an idiot, huh?â Takaya muttered, turning his gaze to the riverâs brooklet. The refreshing May breeze brushed against the cheeks of the two uniform-clad figures gently. Through the intermittent sounds of cars passing each other, the murmur of the brooklet reached their ears.
Takaya said, âWerenât you paralyzed in class the other day? It was probably the spirit of the girl who committed suicide ten years ago, right? Before that there was the ghost of the grandma who died in a traffic accident that followed you around, right? And when you take pictures on vacation youâd always catch a spirit or two. Youâre seriouslyâyou know, whatâs it called. Iâm not touched by psychic phenomenon at all, but a sensitive like youâwouldnât you be a prime target?â
Finishing the last mouthful of his drink, Yuzuruâs brows knit. âWhat do you mean by âtargetâ?â
âI dunno, but havenât you been possessed by a spirit? Something like an itako or a medium?â
âDonât put me together with them.â
âWhat you said about that strange dream you had, what was it? Like a historical drama? An onryou from the Sengoku Period, maybe?â
âNo way...â Yuzuru said, laughing, but...
He stopped in his tracks.
Noticing, Takaya halted too. Yuzuru was staring at a point somewhere ahead of them.
âTakaya. Over there.â
Takaya followed the direction of Yuzuruâs gaze. On the small red-painted bridge across the Metoba River.
There stood a young woman in school uniform gazing down at the river surface.
Long straight black hair flowed down her back. She seemed not too far from Takaya and Yuzuruâs age. Her sailor uniform was a brilliant navy blue with a cobalt blue ribbonâa uniform they had not seen around here before. But it was mid-morningânot a time for ordinary high school students to be loitering about.
The young woman held nothing in her hands; she only stared down at the river with an impression of perfect stillness. Her expression was without animation, her eyes blank, her face pale.
Yuzuru gazed at the young woman fixedly as if something had drawn him to her. When Takaya noticed and, thinking it dubious, was on the verge of calling out...
Yuzuru stepped forward as if his feet had been bespelled.
Eyes wide, lips opened slightly, he took another unconscious step forward. It was as if someone was moving his legs like a puppet. Without its assistance he seemed to stagger. Then, another stepâ
He came back to himself. Takaya grabbed his wrist. He shouted close to his ear, âYou idiot! Whatâre you doing? !â
âGoing after some chickâthatâs not like you!â
â...â Yuzuru made a slight sound and closed his eyes. Then. A startled noise came from the young woman on the bridge, and she looked their way.
Noticing, the two turned their eyes back to her.
There were about fifteen meters between them.
Looking over at them, the young womanâs eyes filled with tension. Their blankness was replaced by glowing, and expression suddenly flooded back into her face. She stared at them where they stood on the pavement. But that gaze was not an ordinary casual look.
It was an eerie look not from this world.
A feeling of bizarre tension.
An intense disorientation as of having entered another dimension.
White light radiated from behind her.
He gulped, suddenly lost for breath.
(What in the world isâ)
Yuzuru took an unconscious step back.
The young woman stared at them.
Like a noble of ancient times looking down upon a commoner, her expression was full of a strange feeling of coercion which pinned them motionless beneath her gaze.
Suddenly there was a trembling in the depths of her eyes.
Takaya was the one who reacted.
Her expression became layered with complexity as the sense of coercion disappeared. In its place a feeling of peace spread across her face, and her eyes opened wide. A faint murmur escaped from her shapely red lips.
âHuh?â Takayaâs eyes widened.
The young woman moved towards them slowly. Her lips moved once more, saying something he couldnât hear.
The young womanâs body trembled. âOh!â Takaya and Yuzuru moved towards her; in that instantâ!
Pale fire burst from her body.
With an ear-piercing scream, the young womanâs body ignited.
The young woman writhed, enveloped in flame. Her body burned with a sound like a gigantic gas burner. Screams ripped from her throat. The pale flamesâno, purple. âpurple!
âYouâve gotta be kidding me. Hey, Yuzuru! YUZURU!â
Yuzuru, his face convulsing with tremors, didnât react to Takayaâs shout.
Taking off his blazer, Takaya rushed over to the young woman. Within the flames the young woman writhed violently. Takaya, beating wildly at the fire in a attempt to put it out, suddenly stopped.
The fire gave off no heat.
Purple flames. Intense, eerie flames...from nowhere.
Biting his tongue, he wrapped his blazer around the young womanâs body and restrained her as she flailed violently. âYuzuru!â he shouted. âAn ambulance! Snap out of it and call an ambulance!â
âYuzuru! Canât you hear me? YUZURU!â
Passersby gathered to see what was going on. Takaya shouted, âYUZURU!...damn it! YUZURU!â
«The seal on the Maenduka has been broken. Let us assemble. Let us return to the land of our birth, o my brothers. »