As Yuzuru was walking along the porch, dressed in a kimono instead of sleepwearâŠ
âAre you having Tsukimi Sake, Dad.?â ( TN: Tsukimi : âmoon-viewingâ is a Japanese festival honoring the autumn moon, offering sweets and alcohol to the moon.)
âWell yes, because the moon is so beautiful tonight.â
It was Yuzuruâs father, Kazuya Takasegawa, who answered as he held up a glass.
The glass contained clear ice and golden liquor.
The sight of him, a quarter foreigner, dressed in a Japanese kimono, sitting on the porch drinking sakeâŠ
It was a strange sight.
âIf itâs Tsukimi sake, why not use actual sake?â ( TN: Tsukimi sake is the alcohol offered in tsukimi and the sake here refers to Japanese alcohol)
Yuzuru said as he sat down next to Kazuya.
Then Kazuya replied in a slightly sulky tone.
âIsnât it fine? I like it better this way.â
Then he poured the liquor into the other glass he had prepared.
Then he handed it to Yuzuru.
âYou like it this way too, donât you? ⊠Iâm pretty sure you prefer it straight, right?â
âTo encourage your son, whoâs going to be a sophomore in high school in a month, to drink⊠youâre such a bad father.â
Yuzuru said jokinglyâŠ
And he grabbed the glass and sipped the alcohol.
Then he picked up a pair of chopsticks and picked at the simmered food in front of him.
He chewed the potato, swallowed it, and then chuckled.
âTo eat stewed food to accompany whiskeyâŠâ
âI was told that if I wanted to drink, I should just use leftoversâŠâ
âHa, haâŠâ
The image of his mother forcing leftovers on his father came to mind.
Itâs not that Kazuya is unable to go against his wife, Sayori, but rather that Sayori stands up to KazuyaâŠ
It seems that he canât assert himself strongly in these situations.
âIt seems that you gave an engagement ring to Arisa-san. I heard from Amagi-san.â
Kazuya said and then smiled.
âI heard you gave her something reasonably good. Didnât you have a hard time paying for itâŠ?â
âNo, well⊠I thought if Iâm going to give her an engagement ring, I might as well get her something decent.â
âHmm, well⊠itâs the feeling that counts, but the quality and effort of the gift is a good indicator of the feeling.â
Kazuya narrowed his eyes.
Then he asked Yuzuru.
âBy the way, Iâm asking you just to make sureâŠYou know that you will be buying a formal engagement ring as the âTakasegawa familyâ, right?â
âThatâs, well âŠof course. Iâm sure Arisa would like to choose her own engagement ring. I gave that one as a âŠproposal ring.â
ââWould the kind of man who gives cheap engagement rings really be willing to support us with funds?ăWill he really be prepared to invest in us? The next successor is incredibly stingy..â To have people think all these would be inconvenient. Isnât that what youâre saying? I understand.â
When Yuzuru said that as if to interrupt Kazuyaâs words, Kazuya raised the corner of his mouth in delight.
âYou know exactly what Iâm talking about. The end of money is the end of fate. No one will follow you or help you if you donât bring them any benefit.â
âThere are relationships in the world that money canât buy, arenât there?â
When Yuzuru said this half defiantly, half-jokinglyâŠ
Kazuya shrugged his shoulders in a goofy way.
âIâm surprised. Do you want to develop a deep love and friendship with politicians, investors, the media, and bureaucratic aunts and uncles?ăWell, Iâm not going to stop you.â
âN-no. âŠI think itâs better if itâs just about the money in those cases.â
As Yuzuru chuckled and said this, Kazuya patted Yuzuru on the back in a good mood.
âThatâs fine. Friendship and love are precious because they cannot be broken by money and can be relied upon in times of need. Treasure them.â
âI donât need to be told.â
Yuzuru replied shortly and sipped from his glass.
As he rolled the wine around on his tongue, he thought of Arisa.
âWhen it comes to the most important person, it is only Arisa.â
âWhatâs with the sudden declaration of love?â
âHow much did you know about her dad?â
Yuzuru asked his father in a slightly lower tone than before.
Kazuya kept a smile on his face, but his eyes were calm as he looked back at Yuzuru.
âWhat do you mean by that?â
âAbout Arisaâs family background.â
Just a little.
Just a little âŠthe atmosphere grew tense.
âItâs not a very good home environment for Arisa. She has been subjected to violence by her aunt.â
ââŠHmm, is that true?â
âPlease donât feign ignorance. If I can realize it, there is no way that you didnât know about it.â
Yuzuru retorted in a calm voice.
âThis is about the person who will be the partner of Takasegawaâs next successor. Naturally⊠you would have researched every nook and cranny about them beforehand, right? It would be easy if you use Ryozenji.â
The wife of Takasegawaâs next successor must not have any âproblemsâ.
She should have been thoroughly investigated for her height, weight, size, medical conditions, education, personality, ideology, religion, past, and relationships.
They must have done a thorough investigation.
Even Yuzuru could easily guess what was going on, so there was no way Kazuya and his grandfather, Sogen, would not have noticed.
âYou knew, and you did nothing, and you didnât tell me anything.â
Yuzuru said in a reproachful tone.
And KazuyaâŠ
âI figured youâd understand without me having to tell you.â
He readily admitted that he had known and had kept it to himself.
Then he smiled bitterly.
âI didnât need to look it up in the first place, I could tell by her expression and demeanor. I could tell at a glance that she didnât want to get married and that she was scared of her adoptive parents. âŠIt would be weird not to know.â
Even Yuzuru, with his limited life experience, could see this.
There was no way Kazuya, who had far more life experience than Yuzuru, could not understand.
âYouâve always told me to be thorough with my communications, havenât you?â
âWell, yes âŠI thought it would hurt your feelings. After having brought a girl as you wanted, or more like someone close as possible to the kind of girl you wanted, and then to have that girl to not want to marry you wasâŠâ
Yuzuru didnât want to get engaged in the first place, so it wouldnât have hurt him in any way.
But, as a parent, it was natural for him to be concerned about his son to some extentâŠ
âBesides, I didnât think it was that important.â
Kazuya said simply, without any malice.
âThe important thing is that sheâs Amagiâs daughter⊠No, there was no reason for us to be concerned about Amagiâs daughter in the first place. Itâs not as if not getting you two married will necessarily hinder your business dealings.â
The only value he saw in Arisa was that she was related to Naoki Amagi andâŠ
She was very close to, if not completely in line with, his sonâs unreasonably selfish demands.
âItâs not important, is it?â
âOf course, if Amagi-san doesnât like Arisa-san and doesnât care about her, that would have been a problem. âŠI thought I was being disrespected when, during the initial negotiations, I was asked if I wanted one of the two daughters who was close in age to my son to be the bride. I thought they were trying to force the âunwantedâ child on us.â
From Kazuyaâs point of view, it was more convenient for him to have Mei Amagi, Naokiâs own daughter, who was related to him by blood, rather than Arisa, who was not directly related to Naoki Amagi as Yuzuruâs bride.
Thatâs why he initially sought out Mei Amagi.
However, Yuzuru demanded a blonde-haired, blue-eyed, fair-skinned, big-breasted beautiful girl named Arisa, so the option suddenly became Arisa.
âBut to my dismay, âŠhe seemed to be equally affectionate towards both. Well, what can I say? He is a clumsy guy, isnât he? Itâs also convenient for us. If it is a unilateral âone-sided affectionâ from Amagi-san to Arisa-san⊠it is to our advantage.â
Arisa is the bridge that connects Takasegawa and Amagi, but also the chain.
Normally, in such a political marriage, you have to be prepared to be bound to some extent as well as to bind the other partyâŠ
It is very convenient for Takasegawa if Naoki Amagi unilaterally cares for Arisa, while Arisa does not have good feelings toward Naoki Amagi or the Amagi family.
This was because Arisa would be less likely to favor Amagi.
âAnd Iâve come clean honestly. With this⊠are you mad at me?â
In response to Kazuyaâs questionâŠ
Yuzuru quietly shook his head.
âWho wouldnât be angry âŠwith someone who treated their beloved as a tool? Even if itâs their own father.â
ââŠ.Thatâs right, itâs exactly as you said. I was totally at fault. Of course, I know exactly how you feel. I was angry too when my dad treated Sayori like a tool.â
It was an apology, but at the same time, it seemed to say:
You are just like me.
Yuzuru sighed quietly.
âI think itâs not the apology for the past that matters, but the future. Letâs have a constructive discussion, Dad.â
âHmm, what do you mean by constructive discussion?â
âFor me, Arisa is most important.â
Yuzuru declared clearly.
âThe word âimportantâ has two meanings. I never want to let go of Arisa, and at the same time, I want to make her happy. Of course, through my own means.â
âHmm⊠And?â
âThe Takasegawa is my second priority, or rather it is a means to that goal.â
Yuzuru then looked at his fatherâs face.
In the past, he was looking up, but now Yuzuru was looking down slightly.
âSo if you try to take Arisa away from me or make her unhappy, I will do my best to rebel against you.â
âRebel huh? âŠHow do you define that?â
âI will break apart the house.â
The smile faded from Kazuyaâs face.
The two of them gazed, no, stared at each other.
âThat would be troubling. âŠIt would be really troubling. If you cause a family uprising involving a branch family, it will be a big problem.â
âAh, thatâs exactly right, Dad. There is nothing more foolish and unproductive than fighting among family members.â
Kazuya nodded in agreement with Yuzuruâs words.
He touched his chin and raised the corner of his mouth slightly.
âHmm, but⊠in other words, as long as Arisa-san is around, you canât defy me, can you?â
âThatâs right. And if you donât want to make an enemy of me, you have to take care of Arisa and treat her as family.â