NHK ni Youkoso! Vol 1 Chapter 10

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NHK ni Youkoso!



NHK ni Youkoso! Vol 1 Chapter 10


Chapter 10

Dive

Part One

Summer ended. Id depleted my living expenses. I had no money left for

food, so I decided to try sleeping to conserve energy. I would be awake

for five hours, and then Id sleep for fifteen. I tried living on that

schedule.

For the first three days, I didnt really have any problem fasting. At

worst, my stomach hurt a little bit. By the time the fourth day rolled

around, though, I couldnt think of anything but food. I want to eat

ramen. I want to eat curry and rice. Regardless of my will, my body

seriously wanted calories. This craving was impossible to fight.

Finally, on the fifth day of fasting, I left the apartment. Spending my

last few hundred yen to buy a pastry and another part-time job

magazine, I decided to start doing physical work that very day. 

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Physical day labor. . . I mastered the work surprisingly easily,

bringing supplies into event halls, helping with moving and the like.

Once in a while, I made a mistake and got punched by one of the

higher-ups; even so, the work was refreshing. The rougher I treated my

body, the more and more empty my head became. For the first time in

several years, I could go to sleep and wake up feeling refreshed.

Given all my credit card debt, I worked night and day for the first

month. After registering with a temporary agency, I was able to get daily

work. Once Id acc.u.mulated a degree of wiggle room in my savings, I

immediately reduced the amount of work I was doing. I decided to work

for about half a month at a time, then staying holed up for the second

half. As long as I could make about one hundred thousand yen a month,

I could actually maintain a rather pleasant life.

Whenever possible, I tried to work nights. Nighttime traffic control

was the best job. To be a security guard, you needed to get registered by

taking a four-day legal training course; once you finished that, however,

no other work was easier.

In the middle of the night, I waved the glowing red guide stick back

and forth at construction sites far from human habitation. The only

thing I could hear all night long was the echo of construction equipment

operating behind me. On the nights when I worked as a guard, I was

alone. Sometimes a car would pa.s.s, but all I had to do was wave the

guide stick appropriately and caution, "Look out, slow down."

Because I almost never needed to speak to others while working, I

felt the same as when I holed up in my apartment. I just relied on my

conditioned reflexes to wave the guide stick, back and forth, back and

forth. The night wind was a bit chilly, but my pay for this was ten 

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thousand yen per night, counting my travel fare.

Id work, and then Id shut myself away—earn my living expenses,

and then shut myself away. This lifestyle continued and, with

frightening speed, time went by. While I kept working, it turned to

winter.

It was the winter of my fifth year as a hikikomori. This year felt

thoroughly cold—probably because I had previously sold off my kotatsu

to the secondhand shop. Even covered head to toe with a blanket, I still

was freezing, always shivering uncontrollably. At that point, in place of a

body warmer, I decided to try using the laptop computer, which

Yamazaki had left behind when he moved.

"Its an off-brand Pentium 66 MHz notebook computer. I didnt

want to have to carry it, so I was going to throw it away. But seeing as I

have it, Ill give it to you, Satou," hed said.

Hed left with those words.

I set the laptop on my stomach and turned on the power. A noisy

whirring indicated that it was operating, and an anime wallpaper

appeared on the liquid crystal screen. Being an older machine, it

generated an amazing amount of heat. Soon, I warmed up and began to

grow sleepy.

Just then, I recognized a familiar icon displayed on the computers

desktop.

It looked like the executable file for the erotic game that Yamazaki

had been making. Positioning the cursor on the file, I clicked to open it.

The hard disk started groaning. After a long loading period, the game

began.

I played it for several hours. And then, I understood. . . I understood 

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that this was a terrible, terrible game.

The genre was an RPG, but it was an extremely cheap RPG, with

about one hundredth of the first Dragon Quest35 games content.

It wasnt an erotic game any longer, and the story was utterly

ridiculous—basically, the concept was something along the lines of "a

journey about love and youth taken by soldiers fighting against a giant,

evil organization." The game told the story of an average young man

who becomes a warrior to fight evil and protect the heroine. This wishfulfillment

scenario eventually bypa.s.sed the player, continuing

meaninglessly on and on and on.

I was dumbfounded.

Come on, what idiot could have come up with such a stupid scenario?

It was me. I was the very person who had written the original outline

for the story.

I grew sad. It was a bittersweet sadness, because I thoroughly

understood the scenario of the game: Soldiers taking a stand against evil.

This had been our exact desire; we had wanted to fight an evil

organization; we had wanted to fight villains. If a war had broken out,

we would have joined the JSDF36 right away and launched kamikaze

attacks. That definitely would have been a meaningful way to live and an

attractive way to die. Had there been villains in the world, we would

have battled them. Fists raised in the air, we would have fought. There

was no mistake about it.

There werent any villains, though. The world was just complicated

in various ways, and there werent any obvious villains to be found. It

was excruciating.

Our personal desires had become the framework for the game. As I 

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progressed farther into it, I realized that it actually had a wonderful

story. It was a simple, beautiful story. Right now, in fact, the main

character, fighting an enormously powerful enemy, vowed to protect the

heroine.

"Ill protect your life!" Heedless of his own safety, he prepared to

challenge the gigantic enemy and the final battle began. I was nearing the

end of the game.

There were three battle commands: "attack," "defend," and "special

attack." No matter how much I attacked the last boss, I couldnt do any

damage. Naturally, just trying to defend myself didnt help, either.

Finally, I had no choice but to use the special attack—the final death

blow. Using my own life energy, I sacrificed myself in order to deal a

mortal wound to the enemy. There was no other way to defeat the final

boss. So, the hero of the game held his "Revolutionary Bomb" in his right

hand and went to perform his special attack.

However, at the very, very end—at the exact second the hero

executed his special attack on the final boss—the game suddenly froze!

The game window closed, and the text editor started up. Yamazaki

apparently had left a letter that seemed like an excuse.

"There really isnt any other way to destroy the huge, evil

organization than to use your special attack. You can gain victory only if

you choose death for yourself because the giant, evil organization

actually is made up of our entire world. Because the second you choose

death, the world disappears into nothingness, the evil organization, too,

disappears into nothingness. Then, peace will come to you. Still, I didnt

blow my own head off with a bomb. That was my choice. No, it

definitely isnt that I just didnt want to go through the pain of drawing 

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the CG for the game ending or that I got downright tired of making a

terrible game. Nothing like that. . . "

At first, I tried to smash the laptop. Then, I changed my mind. I had

watched Yamazaki desperately work on this game, but the final

shoddiness of it hit me pretty hard.

What in the world could he be doing right now? This question suddenly

began to bother me, but I decided to try and forget it. I hadnt heard any

news from him since he left, and I didnt feel like contacting him, either.

Those idiotic days from that period in my life had ended long ago.

Christmas came once again. The city lights twinkled.

The guide stick grasped in my right hand, too, lit up in the darkness.

Tonights work was traffic control in the parking lot of a new

department store that had opened near the station. Because the

entrances were equipped with fully automated ticket machines, I had

absolutely nothing to do. When it got crowded, I tried helping out the

machines; but each time, I just ended up swinging my stick back and

forth.

There were no accidents, nothing happened, and Christmas Eve

marched on in safety.

About an hour before the store closed, a car came by. The car itself

was the sort of j.a.panese model found anywhere, with nothing special to

note about it. However, because the interior lights were on, I recognized

the girl sitting in the pa.s.senger seat. I saw her clearly.

Startled, I tried to push my cap down over my eyes as much as 

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possible. The car pa.s.sed me without hesitation, so there hadnt been any

recognition. But I felt that my high school acquaintance, sitting in the

pa.s.senger seat, had looked my way, just for a second.

Of course, that, too, was just a delusion.

My shift ended, and I changed out of my uniform and put the guide

stick and helmet into my bag. Swaying back and forth on one of the last

trains of the night, I headed toward my apartment. On the way, I

stopped by a convenience store to buy alcohol and the like.

I decided I should try getting into the Christmas spirit. Walking up

the steep road that led to my apartment, I drank a beer. I hadnt had

alcohol in a while, so it took effect quickly. Somewhat shakily, I slowly

hiked up the long, sloping path. In the distance, an ambulances siren

pierced the otherwise quiet night. I finished my second beer.

Merry Christmas.

By the time I pa.s.sed the park, my gait had been reduced to a

drunken stumble. Walking carefully, I could avoid swaying drastically,

but I figured I might as well just walk like a drunk. I increased my pace

and wobbled from telephone pole to telephone pole. I tripped over a

stone and almost fell. I staggered and was about to collapse in the middle

of the road when, right in front of me, an ambulance rushed past.

I had almost been run over!

I thought perhaps I should complain in a loud, drunken voice, "You

id—"

I stopped in mid-sentence.

The ambulance had pulled up in front of Misakis house. Her uncle

dashed out of the front door. He yelled to one of the paramedics as they

ran into the house, carrying a stretcher. A short while later, they carried 

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the stretcher back through the front door. Misaki was limp.

I watched as Misaki, her aunt, and her uncle sped away in the

ambulance at a breakneck speed.

Part Two

It was almost New Years Eve. One afternoon, I loitered in front of the

large hospital at the edge of town. This was where Misaki had been

admitted.

Earlier that morning, I had headed down to the manga café near the

station and had gotten the information from her exhausted uncle.

"Anyway, Im so sorry." Her uncle apologized to me for no reason.

"We thought she was doing better. Shed been much calmer since

quitting school and had seemed really happy recently. I wonder if maybe

that was because of what shed planned. By the way, how do you know

Misaki?"

"Were sort of acquaintances," I answered. I retreated from the

manga café and had headed straight for the hospital, but. . .

I had been hanging out in the courtyard for nearly two hours.

Among the visitors and patients out for strolls, I was pacing back and

forth on the path from the main gate to the front entrance.

Misaki was in a private, fourth-floor room on the open psychiatric

ward. Apparently, shed swallowed a bunch of sleeping pills. It was

nearly a fatal dose; had they arrived much later, it might have been too

late. 

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It was uncertain where Misaki had obtained the sleeping pills, but

they may have been from the neighborhood psychiatrist. But to have

ama.s.sed enough pills for an effective suicide attempt, she must have been

going there for quite for a while. That meant that this attempt clearly

had been intentional. Misaki had planned her death for a long time.

What in the world did I intend to do, showing up unannounced? I

couldnt make anything better for her.

Should I cry saying something like, "Dont die!". . . ?

Should I try yelling something like, "You still have tomorrow!". . . ?

Misaki had written numerous, similar clichés in her secret notebook.

But they hadnt helped her, so shed tried to overdose on sleeping pills.

In short, there was nothing I could do for her. It might even be

better for me to avoid showing my face. She probably would feel even

emptier, getting a hospital visit from a pathetic hikikomori.

When I thought about the situation that way, Id decide to go home;

but at the hospital gate, my feet would stop on their own. Once more, I

turned back toward the front entrance and repeated the entire cycle.

My thoughts were looping around. If this kept up, it looked like I

would just keep walking to and fro until nightfall. I couldnt make up my

mind.

Finally, s.c.r.e.w.i.n.g up my courage, I dashed into the hospital before I

could change my mind again. I got a visitors badge at the front desk,

pinned it to my chest, and headed up to the fourth floor.

The entire fourth floor was an open psychiatric ward. At first

glance, it seemed no different from a normal hospital. Id thought that a

psychiatric ward would be full of straitjackets, electroshock equipment,

and lobotomy laboratories. However, this open ward was clean and 

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cheerful; it seemed like an ordinary part of the hospital.

Or so I thought. When I noticed that an older woman of around

sixty, apparently a patient, had squatted down in the corner of the

hallway, I quickly headed for room 401.

In the far corner of the fourth-floor hall, a nameplate identified

Misakis room: "Misaki Nakahara," it said.

There was no mistake. This was the room.

I knocked softly.

There was no answer.

I tried knocking again, a little harder; there was still no answer.

However, my knocking seemed to have dislodged the door, though it

might have been open partially to begin with.

"Misaki?" I peeked into the room.

She wasnt there.

Well, if shes not here, theres nothing I can do. Ill go home!

I decided to leave behind the fruit basket I had bought in the

hospital gift shop. And I noticed someone had left a train schedule open

on the shelf next to the bed. The schedule was annotated here and there

in red ballpoint pen. Moving it aside, I put down the fruit basket.

As I did, a sc.r.a.p of paper fluttered to the floor. I picked it up and

read it: "Mikka Tororo was delicious. Therefore, farewell, everyone."

Shoving the sc.r.a.p of paper and the schedule into my coat pocket, I

dashed out of the hospital and headed toward the station.

The sun had begun to set. 

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They should have put her on a closed ward with iron bars over the

windows, not an open one where she could come and go freely. They

should have put her in a straitjacket and pumped her full of medicine to

make her happy. But because they hadnt, Misaki had left the hospital.

She was heading back to the town where shed been born. She was likely

going there to die.

I remembered the discussion wed had a good while ago:

"Tsuburaya, the runner, apparently went home to the countryside

right before he died. Then, he ate grated yam with his mother and

father, it says."

"Hm."

"I guess everyone wants to return to their hometown before they die,

after all."

That was probably true. Misaki, too, must have started wanting to

return to her hometown. She likely intended to dive into the sea from

the tall, sheer cliffs at the cape, where shed said she often played. It

wasnt going to be that easy, though. Now that I had found her suicide

note and the train schedule, her luck had run out.

As far as I could tell from looking at the notes marked on the

schedule, Misaki had boarded the train only an hour or so before. If I

chased after her, I should be able to make it in plenty of time. I knew

where she was headed, and on top of that, I had money. If I used taxis for

part of the trip, I might even reach the destination before Misaki. There

wasnt any reason for me to worry.

On the night train, I opened a map, purchased at a bookstore along

the way. I looked for that cape—the one where Misaki said she often

played when shed been little. Here it is. The map showed only one cape

near her hometown, so this had to be it. 

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Misaki probably had boarded the train that had departed right

before mine. Mixed in with people returning home for the years end, she

likely was heading for the town where shed been born, toward the cape

known as a famous suicide spot. However, she didnt know that I was

following her.

I wouldnt let her escape. I was certain to catch up with her. On that

point, at least, I wasnt worried. The problem lay elsewhere.

When I found Misaki, what should I say to her?

I understood her suffering, if only a little bit. It was just the very tip

of her pain; even so, I could imagine it to some degree. She probably felt

trapped, as though shed run out of options. And her pain would never,

ever disappear, not in her entire life.

Of course, that was natural. In a way, her pain was common to all

mankind. It was an ordinary suffering. Everyone is troubled by similar

feelings. I, too, was troubled by them.

Even if I keep living, theres nothing to he done. Its only pain.

Knowing that, could I stop her from jumping? Did I have the right

to stop her? As a member of society, I probably should say something

appropriate like, "Even so, keep living!" or "Stop whining!"

I understood all that.

While I was mulling over these things, the train arrived at its

destination.

Exiting the station, I found that the town was deserted. It was

already the middle of the night; but even given the time, the area around

the station was as silent as a ghost town. There was no sign of anyone on 

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the streets.

On top of that, it was snowing and really cold. As the town was

located on the Sea of j.a.pan, it was in something of a blizzard zone. I

fastened shut the neck of my coat and headed toward the sole taxi in

sight. The driver seemed surprised by a customers arrival. The man,

poised at the threshold of old age, looked like hed been sleeping in his

seat. Hurriedly, he wiped his eyes.

Getting into the warm car, I pointed at the map to show him my

destination. The driver looked at me for confirmation, with an

expression that said, "Are you serious?"

I nodded, and the car took off, causing the chains on the tires to

clank.

"Sir, why would you want to go to a place like that so late at night?"

"Sightseeing. Please hurry."

About half an hour later, the taxi exited onto a hilly road that ran

along the ocean sh.o.r.e. It headed straight up a steep hill. On the right,

the pitch-black sea spread out. When we reached the top of the hill, the

taxi stopped.

"This place actually has become quite a famous tourist spot, but

there isnt anything here." The taxi driver spoke as though in apology.

I paid the fare and got out of the taxi.

"You dont really plan to. . . No, the construction is complete, so it

should be fine." With that, the taxi driver pulled back onto the road.

I looked around. There really wasnt anything here. Or more

accurately, it was so dark that I could barely see.

As the ocean was on my right side, I thought I would find the cliff if

I headed in that direction, but only spa.r.s.ely scattered streetlamps lit the 

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area. I felt terribly helpless. For the time being, I crossed the road and,

climbing through the s.p.a.ce between the guardrails, I set off on a snowcovered

path.

Misaki had to be at the other end of this path. Stepping through the

snow, which came up to my ankles, and taking care not to slip and fall, I

continued down the path cut through the thick brush. With each step,

the surrounding darkness grew deeper and deeper.

Before long, the light from the streetlamps no longer reached me,

and I could hardly see anything at all. Then, the brush thinned abruptly.

The path ended, and in front of my eyes stretched the coal-black sky and

the Sea of j.a.pan. Thats right. I had made it to the very edge of the cape.

It was too dark for me to see well, but the cliff was about thirty feet

ahead. I finally had arrived. I had reached my destination!

But what about Misaki?

I looked around, but I couldnt see much. A large full moon floated

in the night sky, but my eyes werent used to the dark yet, so I couldnt

make out anything but vague outlines. There seemed to be no sign of

anyone anywhere. That was all I could tell.

What did this mean? Had I arrived first? Or had Misaki stopped

somewhere along the way? Or could it be that. . .

My heart began pulsing violently, and my blood curdled.

No, no, it couldnt be. There was no way that she could have jumped

before I even arrived, right? Shed be here shortly. Soon, Misaki would

come walking down that path.

I stepped back and sat on a bench that faced the ocean. With my face

turned expectantly toward the little path, I waited for Misaki.

An hour pa.s.sed. Misaki didnt come. It began to seem as though she 

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wouldnt come down the path at all. I put my head in my hands.

Without realizing it, I started talking to myself.

"Why?"

"Why what?"

"Did I arrive too late?"

"No, you didnt."

"Misaki is. . . "

"You were off by only five minutes. Maybe you should be a

detective."

I slowly turned my face to the right. Standing there was Misaki. She

was wearing a black coat that blended with the darkness.

Perching on the edge of the bench, Misaki explained, "You finally

said something. I didnt know what to do because you were silent for so

long."

Part Three

A violent rage boiled up inside me. I felt as though she had made an a.s.s

out of me. Forcing those feelings back down inside, I said in as gentle a

tone as possible, "Well then, lets go home! Its cold out here!"

"I dont want to."

What do you mean you dont want to?! You, ah c.r.a.p, just stop making a

fool out of me. I nearly started railing at her as hard as I could; but

somehow, I was able to control the impulse.

I tried to remember a book I had read long ago called The Psychology

of Self-Injury. It had theorized, "Those who try to commit suicide 

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actually want someone to save them. They want someone to listen to

what they have to say, so try and listen to them with a kind demeanor, as

gently as possible, without chiming in with any sort of negative

comments."

Those seemed to be the key points.

I turned to Misaki as I fixed my collar. That was proof of my gentle

att.i.tude. Then, I said, "Dont die. Lets keep living!"

Misaki smiled. It was a derisive smile.

I wanted to tell her just how much trouble I had gone through to get

all the way here; of course, I held back. In a kindly voice, I asked, "Why

did you attempt suicide so suddenly?"

"It wasnt your fault or anything, Satou."

"I know that. So. . . "

"Ive grown tired of living."

"Explain in more concrete terms."

"I got sick of everything. There was no reason for me to keep on

living." She chanted these abstractions, a smile still on her face. Was she

making a fool out of me, after all?

"Yeah, thats right. I dont think that I can get help from you any

longer, Satou. Youre just a hikikomori, in the end."

The blood rushed to my head. "Go ahead and die!"

"I will die."

"No! I was kidding. Dont die. If you die, youll go to h.e.l.l."

"You dont have to be in such a panic. To begin with, Im basically

already dead, seeing how I took all the drugs Id saved over an entire

year. If my uncle hadnt found me, I would have succeeded. No matter

what you do, Satou, Im determined to go ahead and die." 

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There, in the winter, standing at a cape in the inky darkness, we

continued discussing whether to live or die. The conversation was light

years removed from the normal, everyday world.

It was already past midnight, and it was freezing. Misakis teeth

chattered.

"Either way, Im going to die." She had grown defiant. "Go ahead and

try to stop me if you want, even though its impossible."

Clearly, the views on suicide traditionally retained by our society no

longer held any merit. Without any shame at all, she was arguing for

death.

I reb.u.t.ted, "If youre saying stuff like that, Misaki, then you dont

really feel like dying anymore, do you?"

In response, Misaki put her hand into her coat pocket and pulled out

a metal object.

"I have a box cutter here." The blade slid out of the handle. She

declared, "Right now, Ill cut my wrists with this box cutter!"

"Thats dangerous!" I tried to grab Misakis hand.

"Dont come near me!" Misaki quickly jumped up from the bench to

avoid my grasp.

"I dont know what to do. Im sure that Ive gone crazy. If you come

too dose, Ill probably cut you!" As she shouted this, Misaki stretched

out her right hand, which gripped the box cutter, and put her left hand

behind her back. She looked like she was attempting some fencing pose.

"What are you doing?"

"I learned it from a book called The Art of Murder that I read at the

library. Im employing the knife-fighting art of the Sicilian Mafia."

Putting several feet between us, Misaki swung around the box 

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cutter, threatening me.

"Arent you disgusted? Disgusted because the person you came all

this way to save really is crazy? Theres nothing I can do about that,

though, Satou. Im sure you were thinking something along those lines,

right? Like, you wanted to show how cool you are by saving some crazy

girl about to commit suicide. Thats what you were thinking, wasnt it?

But its impossible. Its impossible!"

With the moon at her back, it was hard to see her, so I couldnt tell

what expression she wore. Though it sounded like a farce, it wasnt.

That much seemed certain. I asked her seriously, "If I told you Im

deeply in love with you, what would you do?"

"I wouldnt do anything. Im finished. I mean, youre just a

hikikomori to begin with, Satou. And you look like youd change your

mind quickly. Besides, in actuality, you dont like me at all, right? If

someone wont be mine from the top of his head to the tips of his toes,

its better for me to die. Its not like my desires can be granted by just

anyone. I always knew this. And thats why, either way, I just need to

die."

"I like you! I love you! Please, dont die!"

"Ha ha ha. Youre so funny, Satou. But its no use. Im going to die!"

Our dialogue was somehow very much like a shoujo manga.

Still, I knew that words like "love" and "hate" probably werent that

important. The problem likely lay in a deeper, more fundamental place.

I thought that I should try my best to explain this to her. I should

somehow put it into words for Misaki. However, the words would slip

away at once. The second I p.r.o.nounced them, they would lose all

meaning. 

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I just didnt understand. What should I do? What did I want to do?

What was I thinking. . . ? It didnt really matter if she died. Thats what I

thought.

Its all the same in the end. The only difference is whether death comes

sooner or later. Even if I do keep living, there will he only more suffering and

more hardship. Theres no meaning to it. Theres no meaning to life. It would

be better to die. This was a thoroughly logical conclusion that no one

could refute.

At least, I couldnt refute it. In fact, I doubted that anyone was less

suited to the role of convincing someone else to give up on suicide than I

was.

"Its not right." I kept saying these ridiculous things. "Dont say

youre going to die."

All the words sounded artificial.

Deciding to rely on force, I stepped toward Misaki, who was still

swinging the box cutter around. She backed up. Ignoring her wild

movements, I lunged forward and reached out my right hand. Just before

my hand touched Misakis body, the blade of the box cutter sliced open

my palm. A second later, blood began to flow. It soaked into the snow.

It hurt, but the pain was wonderful.

Misaki stared at the b.l.o.o.d.y box cutter, a dreamy expression on her

face. I gave her a smile.

Misaki looked as though she were also about to smile.

The wind blew, and powdered snow danced upward. 

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Finally, I understood. I knew what I needed to do: I would keep this girl

alive. I would save her.

How? Does a hikikomori like me have the power to do things for others?

Wasnt that kind of thing impossible? Shouldnt I know my place? Well?

Yet somewhere, there had to be a wonderful solution. I truly

believed this. There had to be a way for everything to work out. There

had to be a way to fulfill Misakis wishes and my own hopes. Surely, I

already knew the answer.

I would erase her pain and make it possible for her to live on,

laughing and happy. I would give her the vitality to make it until

tomorrow, give her the strength to live. The method—I had to know it

already, somehow.

Once, shed said to me, "If that type of bad G.o.d did exist, then we

could go on living in good health. If we could push the responsibility for

our misery onto G.o.d, then we would have that much more peace of

mind, wouldnt we?

"If I could believe in G.o.d, I could become happy. Even if G.o.d is a

bad guy, I know I could become happy. The problem is. . . the problem is

I have a poor imagination, so I cant believe in G.o.d very easily. Look,

couldnt He create some really showy miracle for me, just like He does in

the Bible?"

She wanted to believe in a G.o.d, but her G.o.d was a villain. He was

the main instigator of all evil. If she could believe in the existence of

someone so evil, Misaki had said that she could keep on living. If a

miracle occurred in front of her, it would prove the existence of this

villain. She had said that, in that case, she would be able to keep on

living. Ill grant your wish!

Welcome to the N.H.K.

218

The method was unfathomably difficult, terrible, and likely would

require an enormous sacrifice. That, itself, however, was what I desired.

To sacrifice myself to save the heroine would be the n.o.blest act I could

perform.

Ah, I wanted to brag to Yamazaki, Im living right now, this very

moment, burning out my life in a wonderful manner. I truly feel alive. I

wanted to hold my head high with pride and brag to him.

It was true, looking at it objectively, that this was quite a dramatic

night. A girl swinging a knife around and me trying to stop that girl from

committing suicide. It was all rather moving. Given that fact, the words

should come pouring forth. In this situation, I should be able to say

something eloquent.

Misaki was trembling. I probably was trembling, too. I was

frightened, so I tried to bolster my courage.

Memories from my twenty-two years pa.s.sed through my mind. I

realized that I had existed for this moment, when I would do whatever I

could—anything I could—to keep this girl alive. It was probably my lifes

mission. If not, then there was no meaning. . . No meaning for my having

lived up until now, no meaning in living and then dying. At that instant,

I understood everything. I knew everything, and everything was

connected.

I would help Misaki, who was shaking with terror. I would give my

life to help her. This kind of situation must have been what Id desired

all along. The flags that guided me toward the ending all had unfurled.37

My dialog, leading toward this ending, was all that remained to set this

scene into motion. Because of that, I would stand up and face it. Misaki

could find a reason to live. It would be a happy ending. 

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219

I was scared. Please, help me. . .

Even so, I gathered my courage and embraced the trembling Misaki.

"Its not your fault, Misaki."

I hugged her with all my strength and whispered into her ear, "Its

not your fault at all, Misaki. Not a single part is your fault."

She was slight, thin. Shaking, she clung to me, and the darkness

surrounded the two of us.

The wind was strong that night. Snow fell lightly. The stillness grew

deeper. Why were we so sad? Why were we so lonely? Do you know the

reason? Oh, I understand. Its because were about to part, about to say farewell.

Thats why were trembling. Were forever alone, and were forever lonely.

Thats how it always is, the way its supposed to he. Everyone is like this, so

dont hate yourself. Dont hate yourself. There are other things you should hate.

You need to know that.

"Thats right, there are bad people. There are people whove hurt

you, Misaki."

Theres no need for you to be sad. No need at all. Why must you be sad? If

you always had to live in pain, lonely and suffering that would be irrational. It

would be strange, wouldnt it? Thats just nonsense. Thats why there has to be

someone, somewhere, behind all this. A villain who forces you to suffer.

Thats why. . .

Thats why, in this world, conspiracies exist.

However, there is a more than a ninety-nine percent chance that the

plausible-sounding conspiracies that you hear about from others are

simple delusions or even intentional lies. When you visit a bookstore,

the books with rides like The Great Jewish Conspiracy to Ruin the j.a.panese

Economy! or The Super Conspiracy of the CIA That Hides Their Secret Pact 

Welcome to the N.H.K.

220

with Aliens! are all just trivial delusions.

Even so. . .

Even so. . .

A tiny percentage of people actually have stumbled upon a real

conspiracy. There is, in tact, one person who witnessed with his own

eyes a conspiracy that exists, at this very moment, in the most extreme

secrecy.

Who is this person?

Its me.

What was the enemys name? I knew it. I had known it for a long

time, the name of the evil organization that tortured us, the terrible G.o.d

for which Misaki had earnestly wished. Its name was. . .

N.H.K.

Thats right! I remembered everything now: the name of my enemy,

my mission, the reason for my existence, the reason I had continued to

live until now, and the reason I had spent every day empty and vapid.

Yes, my life has existed only to save you. This is probably true. Its all true, so

listen to me!

Still embracing Misaki so she couldnt pull away, I explained in brief

detail. "Listen, Misaki. In this world, there is an evil organization. Its

name is N.H.K. N.H.K. is a huge organization that spans the entire

globe. Theyre an evil, secret society, and theyre the ones who put us

through this pain. Its all the N.H.K.s fault. After this, if anything bad

happens around you, its all the N.H.K.s doing. Everything is the

N.H.K.s fault!

"For starters, the name N.H.K. itself is simply a coincidence. The

actual name doesnt matter at all. If you dont like N.H.K., you can call 

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221

it whatever you want. If you wish, you can even call it Satan. Or call it

the evil G.o.d. It all means the same thing.

"Its true. The names dont matter at all. Theyre just a set of sounds.

An imaginary enemy torturing you: That is the real essence of N.H.K.

For example, take that girl from my high school literature club. To her,

it could signify the Nihon Hiyowa Kyokai,38 as her own weakness

continually defeated her. She was weak in both mind and spirit."

Please, stop trying to slash your wrists. Please, become happy, somehow.

I continued, "In the case of Misaki, N.H.K. means Nihon Hikan

Kyokai.39 Because of the misfortunes you were born with, Misaki, you

saw everything in a pessimistic way. Please, forgive me for being alive. Dont

hate me. You always were self-defeating like that.

"Then, my own N.H.K. . . .

"Well its actually the N.H.K.s fault that I became a hikikomori,

just as its their fault that you suffer, Misaki. Thats the truth. I learned

this through a certain technique. I fought with them. Ive been fighting

them for a long time, but its no use anymore. Ive finally fallen victim to

them, and theyll kill me before long. But Misaki, youre fine. You must

live on, in health."

Misaki clearly was frightened as I kept spewing nonsense.

I released her and took a step back. Now, I would show her a

miracle, a great miracle, in order to prove the N.H.K.s existence. I

would reveal my true nature as a strong soldier who battled the N.H.K.,

and I would defeat them for her.

If I did that, Misaki probably would believe my story. She would live

on, smiling. She most likely would stop hating herself, and her

pessimistic personality probably would be healed.

That was the answer. I would give her immutable love. You were 

Welcome to the N.H.K.

222

afraid. You were afraid of being hated by others. You were afraid that others

feelings might change. But youll be okay. My feelings wont change. I love you,

and that feeling absolutely will never change.

And the reason. . . ?

"Ah! I cant go on! Its a psychic attack by the N.H.K.!"

I rolled around in the snow.

"Do I look like Im going crazy? If so, then that, too, is caused by the

N.H.K. Ill be killed soon! Ill be killed by the N.H.K.! But Ill return the

blow! Just you watch!" I got up and ran, heading for the edge of the cliff.

I started out running slowly.

"Goodbye, Misaki! My legs are moving on their own. Im going to be

killed by the N.H.K. But in the moment that I die, I plan to do

something to return their strike. Ill destroy them!"

My speed gradually was increasing.

"Thats right! In order to defeat the N.H.K., I have to sacrifice my

own life so that I can use my special attack. This is why I must go, but

Ill protect you!"

I was moving at full speed now.

I had to run out into the night sky with all my strength. The cliff

edge was nearing. Ah, Ill jump. Ill dive. Ill use my special attack.

Because of my unbelievably idiotic end, Misaki would have to believe

in the evil organization. Due to my special attack, she might see the end

of that evil organization. And it probably would bring her happiness.

And despite everything, Misaki would not need to feel guilty at all.

This was all I had wanted. I always had intended to die. 

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223

I would fulfill my own lifes purpose and also save Misaki. Truly, this

was the clearest way to kill two birds with one stone. I was the one who

had planned to die. I always, always had planned to die.

After all, I even had tried to starve myself to death. But that had

proven to be impossible. A weak-willed person like myself couldnt carry

through with something like a fast: My limit was four days. Then, I had

worked to earn my living expenses. That was the single time I had

worked hard before my death. I always had been searching for some way

to die.

In short, I was a much crazier person than you. It proves that, emotionally,

I am an abnormal person. I mean, if I werent, then I couldnt do something like

this, right? Misaki, while you look down on me, at the same time, please accept

my love or whatever it is. Ill die soon, but Misaki, you must live-on. I will

defeat the N.H.K. and get rid of dye evil organization. Please, believe this. If

you do, you can stay alive. Misaki, you can keep living.

Watch my special attack and burn it into your mind. Look, can you see it?

Can you see the Revolutionary Bomb, brightly shining in my right hand? Its

the Revolutionary Bomb that Yamazaki refrained from using, an earthshattering

bomb that destroys villains. Its very, very weak, far too weak to blow

away the N.H.K. But its more than strong enough to snuff out this minuscule,

pathetic, worthless living creature—in short, me. And if I die, my N.H.K. also

will disappear, because the N.H.K. is G.o.d. It is the entire world. And with my

death, my world will dissipate. And the N.H.K. will disappear. Thats exactly

why I need to do my special attack right now, with the legendary Revolutionary

Bomb.

I was going to die. I was going to dive from the cliff soon. Behind me,

Misaki was screaming something, bur her voice no longer reached me. 

Welcome to the N.H.K.

224

No one could stop me now.

This was the best! My body ran like the wind. Ah, I felt good. I felt

invigorated, running as fast as I could, atop the cliffs, in the dark.

I also was scared. I didnt want to die.

There was no reason for me to live. I didnt want to live.

Soon, I would die. Only a few feet remained before the cliffs edge. In

mere seconds, the s.p.a.ce of one heartbeat, I would soar out into the wideopen

sky.

After just a few more seconds, swinging my arms as hard as possible

and sticking out my legs as far as I could, I would dive. For the first time,

I could truly escape, leave my six-mat, one-room apartment and fly

higher and higher into the open sky. I would jump and fly.

Ah, just a little longer. Ill fly soon.

I would jump into the Sea of j.a.pan, as though I were doing a running

long jump. Id jump out. . .

Im jumping. . .

I jumped.

I jumped!

Both my legs left the ground. My body was floating in the air, and

after a few moments, my body would fall soon.

I would fall and smash into the Sea of j.a.pan.

The ending was very near—just like in the erotic game that

Yamazaki made, I would use my special arrack on the N.H.K. To

protect the heroine, I would rush forward into the final battle. I had

wished for that game scenario, and I was going to die exactly the way I

had wanted. It was the greatest happy ending. 

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225

Soon, I will be saved. . . .

Then, it happened. Suddenly, something came to mind that concerned

me. The ending of that game—no matter how I tried, I couldnt

remember it. Did the hero of the game defeat the evil organization? In

fact, was there even an ending at all?

Someone said, "Theres no way to win."

It might have been a dream. I already might have lost consciousness

some time ago. As I danced through nothingness, the pitch-black Sea of

j.a.pan and a bright, starry sky stretched out before my eyes.

And then, I saw them. They were mocking me.

My body would start falling soon. I would die. That had to happen.

But they said, "Remember."

On this bluff, where there had been too many incidents,

construction to prevent them had already been completed. The

Revolutionary Bomb disappeared without going off.

I screamed, "Is that how you do it?! You cowards!"

No answer came back to me. 






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