NHK ni Youkoso! Vol 1 Chapter 9

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NHK ni Youkoso!



NHK ni Youkoso! Vol 1 Chapter 9


Chapter 09

Days of the End

Part One

To a hikikomori, winter is painful because everything feels cold, frozen

over, and lonely. To a hikikomori, spring is also painful because

everyone is in a good mood and therefore enviable.

Summer, of course, is especially painful.

It was a summer loud with the sound of cicadas. From morning to

night, they kept whining and whining. The summer was also cripplingly

hot. Even if the air conditioner ran constantly, it remained hot. I didnt

know if my air conditioner was wearing out or if this summer was just

especially hot. Either way, I was thoroughly boiled.

Sometimes, I wanted to yell, "Whoever is responsible, show

yourself!" I didnt even have the energy to do it, though. The summer

heat had worn me down completely. My appet.i.te was depressed, and my 

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nerves were exhausted. No matter how much Lipovitan D27 I swigged,

my weariness was impossible to dispel.

Only my next door neighbor was energetic. He unabashedly made

noise. From early morning until the middle of the night, anime songs

rang out at loud volumes. He said that recently, he needed only four

hours of sleep a day. He was working hard on his creative projects, with

the help of anime songs. Bloodshot eyes flashing, he vigorously applied

himself to these meaningless activities.

One day, Yamazaki said, "Ive finally gotten through a big part of my

game."

"Oh, really?"

"Tomorrow, Im going to start making a bomb."

"What?"

Without answering Yamazaki silently gnawed on some white bread.

It was a pretty half-a.s.sed breakfast. As I wasnt as lazy as he was, I

properly toasted my bread and quickly fried an egg.

"Like I told you before, dont take food out of other peoples fridges

without permission."

I pretended not to know what he was talking about.

Misaki was wearing long sleeves even though it was summer. She was in

a good mood, though.

"This is so fun, so fun, so fun," she said. She really did seem to be

having fun. She was swinging happily on the swing set.

Of course, tonight felt tropical. It was so hot that I sweated even 

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without so much as speaking.

Misaki, however, seemed cool enough. Hair streaming behind her as

she energetically swung back and forth, she said, "By the way, Satou, do

you want to eat the leftover cat food?"

At some point, the parks black cat had gone missing. It had been

quite a while since he had shown himself. Either he had been hit by a car

and gone to heaven, or hed taken off on a journey somewhere.

At any rate, I turned her down. "I dont need it."

"I stocked up on that cat food. Ah, what a waste."

Jumping down off the swing, Misaki stepped into the cozy sandbox

next to the jungle gym. Picking up a green shovel that one of the

neighborhood kids had left behind, she started making something in the

sandbox.

I asked, "What is that?"

"A mountain."

She was right. It certainly was a mountain. Set in the middle of the

sandbox, it was a sharply peaked mountain. It angled steeply, like

Mount Fuji drawn by Hokusai,28 thus looking as though the slightest

vibration would make it crumble. But the sand mountain soon was

perfectly complete. It was wonderful work, using sand wet with the

evening dew.

Clapping her hands to brush off the sand, Misaki circled the

mountain once. She looked expectantly at me. I said, "Its a nice

mountain."

A little smile on her face, Misaki shouted, "Yaaah!" and aimed a

forward kick at the mountain. "Things with shape will one day fall

apart." 

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"Thats right." I nodded.

There was actually a huge variety to the books Misaki pulled out of her

backpack, night after night. She apparently borrowed them en ma.s.se

once a week from the library. There were novels, poetry collections,

practical guides, and reference books. Misaki read books of all different

shapes and sizes, and then she would read them to me.

"Well then, the text for tonight is The Last Words of Famous People.

Its t.i.tle refers to the words that exemplary people leave behind at the

moment of their deaths. . . "

Refers to. . . ?

"Lets think about what life is!" she cried.

It was a dramatic line, and I was done in by Misakis ability to make

such grand, unusual declarations with an utterly normal expression.

Then again, seen from another perspective—well, compared to

yesterdays topic of "Lets think about what it means to live," it wasnt

that big a deal.

Regaining my composure, I urged her to continue, and Misaki

immediately started reading the text aloud.

The book collected the last words of famous people from all around

the world, from ancient times to modern days. I listened quietly and

respectfully. As she read from the book, however, Misaki seemed to

grow bored with it, and her theme changed along the way.

"More light. . . Well then, whose words could these be?"

What, a quiz?! 

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"Three. . . Two. . . One. . . Times up! The answer is Goethe. Well,

that line is too cool, isnt it? I think that Mr. Goethe must have thought

it up far, far ahead of time."

"M-maybe he did."

"Okay then, next question. Mikka Tororo29 was delicious."

I knew this one. "Its the marathon runner Kokichi Tsuburayas

death note."

"Ping pong, ping pong!30 Thats right! Its amazing you knew that."

I couldnt really brag about knowing famous peoples last words, but

Misaki praised me anyway. She sounded oddly taken with the contents

of that death note, "Mikka Tororo. . . this is like some kind of joke, isnt

it?"

"Conversely, that might be why people are struck by it."

"I see. That really clears things up for me," she said, nodding

repeatedly. "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 hometowns before they

die, after all."

"Now that you mention it, Misaki, are you from this city?"

"No, Im not. The north star is in that direction. . . so Im probably

from over there." Misaki pointed in a north-by-northwest direction.

She said the name of a town I didnt know and explained that it was

a small town on the Sea of j.a.pan, with a population of five thousand.

According to her, it supposedly had a beautiful cape, but that cape had

become a somewhat notorious spot for suicides. 

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"Ever since some famous person jumped off its cliff during the Meiji

era, its like its become a Mecca for suicides. They say that so many

people either jumped deliberately or slipped and fell accidentally that

they had to construct safety barriers to prevent further incidents. When

I was little, I didnt know anything about that and was always, playing

on those bluffs. One day, I saw a strange woman there."

Misaki continued, "She was by the cliffs edge, on the high cape. It

was a beautiful early evening and the sky was a bright red. The woman,

too, was beautiful."

"And?"

"I took my eyes off her for just a moment, and she vanished. Even

now, I sometimes see her in my dreams. It might have just been a dream

to begin with, though. I mean, she had a really cheerful smile on her

healthy-looking face. Alone, she stared at the ocean and late-afternoon

sun. And then, in that one short instant, as I glanced away, she

disappeared. A strange story, isnt it?"

It was a strange story.

"What could have happened? I think she should have at least left a

suicide note—maybe about grated yam or something," I joked, trying to

lighten the mood.

"I want to eat some grated yam."

"It makes you itchy."

"Yeah." She nodded.

"Its delicious, though, isnt it?"

The conversation had begun to stray. I, too, was exhausted, after all.

But Misaki was laughing. "Ah, how fun, how happy. You think so, dont

you, Satou?" 

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"Sure."

"Were coming to the end. The last day of the project is

approaching." Misaki returned the book to her bag. "Ive given all these

helpful lectures, Satou, so you should be just about ready to become a

model adult, right?"

Standing up from the bench, she said, "You understand now, dont

you? Why youve become a worthless person? Why youve become a

hikikomori? You should understand by this point."

I didnt answer.

"If you think about it properly, you should definitely understand."

Still seated on the bench, I looked up at her. The park was so dark

that only her silhouette was illuminated. I couldnt see the expression on

her face.

"Im nearly out of time. I cant cause any more trouble for my aunt

and uncle, so Im going to leave town."

Her tone was absolutely casual, so I listened to her calmly.

"Where are you going?"

"A city. . . someplace where there are lots of people; someplace where

no one knows me; someplace where I dont know anyone. Thats why, by

the time I go, Satou. . . Satou, you have to become an outstanding

person."

I couldnt tell where the discussion was going; then again, she was a

girl who said terribly unreasonable things.

Dazed, I shook my head from side to side.

"That wont change anything," said Misaki.

"Okay, I understand. Im fine now." All I could do, at that point, was

try to convince her of her success. "No, because of you, I really have been 

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reborn. You should rest a.s.sured of that and start a life of your own in a

new city."

She still seemed somehow dissatisfied.

In an optimistic tone, I said, "Thank you! I owe you my life. Oh,

thats true. Want to take my stereo with you? Its a necessity for living

alone. If you want it, Ill give it to you as a present. . . "

"That isnt what I mean."

"It isnt what you mean?"

I waited patiently for her to continue, but Misaki turned her back on

me without saying anything else.

I stood up, too. "Well then, goodbye."

I started walking toward my apartment; as I did, Misaki called out.

"No! Wait a second!"

"What?"

"Lets go on a date. Itll be your graduation exam to test whether you

really have become an outstanding, socially adept person, Satou. Meet

me at the station, Sunday at noon. And were definitely going even if it

rains!"

With this defiant declaration, Misaki quickly strode away.

Meanwhile, Yamazaki really was making a bomb. He had gotten hold of

a bomb recipe from the Internet and was really, truly manufacturing a

bomb.

First, he needed to make black gunpowder. The history of black

gunpowder went way back into the distant past. For example, it was 

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used during the Genkou period of Mongolian invasions31; and the

weapon called the tetsuhou,

32 which surprised the samurai, also used

black gunpowder. Despite being an extremely primitive compound of

pota.s.sium nitrate, sulfur, and coal, its force is tremendous. They say

that when used in an enclosed s.p.a.ce, black gunpowder generates enough

power to break all the windows on an average car and instantly kill the

people inside.

"What are you going to use a bomb for?"

"Its obvious, isnt it? Im going to blow up something!"

Well, yeah, that was true. It was, indeed, obvious. There was no

other use for a bomb.

"I meant, what are you going to blow up? Thats what I wanted to

ask you."

"My enemies."

"Who are your enemies?"

"Villains. Im going to get those villains with my revolutionary

bomb."

"I see. Well, who are the villains?"

"Like, politicians or something."

"Do you even know the name of the current prime minister?"

Yamazaki grew silent and went back to his work. Before long, hed

completed the black gunpowder and the airtight iron pipe. His

detonator, which used an a.n.a.log clock, also was finished. The only thing

left was to attach the detonator to the pipe, and then he could set it off at

any time.

"Yay, Im done! Im a fighter! Im a revolutionary!" Yamazaki was in

high spirits. "Theyll all be blown up! Ill kill all the villains!" 

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He was in high spirits, but he was also entirely self-aware.

"Ah, that was fun," he concluded.

In the end, though, the bomb didnt blow up any villains.

To start with, we didnt know where to find any villains. Because

there was nothing we could do about that, we tried to blow up the

neighborhood park on Sat.u.r.day night. So no one would see us, we

crawled deep into the brush to set the detonator. The bomb actually did

explode, but it was more a whimper than a bang.

It was a sad story.

Amid these distractions, Sunday arrived. As I had promised, I met

Misaki in front of the station. We had our date, and I returned to my

apartment.

I slept all night. When I awoke, it was morning. I had nothing to do

and was bored. I decided to try ingesting my entire stash of stockpiled

drugs. I started having a good time. Everything became pleasurable. I

laughed.

Part Two

In general, drugs can be cla.s.sified into one of three large categories:

uppers, downers, and psychedelics. Uppers are drugs that make you

energetic. Cocaine and stimulants are famous uppers. Downers are

drugs like heroin, which make you sluggish. Id never tried them, so I

didnt know firsthand, but it seemed that taking them would feel really,

really good. And psychedelics are hallucinogens. LSD and magic 

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mushrooms represent that category.

For the most part, I really preferred legal hallucinogens. They had

few side effects—unlike uppers and downers—and more than that, they

were easy to get because they were legal.

On the day after my date, I took drugs again. I decided to take a

rather aggressive approach.

First, I set the groundwork with thirty milligrams of AMT. AMT is

an antidepressant that was studied by Russian scientists. After they

discovered that a large dose could cause hallucinogenic effects, it was

prohibited for medical use. Still, it was originally just an antidepressant.

After taking it, for the first two hours, a person would be plagued with

terrible nausea; once that was over, however, it became entirely

pleasurable. It also happened to be the best thing ever for combating bad

trips.

Next, I boiled down the seeds of a harmal plant and drank the

yellow layer of liquid that floated to the top. Harmal, a plant I think is in

the goathead family, originated in Tibet and contains the Indole-type

psychedelic components harmine and harmaline. Using it by itself

doesnt produce any real effect; in combination with other hallucinogens

like magic mushrooms or DMT, though, the effects are amplified

dozens of times over. Thats the Ayahuasca method. As harmal is an

MAO inhibitor, it could be life-threatening if ingested with cheese or

other dairy products; but as long as those foods are avoided, it shouldnt

cause any problems.

Well, my real opportunity had arrived. My consciousness already

was dimming, and the edges of my vision wavered wildly—but here, my

true trip would begin. I would keep going and going! 

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Grinding five grams of dried magic mushroom with a mortar and

pestle, I washed the powder down with a single gulp of orange juice. On

top of that, I screwed up my courage and ingested a ten-milligram crystal

of 5-MeO-DMT. DMT is a drug containing only the effective

components of hallucinogenic plants like chacropanga, which natives of

the Amazon use in their Ayahuasca ceremonies. Though legal, this drug

is reputedly one of the strongest anyone can find. According to one

theory, the hallucinogenic effects are more than one hundred times more

powerful than those of LSD. Its truly the ultimate psychedelic.

In just one second, I had become paralyzed! The drugs had taken

effect!

The Satou Special—my wonderful, ultimate method, devised

through research and trial-and-error—was complete.

By effectively combining four types of drugs into a single c.o.c.ktail, I

was promised the ultimate trip, one that even illegal drugs couldnt

touch. With a hard thrust, as if riding a rocket ship, I was shot into the

far reaches of outer s.p.a.ce. Time stopped entirely. s.p.a.ce began to warp

thoroughly. My physical body disappeared.

"This is no good, Satou. I found out something terrible! Ive had an

epiphany!" Yamazaki declared. "This is really, really bad!"

I tried to say something but my mouth wouldnt work.

Yamazaki was getting agitated. "Are you listening? Listen closely:

This is a really bad thing!"

As there was nothing else I could do, I listened closely. 

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Pulling himself to his full height and wearing the largest grin

imaginable, Yamazaki said, "I was able to logically prove that I am the

monotheistic G.o.d who created the cosmos!"

I died.

Then, I came back to life.

"Please watch, and Ill clean up your room now, using my

superpowers." Yamazaki pointed his finger at the rubbish scattered

about the floor and screamed, "Move!"

Naturally, the rubbish did not so much as twitch.

"Hey! Im ordering you! Why are you resisting me?" Yamazaki

fumed.

Observing this situation, I felt something rise up inside of me. It was

a strange sensation, bubbling up from the very depths of my body.

Folding my arms, I thought carefully about this feeling. Finally, after

what seemed like an eternity, I realized what it was. I know, this is. . .

It was nausea! I was attacked by violent nausea. I tried to dash to the

bathroom, but the path there was challenging. My legs wouldnt move

forward. The hall seemed to have stretched into a fifteen hundred foot

tunnel. The bathroom was so far away. Would I make it? Could I get to

the bathroom before spraying-vomit everywhere?

Ill be fine. Calm down.

Yamazaki had just said it. He had said, "I am G.o.d."

But I knew. I knew that his words were completely mistaken. How

did I know? Because I was G.o.d! I had confirmed that truth just a

moment earlier, using a thoroughly logical thought process.

I would definitely make it in time. I am G.o.d. I will make it to the

bathroom in time. 

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I made it.

Prostrating myself before the toilet, I threw up. Afterward, I felt

much better. Then, I became energetic. I was enjoying myself. Skipping

slowly back into the room, I found Yamazaki squatting there, still

grinning.

"Its no good. Elementary students are no good." Muttering under

his breath, he looked like he was thinking of something criminal.

For some reason, his situation triggered an extreme sense of déjà vu.

This sort of thing has happened before, hasnt it. . . ? While I thought about

it, ten consecutive aggressive feelings of déjà vu suddenly hit me.

Everything I was looking at had happened before.

I decided to engage Yamazaki in a discussion about this sensation.

After a moment, I became unsure what was really going on. "Huh, have

we had this discussion before?"

"What are you saying, Satou? I have no idea what—"

"Wait just a second. Let me think carefully about it."

Lying face down on the floor, I thought as hard as I could. When I

did, I was able to remember. . . I was a soldier from an ancient

civilization several thousands of years ago, who had transmigrated

through time and s.p.a.ce to come to this world. Naturally, I decided to

keep this revelation from Yamazaki. It was a gravely important secret,

after all.

After a little while pa.s.sed, Yamazaki broke in on my thoughts. "You

should breathe. Youre dying."

I breathed. I came back to life. Sincerely thanking Yamazaki, I

pondered the way that the world was wrapped in love. I bowed my head

to say, "thank you, thank you." 

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However, as if to balance out my return to life, Yamazaki abruptly

acted like he was in extreme physical distress. Clutching his throat, he

rolled about on the floor, writhing in agony. When I asked, ”Whats

wrong?" he just uttered an inhuman cry and, without speaking,

continued convulsing.

Finally, he picked up a notebook and ballpoint pen in order to

communicate the problem to me. Hands shaking, he wrote something

down in the notebook.

Taking my time, I carefully deciphered his letters: "I forgot how to

use my voice."

Yamazaki gripped his throat, looking miserable. I whacked his back

as hard as I could.

"Ouch!" he said, and then he gave me a thumbs-up. His broad smile

returned.

I decided it was time for us to head out. It was already the middle of

the night, so I wasnt afraid that wed be seen by the police or any

neighbors.

We headed toward the neighborhood park. Yamazaki was walking

like a robot. Maybe he really was a robot. In the end, could I have such

thoughts and also be human? I found the idea a little mysterious.

At that point, I tried banging my head against the streetlamp in the

park. This was bad: It didnt hurt. It didnt hurt at all. I am actually a

robot...

Thus, I discovered a new truth.

Be that as it may, the park at night was wonderful. Though the

streetlamps were the only light source, the park shone and glowed like a

photograph taken using a long exposure. The park was full of life. 

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Everything there pulsed with life: the gentle creaking of the old bench,

the steady breathing of ma.s.sive trees lining the road, the dynamic twists

of the branches and leaves. All this, every last thing, was alive.

While I was transfixed by the scene, Yamazaki said, "I can hear

music."

I heard it, too. From somewhere in the park, inexplicably beautiful

music was playing.

We were looking for the musics source—pushing our way through

the gra.s.s, shoving our heads under the bench, combing the park for quite

a while—when, at last, we found a speaker. It was buried in the roots of

the largest tree by the road.

However, it was strange. We didnt really understand the speakers

mechanism. Yamazaki and I considered it together. We concluded that

the speaker was a "white hole," which pushed out matter rather than

sucking it in.

We walked into the white hole and emerged near a beautiful lake.

Yamazaki slowly shed his clothing and dove headfirst into the lake.

However. . . "Argh! Its a sandbox!"

It seemed that the lake was, in reality, just a plain old sandbox. It

really had looked like a lake to me. I decided that I couldnt trust what

Yamazaki told me.

In any event, it felt as if time had been playing tricks on us. First, we

were going back in time, and then we were headed forward into the

future. I thought about this. When could "now" possibly be?

"Hey, Yamazaki. What day of the week is today?"

There was no answer. It seemed as though he had gone back home

already. 

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Having grown sad, I climbed into the brush, picking the spot where

we had detonated Sat.u.r.day nights bomb.

In the brush were Yamazaki and myself—from three days ago!

"Okay, it will explode after three minutes. Please, back far away

from it."

Me, myself, and Yamazaki retreated.

"I wanted to be a revolutionary, but that dream didnt come true, I

wanted to be a soldier, but that dream didnt come true. My father it

dying, and then Ill have no choice but to go home. I wonder whose fault

that is. I think theres some evildoer out there somewhere. I wanted to

blow him up, like in a Hollywood movie, with this bomb. You know. . . "

As I could see only our backs, there was no way for me to check

Yamazakis expression as he said that. But I already knew.

"Huh? Three minutes already have pa.s.sed, but it didnt explode."

Yamazaki walked over in the direction of the bomb. As he did, I heard a

loud bang, and Yamazaki fell over.

I knew. I knew that he had been crying. "This has no force at all.

This bomb I worked so hard to make only has the power of a few

firecrackers. This is no good. Im going back home. See you."

And then, he went back home to the countryside.

When I returned to my apartment, only the life-sized anime doll

that Yamazaki had left was waiting for me. She asked, "Arent you

lonely?"

"No, Im not lonely. . . " 

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On that warm, sunny day, I had gone on the date with Misaki. It

unfolded as wholesomely as a date between middle school kids in the

countryside would have.

We took the train into the city. There were large crowds, so we

nearly lost sight of each other. Neither of us owned a cell phone; so, if we

were separated even once, it would be the end of everything. In this large

city, we never would be able to find each other again. We had to be

careful.

Even so, Misaki was wandering heedlessly. I, too, was mostly just

plodding along. "Where should we go?" I asked.

"Somewhere."

"What about lunch?"

"We just ate together, didnt we?"

"What about a movie?"

"Okay."

We watched a movie. It was an astounding Hollywood action flick.

Someone was being blown away by bombs, and he swung his arms

around in circles as he floated high up into the sky. Then, he died. I

longed to be like him.

"That was very interesting. Do you think I should buy the

informational pamphlet?"33

Misaki was blown away by the thousand-yen price tag, though, so

she didnt end up buying it. "Why are they so expensive?!"

"Thats the price they usually are, isnt it?"

"Hm, really?" It seemed that she hadnt known.

When we exited the movie theater, we were once again at a loss over

what to do. 

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"Where should we go?"

"Somewhere."

"What about lunch?"

"We just ate, didnt we?"

We kept walking aimlessly. We had no place to go, and I didnt

know what to do. Misaki felt the same way, and we both were troubled

by it.

Eventually, we arrived at a needlessly large city park. There were a

lot of people there, of course—and in the very center was a large

fountain. Pigeons fluttered around us.

Seated on a bench, I was dazed. We chatted amiably until sunset.

Finally, we ran out of conversation topics; when only our restless silence

remained, Misaki pulled her secret notebook from her bag.

"Lets walk toward our dreams!"

I responded, "It doesnt matter anymore. This stuff isnt going to

change anything."

"Dont say such negative things."

"Even if I try to believe these lies, in the end, theres nothing Id be

able to do."

"Actually, theyve made me quite normal."

"What part of you?"

"You dont think I seem normal?" she asked.

"Youre strange," I stated. "Youve always been strange. Ever since I

first saw you, I thought you seemed rather off."

"Really. . . "

We both grew silent. 

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In front of us, a pigeon waddled by. Misaki tried to catch it.

Naturally, the pigeon escaped. She repeated her attempt several times;

after they all failed, she simply stared at the fountain in front of us.

Then, she said, "Satou, when it comes to you and me, and the idea of

which of us is more worthless, you must be more worthless then I am,

right?"

I agreed with her completely.

"Well, thats why. Thats why you were selected for my project,

Satou."

It seemed she had finally decided she wanted to discuss the heart of

the matter. At this point, though, it really didnt make any difference, as

nothing was going to change. At least, that was my conviction.

Misaki was smiling a fake smile that would have made anyone seeing

it nervous. It was an uncertain, manufactured smile that touched only

her lips, unnaturally pulling them upward.

She began, "The initial premise is that theres no way anyone could

end up liking someone like me."

"You really think that?"

"Its been like that since I was born. It was so bad that my mother

and father hated me, and it was even worse with other people."

I didnt have any response.

"My uncle and aunt took me in, but I just create problems for them,

too. Their relationship is getting worse, and they say they want to

divorce soon. Its all my fault, and Im really sorry about it."

"Youre just thinking about it too much."

"No, Im not," she said. "I probably was born useless, and normal 

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people wont have anything to do with me. Eventually, everyone starts

hating me and, because of me, everyone starts feeling bad. I have actual

evidence that what Im saying is true."

Misaki rolled up her sleeves. Holding out her arms, she made me

look at them. Many, many sad scars from old burns marred her white

skin.

"It was my second father. I dont even remember his face. He drank

continuously. While he drank, his mood would improve—-but even

when he was in a good mood, he always was getting angry at me, burning

me with cigarettes." She said all this, her bright smile unwavering.

"I was even scared of school and couldnt go. Of course, I was

scared. . . There was no way I could fit in with everyone else. I was

terrified. Because if they were normal people, they were absolutely sure

to start hating someone like me."

"What about the people at your church?"

"Those are good people. Everyone there is pretty normal, and theyre

working their hardest. So, of course, they wont have anything to do

with me."

I didnt say anything.

"Finally, I was able to find someone more worthless than I was: A

really worthless person. A totally worthless person—the kind you cant

find just anywhere. Someone who cant look people in the eye when

speaking, who is unbearably afraid of others. Someone who lives among

the dregs of society, a person whom even I could look down on."

"Who was it?"

"Satou." Her words were exactly what I expected. 

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193

Then, Misaki pulled a sheet of sc.r.a.p paper from her bag and handed

it to me. It was the second contract.

I felt unsure what I should do. The sun was nearly beneath the

horizon, and the number of people walking around the park had shrunk

considerably.

Misaki handed me a marker and a vermilion ink pad,34 saying, "A

thumb print will be fine.

"After all, someone like you, Satou, might start liking me, right?" she

asked. "I mean, youre even more worthless than I am, after all. As Ive

been carrying out this plan for such a long time, you should be my

prisoner by now, right? Please, be nice to me, and Ill be nice to you, too."

"No. This wont work."

"Why?"

"Its no use. Nothings changed. This agreement just makes

everything more painful. On top of that, its too empty." I got up and

returned the marker and ink.

I tried to be enthusiastic. "Youll be fine, Misaki! This is just a

momentary lapse of confidence. Have a rubdown with a dry towel, and

train your mind and body! If you do that, these stupid thoughts will

disappear. A cute girl like you will be able to have a great life! Dont look

down! Look up, and youll be okay!"

Then, I ran away.

The contents of the contract had seared themselves into my brain. 

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194

Contract Regarding Mutual Support for

Worthless and Lonely People

Defining Satou Tatsuhiro as party A and Misaki Nakahara as party

B, the two parties agree to the following:

A will not start to hate B.

In fact, A will start to like B.

A will never change mind.

A will never have a change of heart.

When one party is lonely, the other always will be at his or her side.

As B is always lonely, basically A always will be at Bs side.

If we do this, I think our lives probably will move in a good

direction.

I think the painful times will go away.

If you break this contract, the penalty is ten million yen.

"Hey! Arent you lonely?" Misaki called out.

Turning around, I answered in a loud voice, "No, Im not lonely."

"Well, Im lonely!"

"Im not.

"Liar."

"Im not lying," I said." Im the strongest hikikomori in the world, so I

can go on living by myself. Pain doesnt mean anything to me. Misaki,

you, should stop relying on other people, too. In the end, everyone is 

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195

alone. Being alone is best. I mean, its true, isnt it? In the end, youll be

absolutely alone; therefore, being alone is natural. If you accept that,

nothing bad can happen. Thats why I shut myself away in my six-mat,

one-room apartment."

"Arent you lonely?"

"Im not lonely?"

"Arent you lonely?"

"Im not lonely."

"Liar." Someone spoke in a low, m.u.f.fled voice.

I turned around to look behind me.

I found myself standing in the middle of my six-mat, one-room

apartment. In the corner, I sat hugging my legs to my chest, melting into

the deep darkness.

It was night, and I couldnt see, hear, or do anything. Despite the fact

that it was summer, this six-mat, one-room apartment, devoid of

furniture or anything else, was cold. A dark and terrible chill filled the

isolated s.p.a.ce. I held my head and trembled.

I said, "Im lonely."

"Im not lonely."

"Liar."

"Im not lying."

"Im so lonely."

"I am lonely!"

The quivering, shaking, shivering me was clack-clack-clacking his

teeth. The me standing in the middle of the room watched this. I

thought Id gone crazy. But I wasnt crazy.

There were only two things that I understood: I was alone, and I was 

Welcome to the N.H.K.

196

incredibly lonely. I didnt want to be in this state. I didnt want to be

lonely.

"Anyway," I screamed, "thats why!"

I kept shouting, "Being lonely is natural! Of course, I hate being

lonely! Thats exactly why I shut myself off from the world, why I lock

myself away. Thinking about it for the long term, this is the best

solution. You understand, right? Hey! You understand me, right?"

There was no answer.

"Dont you understand? Listen carefully to what Im saying. If you

do, youll get it. You can grasp this easily. In short. . . in short, I shut

myself in because Im lonely. Because I dont want to face any more

loneliness, I shut myself away. Hey, do you understand? Thats the

answer!"

There was no reply.

"Im greedier than anyone. I dont want some half-a.s.sed happiness I

dont need some partial warmth. I want a happiness that goes on forever.

Thats impossible, though! I dont know why it is, but in this world,

some interference is sure to come. Important things break right away.

Ive been alive for twenty-two years, and I know at least this much. It

doesnt matter what the thing is, but it will break. Thats why, from the

beginning, its better not to need anything."

Thats right! You should learn this truth, too, Misaki. If you do, you wont

come up with more ridiculous plans. Youll stop looking to people like me for

help.

She was terribly stupid. She was clinging to a horrifyingly enormous

despair. I was appalled by the loneliness that caused her to seek help

from a piece of human trash like me. I cursed the misfortune that had 

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197

fallen upon her. I cursed the unreasonable fact that children couldnt

choose their parents. I wanted a cheerful girl like her to live a strong,

healthy life.

Please, do your best, somewhere. Im all right. Ill be fine on my own. Its

best for me to be alone. Ill live alone and die alone.

Even still, I had hope. I had hope. . . .

Look, just over there—its shining, pale, and gentle.

It was my hometown, the one that drew forth nostalgic, bittersweet

tears. Autumn plains that continued forever. Memories from long ago.

The eternally fleeting glances from giggling little girls. The peace of the

black cat, hit by a car. There was no longer anything painful or difficult

anywhere. I was fine now.

"Thats right. You are now," said a little girl.

The life-sized anime doll, which Yamazaki had left behind as a

present, stared at me. She was an angel. She started to move, and she

guided me forward.

We traveled to a faraway planet. It was beautiful: a blue sky with

white clouds, the cool wind blowing across a spring field that stretched

into the distance. We stood in the middle of the field, and the girl picked

one pure white flower and held it up in front of me.

With her slender fingers, she grasped a petal and pulled it out. "Life."

Then, she pulled out another petal. "Death."

She was telling a flower fortune.

"Life. . . Death. . . Life. . . Death. . . Life. . . Death. . . Life. . . Death."

The last petal fluttered to the ground.

The girl smiled gently. 






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