was finally over. The remaining reverberations were sucked dry by the silence of the winter noon, and all that was left was the sound of the tape rotating.Feketerigó was already broken.
If this is what Mafuyu wants, then nothing I think or do matters anymore.
If Mafuyu were seeking help, I would definitely be there to bring her back somehow. But this time, it"s different. Mafuyu"s heading across the ocean of her own accord; and the ones being left behind are the three of us—
*Pa*. I lifted my head. It came from the sound system. The ca.s.sette player had already spun to the end of the A-side, so it was changing sides automatically.
There was a brief interval of suffocating white noise.
And then, flowing from the bottom, came the pure and clean sounds of the Stratocaster. Each and every note was as clear as a silver strand of rain, and they all merged into a seamless harmony that flowed into my ears. It was a brilliant arpeggio.
It wasn"t any song in particular—just a phrase that Mafuyu always strummed as warm-up every time she played the guitar. The upward-spiraling air bubbles of the semitone; and the flock of birds weaving between the clouds and the ground. Sounds, sounds, and more sounds, arranged together in perfect geometry and a perfect distance away from each other, were all injected into my veins.
So there were such recordings on the B-side, huh. I totally didn"t realize. Is this what Tetsurou was referring to?
I imagined the dirty walls, the amplifiers, the synthesizers and the chairs, all arranged on the floor of our practice room. There was Mafuyu, strumming her guitar with her head lowered. And Chiaki, all warmed up, smashing the hi-hat as she barged into the rhythm. Kagurazaka-senpai would then flick on the switch of the microphone with a smile, causing a minute noise to streak through the air. That was how we would usually start.
A scene that would no longer return.
I shut my eyes to savour the sweet hallucination.
But the tape came to a sudden halt, and I was thrown back into the empty living room once more. What had been left behind in that rocking practice room though, was my heart.
If I could just hug my knees, plug my ears and wait for numerous nights and mornings to pa.s.s by, things would be settled with me cleanly forgetting about everything. Left alone, a broken object would just break down even further. That was the natural progression of things, and was also the easier path for me to take. I understood that much at least.
So I stood up from the sofa.
I returned to my room and promptly began packing my toolbox. When I was done, I went downstairs to search through the storage cabinet, where there was a plastic drawer filled with all the junk I had collected up until then. I did organize that stuff at a minimal level, but it still took me quite a bit of time to find everything I needed.
When night arrived, I made my way over to Chiaki"s house, which was only five minutes away.
I had thought about calling her prior to my visit, but I had no idea what to say to her. And it would"ve been troublesome if she had forbidden me from going, so I was left with no other option but to pay her a sudden visit at night.
"Oh my, it"s Nao. Chiaki? She"s here. Come on in. Have you had dinner already? Chiaki~ Nao"s here—"
It had been a while since I had last visited the Aihara household, but Chiaki"s mom was the same as ever. She yelled in the direction of Chiaki"s room, which was located on the second floor, and pulled me through the door without saying anything else.
"U-Urm, well......"
A flurry of footsteps came scuttling down the stairs just as I was about to speak.
Chiaki was wearing a pair of hot pants and a T-shirt—her outfit was so skimpy it hardly felt like it was a winter night. Her half-opened jaws were stuttering for a good five seconds or so, and her face was all red.
"W-W-What are you doing here!? You idiot! How dare you come here!?"
"S-Sorry!"
I reflexively shielded my head with my toolbox; but thankfully, Chiaki didn"t have anything in her hands that she could throw at me.
"Now, no quarrelling at the entrance. You two should go upstairs right now."
That was the only time I had ever felt especially grateful for Chiaki"s mom"s tough stance. After saying that, she pushed Chiaki and me up the stairs, and there we were, in Chiaki"s messy room, surrounded by stacks and stacks of magazines, as well as an air of silence. Chiaki"s mom then came in with a tray of drinks and snacks.
"....... Urm, alcohol"s a little......" I waved my hands frantically when I saw the bottle of alcohol on the tray.
"Oh, but Chiaki"s drinking already."
She"s right! Lying on the floor were three mini Shaoxing wine flasks.
"Sheesh, you"ve done this several times already. You should know that Nao doesn"t drink."
Chiaki s.n.a.t.c.hed the plate of snacks and pushed her mom out of the room, along with the tray she was carrying.
But when it was just us again, the room became silent once more. Chiaki grabbed a handful of kaki-pi and dumped them into her mouth in frustration.
What should I do? I couldn"t look her straight in the eyes at all.
After finishing the snacks and wine, Chiaki heaved a long sigh and hugged a huge dolphin plushie in her chest.
"...... Mafuyu called."
Said Chiaki softly. I lifted my head in shock. I couldn"t see her expression clearly, as the dolphin plushie was covering her face, but it seemed like her eyes were a little wet.
"She said she"s heading to America, and that she won"t be coming to school again......"
I nodded.
"And she actually said "sorry." That"s so unfair of her. There"s nothing I can say if she apologizes, right?"
Her words stabbed deeply into me.
I had been wondering if I should apologize to Chiaki, but that was an insensitive thought. "Sorry" was a cold, despicable curse that was used to end all forms of communication between people. I gripped the tool in my hand tightly.
"Oh right, what are you here for, Nao? I"m currently..... urm, really drunk, and my mind"s in a mess right now. I may just punch you or cry right in front of you, you know?"
I shifted my eyes to the toolbox, then exchanged gazes with Chiaki.
"...... I"m here to fix the record player."
The dolphin plushie slipped off of Chiaki"s thighs.
"...... Eh?"
"Your gramophone"s broken, isn"t it? Think about it. Isn"t it silly that you can"t listen to a rare present that you"ve received from me?"
Chiaki looked towards the wall, tongue-tied. Nailed onto the wall with a thumbtack, was a vinyl record. It was ."E-E-Ehhhh?"
It was only then that Chiaki noticed the toolbox next to me.
"Where is it? In the cupboard?"
"A-Ah, well, urm.....!"
Chiaki scooted to her feet and dashed to the cupboard with unsteady steps.
"You can"t look inside the cupboard! Turn around!" She was fine with me walking into her messy room, so I had no idea why she was forbidding me from looking inside her cupboard. But I turned my head around anyway.
I opened up my toolbox as I faced the dusty old machine. I first took out a plastic bag filled with replacement parts, then wiped the machine clean with a wet towel.
At first, it was tough working under the scrutiny of Chiaki"s unwavering gaze, but not long after, my fingers were already in the mood to fiddle with the machine. I replaced the gramophone"s needle, adjusted the slanted turntable and located the short circuits with a multimeter.
Easy. It"s just a machine after all. I just have to fix it if it"s broken. But there were lots of things in the world that were irreparable even after being broken.
After checking the spinning turntable with a flick of the switch, I looked in Chiaki"s direction.
"I want to check if the sound"s alright. May I?"
Chiaki shot a glance at the record on the wall. Her nod was so faint, it was barely detectable by the naked eye.
I borrowed the audio cables of the sound system and connected them to the gramophone, then placed the record on the turntable. A fuzzy feeling arose in my chest the moment I lowered the needle. There was a sweet noise.
Cheers flowed from the boombox. And an irritating guitar phrase followed. Then came the bra.s.s instruments that overpowered the harmony of Paul, John and George.
I turned my head towards Chiaki, perhaps with a hint of smugness on my face. Chiaki was hugging her dolphin and beaver plushies, and had curled herself up as though she were trying to hide from something. Her eyes were boring into me—and the spinning turntable as well.
"...... Ah, s-sorry. U-Urm, I"m done."
As I was stretching my hands out to stop the record from spinning,
"Don"t switch it off!"
I turned my head around. Chiaki"s eyes were visibly filled with tears.
"It"s okay. Let it run. I want to listen to it."
Chiaki then tossed a cushion in my direction. It hit my leg and dropped down next to her.
We sat down together and listened carefully to The Beatles amid the noise, amid the illusory concert that was created by stuffing the dreams of four people into a nonsensical joke.
They did hold an actual concert years after the alb.u.m was produced, but it was held on the roof of a building; and they didn"t publicize it, or obtain any permits for it. They disbanded the following year.
I suddenly remembered something Senpai had said some time ago. It"s very easy for someone to disappear one day, never to come back again.
She"s right. Mafuyu has disappeared. All because of my stupidity.
But even so, Chiaki"s still here by my side. Staying beside me.
Why?
"....... Why me? ...... Are there no better guys out there?"
The atmosphere became strange all of a sudden. The music that was flowing out of the boombox suddenly sounded as though it were being produced by some cheap speakers instead. Chiaki sprang up in a really imposing manner, and it was then that I realized what I had said.
"W-W-Wha......"
Chiaki"s trembling voice came from above me. I timidly lifted my head, and saw Chiaki"s blushing face in-between the dolphin and beaver plushies.
"W-What!? What did you just say!?"
And then, the dog whistle—that almost inaudible shrill—rang from the other side, far away.