“I was busy.”
“With what? Practice?” I didn’t answer. It was a good enough excuse. I couldn’t tell any of them the truth, not really. “Yuu-chan, the tournament’s not for weeks. How long does it take to write your girlfriend a text?”
“I barely made it home before I collapsed, Myu,” I lied. To make up for it, I cupped her chin in my hand and kissed her forehead gently. It’s not like I wanted to be a jerk, but I couldn’t afford the attention. To protect Myu and my classmates—to protect myself—I had to keep everyone at a distance. That way I could stay in control. I couldn’t let it fall apart the way it had before.
Being a loner had worked for a while, but that’s when the balance tipped. Because when one of the kendo champs of the school turns down every cute girl’s confession, shuns almost every guy who wants to hang out, forgets his wristband and shows off the trail of scars on his arm—that’s when he becomes mysterious, a puzzle to be solved. That’s when people talk, when the rumors swirl and the truth hovers just below the surface, ready to destroy everything.
That’s when Myu had confessed, and I’d known what I had to do. Now we’d been together for three months, and they’d stopped digging into my past, into my present. They’d forgotten to ask where I disappeared to or where the scars came from. We’d become mini-celebrities, as much as an American quarterback dating a cheerleader, shallow crowd-pleasers who weren’t asked any tough questions. We were normal, and on top of that, I blended in. And as I’d come to know Myu better, I’d found maybe I didn’t have to be alone anymore.
Maybe. And then the voice from my dreams, the woman holding the mirror.
“
“
Myu’s lips turned in a frown. She and Satoshi didn’t get along. Myu didn’t think much of the circles he associated with, but Sato and I went too far back for me to turn on him for any girl. We were kendo teammates and best friends since elementary school—since the transfer, when the world had gone dark around me. He had his own share of secrets, but it didn’t stop him from trying to drag mine out from time to time.
“
Ishikawa’s face crumpled in confusion. “Kendo practice?”
“Wait,” Myu said as I pulled open the
“The week before school ends?” Sato smirked. “Not likely.”
“Yuu-chan, were you...lying?”
“I didn’t lie, exactly,” I said, my eyes downcast to the floor. I had to fix this, but instead I’d gone into panic mode, alarms blaring in my head. My heart felt like it would give out. So much for being suave and in control.
“Where were you then?” Myu said.
“With some other girl.” Sato grinned.
I gave him a look of imminent murder. “
She didn’t look like she believed me.
“I’m totally lying, Myu,” Ishikawa laughed, and then she let out a shaky breath.
“So?” she said, waiting for the truth.
“So he was probably sketching,” Satoshi said, ramming his toes against the wooden floor to push the slippers onto his feet. “Loverboy wants to be a freaking Picasso.”
“Shut up, Sato,” I said. I hoped he wouldn’t hear the waver in my voice.
“Wait, what? You never told me that,” Myu said.
“Just some dumb art class,” I said. “It’s for my cram school. It’s nothing.”
“Don’t go cutting off your ears,” Sato added helpfully.
“That was van Gogh, moron.”
“It’s nothing, huh? Why are you flustered then?” Myu smiled. “Come on, let me see your sketches.”
“I don’t really have any,” I said. “I leave them at cram school.” Every part of my skin felt itchy, and I wanted to get out of there.
“
“Maybe naked,” Sato quipped.
I whirled around. “What part of
“Yuu-chan, please?”
“I’m no good,” I snapped at her. “And I don’t draw people, ever.”
“Why not?”
“I just don’t, okay? God, you guys. Leave it alone.”
I slid open the door to the hallway and slammed it closed behind me.
Nan was flying back to Canada without me. Gramps was too sick, and despite my protests that I would help them, there was still a mess of paperwork hanging over us.
A few years ago, before Gramps’ brief remission, he’d been so far gone that we were waiting for the call any day. At that time, when all our waking thoughts were of death, Mom made an appointment and changed her will. Legal custody of me would go to her sister, Diane, and not Nan and Gramps. Even without the legal issues, it was Mom’s last wish, and Nan was holding to it religiously.
“But Aunt Diane lives in Japan,” I said.
“I know, sweetie.”
“
“
“Nan, I don’t even speak Japanese!”
She’d squeezed my hands in hers again, but this time her grasp was weak. “We’ll get it sorted out,” she said.
Like I was just some sort of tangled knitting project of hers, like she could just unravel me and start over. Twisting my life into new shapes, something that everyone would nod and agree suited me better. But the stitches from my old life would show, the snarls and bends of the old pattern wrecking the new.