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Tokyo Love

Page 17

by Diana Jean


  Kathleen looked around to the statues lining the walls, finely dressed with strange expressions of either vicious smiling or perfect composure. Kathleen felt herself if start breathing to the rhythm of those wood blocks as her eyes scanned the ornate decorations. She didn’t notice the people crushed in around her. She wasn’t thinking about Ai or her work or what they were even going to go next. She thought about nothing except that dragon and the strange sound of its tears.

  When it was over, she felt an incredible urge to reach out and touch someone. Just to feel like she was really back in her own body. Yuriko stood next to her and looked at her when Kathleen gently touched her wrist. Kathleen gave a shy smile and Yuriko didn’t look like she completely understood, but she took Kathleen’s hand and squeezed it.

  “What’s next?” she asked as they filed out of the dragon room with the group.

  Ai, walking in front of them, pointed to a box filled with brightly colored paper. “How about a fortune?” She deposited a few coins into the donation box and motioned for Kathleen to take a folded paper out.

  Kathleen opened it, not surprised to find it was entirely in Japanese. She handed it to Yuriko. “What does it mean?”

  Yuriko stared at it, and then was obviously trying to hold back some laughter.

  “What is it?” Kathleen demanded.

  Yuriko handed it back. “It’s the worst luck.”

  “What?”

  “It means you have terrible luck right now. It’s actually as rare to get this bad of luck as it is to get the best luck.”

  Kathleen held the paper and felt a little betrayed. She looked back at the dragon shrine, glaring. “All right, what do I do with this now?”

  Yuriko pointed to a rack of strings with paper attached. “Tie it there. The priests will pray over it to make your luck better.”

  “But they are the ones who gave this to me!”

  Yuriko laughed. “Just tie it up and you will be rid of it.”

  Kathleen walked over to the strings tied between a couple poles. There were so many, it was hard to find a spot for her own. Some had been hanging there for so long, they were practically falling apart as she brushed them aside. It took her a moment to tie it without completely ripping the long paper in two.

  She turned around to find Yuriko and Ai talking quietly. It always felt weird to her, whenever they talked together without her a part of their conversation. Maybe it was because they looked so similar, even though Yuriko always wore her hair up and Ai kept hers down. The way they tilted their head was the same as they spoke and the way they moved their arms. Like twins who were a little too alike, yet not alike at all.

  Kathleen stepped between them. “What are you two talking about?”

  Ai said, “We were thinking about heading to Kanmangafuchi Abyss.”

  Yuriko was frowning and Kathleen wondered if that was what they were really talking about. Yuriko nodded. Kathleen bit her lip. “What is there?”

  Yuriko answered. “Haunted statues.”

  Kathleen gripped her camera, feeling a mix of excitement and dread. “Let’s do it.”

  chapter NINETEEN

  They had to get back on the bus to get to Kanmangafuchi Abyss. It was crowded near the center of town and they all pressed into the standing room of the bus. Yuriko leaned into the railing of one of the seats, and Kathleen squeezed beside her with Ai on the other side.

  Ai looked over to Yuriko, something in those synthetic eyes examining her. Yuriko looked away.

  “Did you enjoy the weeping dragon?” Ai had said to her as Kathleen went to tie up her fortune outside the temple.

  “Of course. It’s very interesting and beautiful.” She didn't like Ai’s tone.

  Ai smiled, moving slightly closer to Yuriko. “You know, if you would like, I don’t have to join you at the next stop.”

  “Are you implying something?” It couldn’t be a serious offer. Both Yuriko and Kathleen needed Ai to navigate at the very least.

  Ai gave her a strange expression, something like disbelief. “Do you honestly not—?”

  Kathleen had approached and Ai had turned away, breaking off the strange conversation.

  When the bus began to move, Kathleen jerked, unbalanced, and reached for Ai, gripping her elbow for support.

  Ai smiled down at her, but Kathleen only muttered darkly under her breath. Yuriko could see her fingers curling into Ai’s sleeve and, as the bus traveled towards their destination, she leaned more into Ai, obviously tired from the already long day. Yuriko looked away, reminding herself that Kathleen needed to balance and Ai was at a better angle for her to hold onto. Yet she knew that she wished Kathleen would choose to turn and grab onto her instead. That Yuriko could feel those fingers curling around her stomach or arm. She was being ridiculous.

  Though the bus had been crowded, Kanmangafuchi was remarkably barren of people. The path was wide and only a few hikers passed them by.

  Yuriko had heard of the mysterious statues that appeared and disappeared. It was something else to see the meandering row of squat, sitting statues dressed with red hats, all facing a raging river in the gorge. The river was loud, curling around rocks. The water was white, clear blue, and perfect turquoise. The water in Nikko was renowned for being clean, and this river looked the picture of pristine.

  Kathleen was staring at the first statue. “They look friendly enough. How are they haunted?”

  Ai answered. “They say that if you count them as you walk, when you come back, one will disappear.”

  Kathleen looked down the trail, but it was impossible to see the end of the curling row. She smiled to Yuriko and Ai. “All right, challenge accepted. No one interrupt me. I’m going to win this game.” Then she set off, one hand raised as she silently counted.

  Ai looked to Yuriko. “Going to join her?”

  Yuriko could already see how problems might arise. Some of the statues were little more than piles of rocks with thoughtfully placed hats. “No, I think I’ll leave it to her.”

  Ai nodded and walked forward, keeping a little behind Kathleen and her counting. For a time, Yuriko contented herself to watch the flowing rapids of the river. If she were daring, she would have liked to crawl down there and feel the cold, clean water on her feet. Or wash from her face the grime of walking around all day. She thought she could understand why they would call it an abyss. That water looked like it could pull anyone under and far away.

  “You don’t have to hold back, you know,” Ai suddenly said.

  “What?” Yuriko asked. She glanced up, but Ai wasn’t looking at her. Instead, she was staring ahead as Kathleen navigated a rocky part of the trail. Even from a distance, Yuriko could see Kathleen’s face drawn in determination.

  Ai’s eyes slide to hers. “I won’t, you know. My programming won’t allow me to do anything less than try to please her. That’s all it is, isn’t it? Programming? You are not gaining any honor by keeping your distance. You might as well fight for her.”

  Yuriko stopped. “What are you talking about?” She had a feeling she knew. Her heart felt heavy in her chest and her eyes flickered from Kathleen to Ai.

  Ai paused with her. “You love Kathleen.”

  Yuriko wasn’t sure if she was breathing. “I do not.”

  Ai shrugged. “Then you are in some preliminary stage. What really matters is that you’ve spent all day looking at me like I’ve taken something very precious from you. Yet, you have no idea that I cannot even conceive that Kathleen would want me for her own.”

  “Why is that?”

  Ai began walking again. “Because she is in love with you, of course.”

  The trail was flat where they walked, yet Yuriko felt as if she was navigating the rapids of the river below. Her heart thudded and she felt like at any moment her mind might scatter into a thousand different thoughts. “You know this for sure?”

  “As sure as a pile of wires and computer chips can be. She wants to reach out to you, I know. She just doesn’t know how.”


  “She seems to have no problem latching onto you.”

  Ai laughed and Yuriko wondered how Kathleen had programmed her to be able to make such a sad sound. “She’ll take my hand or let me take her arm. But that is because she truly feels nothing to me. I am little more than a safety net, or—” she glanced to Yuriko “—a handhold on the bus. You are more than that. She took your hand in the dragon temple, didn’t she?”

  “It was crowded in there. You know as well as I do that she doesn’t like being crowded.”

  Ai stopped, making a sound of exasperation. She turned to Yuriko, eyes flashing. “It is almost inconceivable how far you both are in denial. She wasn’t panicked there. Anyone with two functional retinas could see that. She was touched by the experience. And who does she reach for when she is moved? You. Who does she reach out for when she is in serious trouble? You. Who does she want to share her experiences with? You. Who does she really, really connect with? You.” She waved a frustrated hand. “I planned this trip to please her. To make her happy even in the slightest way I could. Yet I couldn’t even bring her here without also bringing you. She lets me lead her up to the temple, but when she is overwhelmed by the beauty and awe of it all, she reaches toward you. Yet, you stand there, keeping her at arm’s length because you see her take my arm with about as much intimacy as she does when she sends an email.”

  “Kathleen and I … Kathleen doesn’t see me that way.” Maybe after the nomikai, Yuriko might have thought differently. Yet when Kathleen had wanted to forget all about that experience, when she never brought it up again, when she would always repeat that she wasn’t interested in Ai because she wasn’t interested in women …

  Yuriko knew that Kathleen cared for her. That she probably cared for Yuriko more than Ai, but it wasn’t like what Ai was saying. Kathleen wanted a companion, but not a lover. She needed a friend, not a complication.

  “You are sure of this?” Ai questioned.

  Yuriko wasn’t sure. She wasn’t the type to gamble on her emotions. Not after knowing what it was like to lose. “What does it matter? Kathleen has made it very clear she is only interested in men.”

  “Because she is an idiot. Well, you are both idiots. But as least you are more in tune with your emotions to realize you are jealous.” She snorted. “Kathleen can barely comprehend that she is uncontrollably attracted to you.” Yuriko knew she was flushing, the words sweeping through her like a warm breeze. Ai sighed, shoulders lowering. “I cannot back away from her, like you can. I cannot win her, but you can.”

  “What are you telling me? That you want me to hook up with Kathleen? Isn’t that also against your programming?”

  “My programming is to please her, in any manner that I can. I cannot … ” Her eyes went a little distant and her stance more rigid. “I need more data. More analysis.” She blinked and her more human-like features returned. “The one piece of data that I am sure of is that if you reach out to Kathleen, she will undoubtedly reach back, even if she isn’t sure why yet.”

  “I don’t think if I just put my hand out, she’ll automatically take it.” She would probably wonder if something was wrong with Yuriko first.

  Kathleen shouted to them. “Hey! Come on! I’ve reached the end! Hurry up so I can count the way back!” She was waving to them.

  Ai waved back, smiling. Then she turned to Yuriko. “Have you truly tried?”

  Yuriko could see the last few statues, crumbling into the side of the ravine. The river, however, was more powerful here. The water darker and deeper. Upstream, it seemed only to grow.

  chapter TWENTY

  Kathleen lay on her back, flipping through the photos on her camera. She would like to put them on a larger display, but that would have to wait until they returned to Tokyo. She hesitated on one of the first ones, the one that Ai had snapped, of Yuriko jumping into the picture with her. She was making a strange face, a mix between a smile and a gasp. She remembered that feeling of surprise and suddenly heat as Yuriko’s arm drew around her. It had only lasted for a moment, but her heart had been beating wildly out of her chest.

  She set the camera aside, letting her arms splay out around her. She was so tired that the tatami floors did actually feel good. Ai had opened the door that led to a small balcony, letting a cool breeze in. She said she needed a recharge and was currently kneeling on the balcony, looking like she was in some deep meditation. Kathleen wondered if Ai’s processing powers were being stretched a little too much and if the software needed more improving before the beta release.

  Then again, Kathleen was almost positive that Ai didn’t need the recharge, but simply understood that Kathleen was too tired to deal with her anymore, so she used it as an excuse to step away. Yuriko had gone to the front desk to get some bathrobes so they could go into the onsen.

  Kathleen wasn’t too sure about going into the onsen. It just seemed weird to her to basically get naked and bathe with a bunch of strangers in a giant hot tub. However both Yuriko and Ai had insisted that she try it out. Also, the onsen in this hotel was supposedly on a real hot spring and was good for the skin or something. Besides, they could get into it for free by being guests.

  There was a soft knock on the door and Kathleen turned her head to see Yuriko entering, a stack of blue patterned robes in her hands. She flung one to Kathleen. “Suit up!”

  Kathleen unfolded the robe, a stiff cotton. “Can I wear this in the onsen?”

  Yuriko snorted. “No, but you can wear it to the onsen. It’s easier than taking all your clothes down there.”

  “But I like clothes.”

  “You have done something like public bathing with me before. How is this different?” Yuriko was already pulling her shirt over her head and Kathleen quickly sat up, looking away.

  “Hey! I was really drunk, okay! I thought we weren't going to talk about that again.” Besides, she had a feeling that was pretty different than what usually happened in a public bath.

  When she looked back, Yuriko was already pulling on her robe, the smooth skin of her shoulder disappearing under the fabric. She raised an eyebrow to Kathleen. “Come on. After a long day, this is going to feel great.”

  Kathleen quickly took off her clothes, knowing that she was avoiding eye contact with Yuriko the entire time. It wasn’t like she was ashamed of her own body. She just didn’t know how she was going to handle sitting naked in a bath with Yuriko, not to mention a bunch of other strange women. Plus, most of them would be Japanese and probably stare at her American-ness. They probably thought she would be too hairy. Did Japanese women shave? Did they get pimples on their backs? Kathleen seriously doubted their hair frizzed up as much as hers in humidity.

  Yuriko led Kathleen towards the back of the hotel, where the hot springs were supposedly piped up. She pointed down the hall as they approached the door. “The men go down there so that we are separated.”

  Kathleen thought it was a small blessing. Yuriko opened the door to a large dressing room. It was loud with women chatting and blow dryers running. Some of the women were only partially dressed, drying their hair or putting on makeup. Most were either changing or walking around naked. A few looked up as they entered, but most ignored them.

  Yuriko motioned to a shelf of baskets on one side of the room. “We will keep our robes, phones, and room keys here.”

  “Will they be safe?”

  Yuriko raised an eyebrow. “I once left my entire briefcase, including my wallet, on the train during rush hour. By the time I realized it, the trains were already closed for the night. The next morning, they had it in the office, completely untouched.” She grinned. “People just don’t take things that don’t belong to them. Not here.”

  Kathleen knew this. If she had been in a rush hour in Chicago or New York and forced to be squeezed next to a bunch of strangers, she would not expect her wallet or phone to be with her when she left. This all didn't matter; she was only trying to stall for time.

  Yuriko took off her robe, revealing smo
oth skin and a mole by her navel. She turned, folding her robe and setting it down. Her spine stood out at her back, disappearing into the small swell of hips and …

  Kathleen quickly followed suit, if only not to be caught staring. Something about Yuriko’s body was familiar. As if she had seen it before, or touched it before. She felt like her fingers knew its texture.

  For the first time, she sort of wished she could remember the night of the nomikai better. They had just kissed in her memory. Had there actually been more?

  Kathleen grabbed a small towel as Yuriko strode into the doors leading into the onsen.

  It had been much more crowded in the dressing room, but this room was much larger. The center held a large, steaming pool, the water murky. Lining the walls were small stools facing showerheads and shelves of soaps and other products. The room was still loud, with the voices of people chatting echoing off the walls and mixing with the sounds of people showering by the walls.

  Yuriko walked over to a couple of free stools, seating herself. “So, just like with the bath in the apartment, you have to shower off so you can go into the water clean.” She pointed to the products on the shelves. “Shampoo, conditioner, soap, exfoliant. These are all really good quality, actually.” She leaned a little closer and Kathleen suddenly found she had to concentrate on keeping her eyes above Yuriko’s shoulders. “Just make sure to look like you are really scrubbing. Otherwise you’ll get old ladies glaring at you because they think you are a dirty foreigner.”

  Kathleen grimaced. “Great.”

  Yuriko smiled, turning on her spray and testing the warmth. “Relax. This is not that much more different than a spa, right?”

  Kathleen only grunted in reply. Even as she bathed, she couldn’t help but look around. There were all ages in the bath, from little kids to old women. Some women looked like they were sleeping as they soaked and some young girls chatted loudly. If they were wearing swimsuits, it would completely the same as any hotel pool or hot tub in America.

 

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