Whispers of Lust in the Countryside-Chapter 60 - 59 : Back to Tokyo
Mid-November,
The first real bite of winter had arrived overnight. The sky was the color of cold steel, and every exhaled breath hung in the air like a small ghost before vanishing. The ginkgo leaves that had blazed gold only a week earlier now lay in sodden, frozen heaps along the sidewalks, crackling underfoot like thin ice.
Haruto stood in his small apartment, the single overhead bulb casting harsh light over the rumpled futon and the faint, lingering traces of perfume and skin still clinging to the sheets. His phone buzzed on the table: an international number. His mother’s voice, tinny through the speaker, sounded both apologetic and evasive.
"Someone important is arriving at Haneda tomorrow afternoon. We need you to go to Tokyo and pick them up. Bring them back home for a while."
"Who is it?"
A pause. Static. His father’s muffled voice in the background, then his mother again, too bright:
"You’ll know when you see them. Just... please do this for us."
The call ended before he could press further.
He stared at the silent screen for a long second, then exhaled through his teeth and started moving.
He packed light: two changes of clothes, charger, toothbrush, the thick navy hoodie that still carried faint traces of different lip balms on the collar. He folded everything into a black duffel with mechanical precision, the zipper rasping like a warning.
First stop: the convenience store two blocks away. The automatic doors chimed; the clerk glanced up from her phone, recognized him, and wordlessly stamped the paid-leave slip for his part-time night shift without needing to be asked. The fluorescent lights made the frost on the windows look radioactive blue.
Second stop: the high-school office. The vice-principal barely looked up from his paperwork, just slid the absence request form across the desk and muttered something about family circumstances being acceptable. The hallway outside smelled of floor wax and old tatami; his shoes squeaked louder than usual on the polished linoleum.
Last stop: the group chat.
Haruto
Parents called. Have to go to Tokyo tomorrow, maybe 3–4 days.
Someone’s flying in and I’m supposed to pick them up.
I’ll message when I know more.
The replies came fast, overlapping.
Will you be warm enough?
Which terminal? I’ll miss the way you breathe when you sleep. I put extra heat packs in the front pocket of your bag.Don’t forget to eat.
He sent a single voice note, low and steady: "I’ll be back before you know it." Then he shut the phone off to save battery and walked to keep himself from listening to it again.
The next morning the local station was almost empty. Wind whipped down the open-air platform, carrying tiny ice crystals that stung exposed skin. The digital clock read 10:37. His train, the 10:42 to Tokyo, hadn’t arrived yet.
They were already there, all of them, standing just behind the yellow safety line in thick coats and scarves that fluttered like flags. One had her hands buried deep in her pockets, shoulders hunched against the cold, eyes already red at the rims. Another kept adjusting the same lock of hair over and over, as if movement could keep the tears from falling. The third held a small paper bag from the station kiosk, probably filled with more snacks than any one person could eat on a two-hour ride. The fourth simply stared at the empty tracks, lips pressed thin, fists clenched inside mittens. 𝘧𝓇ℯℯ𝑤ℯ𝘣𝓃ℴ𝓋𝑒𝑙.𝑐𝘰𝑚
Haruto stood on the other side of the line, duffel hanging from one shoulder, ticket folded in his gloved hand. The air between them felt brittle, like it might shatter if anyone spoke too loudly.
The train slid in with a metallic sigh, silver doors gleaming with frost. He stepped aboard, found his reserved seat by the window, and dropped the bag in the overhead rack. The glass was still cold when he pressed two fingers to it from the inside.
On the platform they moved as close to the yellow line as the rules allowed. One lifted a hand in a small, trembling wave. Another pressed her palm flat to the window directly opposite his, fingers splayed wide, as though she could push warmth through the glass. The third held up the paper bag and mouthed something he couldn’t hear over the engine noise. The fourth never looked away, eyes locked on his until the very last second.
The train lurched forward. The platform began to slide. Scarves snapped in the wind; coats flapped like wings that couldn’t quite take flight. The figures grew smaller, smaller, until the curve of the track and a row of frost-laced trees swallowed them completely.
Haruto leaned his forehead against the cold window, watching his small town shrink into gray rooftops and bare branches. The seat beside him stayed empty. In the reflection of the glass his own face looked pale and strangely young, eyes carrying a question no one had answered yet.
The train picked up speed, rushing south toward Tokyo and whoever waited there.
Behind him, four girls stood on the freezing platform long after the last car disappeared, breath fogging the air, scarves pressed to their faces, willing the rails to bring him back sooner than promised.
The train pulled into Tokyo Station at 16:47, right on schedule.
The sky had already begun to bruise into a cold violet, the low winter sun reduced to a dull orange coin behind the high-rise haze. Platform 22 was a river of black coats and muffled voices; the air smelled of steel brakes, takoyaki from a nearby kiosk, and the faint metallic bite of snow that hadn’t quite decided to fall yet.
Haruto stepped down with the duffel over one shoulder, scarf loose around his neck, cheeks still numb from two hours pressed to the window. He was threading through the crowd toward the Yaesu exit when his phone vibrated against his ribs.
International number again.
He swiped, wedging the phone between ear and shoulder.
"Haruto, listen," his mother’s voice, hurried now, almost apologetic. "There’s been a technical problem with the aircraft. They’ve grounded the whole fleet for inspections. The flight is postponed, minimum ten days, maybe more. We’re so sorry to spring this on you."
He stopped dead in the middle of the concourse, commuters parting around him like water around a rock.
"Ten days?" His breath fogged in front of his face. "I only brought clothes for three."
"It could be less," his father cut in, background noise of an airport lounge behind him. "Sometimes these things clear up in two, three days. You have to stay reachable, okay? The moment the flight is rebooked, the person will need to be met immediately. We already transferred money to your account for a hotel. Please, just... stay in Tokyo until we know more."
The call ended before he could argue.
He stood there, phone still in hand, staring at the departure boards flickering overhead. Ten days. Maybe more. The crowd noise dulled to a low surf. His reflection in a pillar’s polished steel looked suddenly very small: countryside coat, countryside haircut, countryside eyes that didn’t know where to go next.
A voice behind him, light, familiar, edged with disbelief.
"...Is that you, Haruto?"
He turned.
She stood three steps away, a navy peacoat open over a cream turtleneck, long chestnut hair spilling from beneath a knitted beret the color of café au lait. A small silver suitcase rested at her feet. The face was older than memory (sharper cheekbones, the last traces of baby fat gone), but the eyes were exactly the same: wide, dark, slightly upturned, the ones that used to pass him crumpled notes in third-period chemistry two years ago.
Erica.
His old classmate from Tokyo Metropolitan High, back when he still lived in a twenty-third-floor apartment in Shibuya and thought countryside transfer was the end of the world. She had been the class rep, the one who always smelled faintly of vanilla and printer ink, the one who once taped a band-aid on his finger when he cut it during dissection and never teased him about blushing.
She tilted her head, smile slow and wondering.
"It really is you." Her breath misted between them. "I thought my eyes were playing tricks. What on earth are you doing in Tokyo?"
The moment her name left his lips—"Erica..."—something inside his chest unclenched.
It wasn’t dramatic. No sudden rush of tears or sweeping orchestral swell. Just a quiet, physical softening, like stepping into a heated room after hours in the snow. The roar of Tokyo Station, the fluorescent glare, the weight of ten unexpected days alone in this city, all of it receded a few centimeters, muffled by the simple fact that someone here already knew the shape of his old life.
Erica’s smile widened, crooked in the exact way he remembered from when she used to sneak him half her melon-pan during lunch because he always forgot his wallet on test days. The years had sharpened her, yes, but the warmth still lived in the corners of her eyes, the same warmth that had made the fluorescent-lit classroom feel survivable back then.
"You got taller," she said, tilting her head to look up at him. "And... quieter countryside air suits you, I think."
Her voice was the same too: low for a girl, soft at the edges, like someone perpetually on the verge of laughing at a private joke. The scent of vanilla was still there, fainter now, woven into the wool of her coat and the cold city air. It drifted over him like a memory he hadn’t realized he’d been carrying.
Haruto felt the knot in his throat loosen. The loneliness that had started pooling the moment his parents hung up suddenly had a hole punched in it. He wasn’t just a boy stranded in the capital with a vague errand and an empty hotel reservation anymore. He was Haruto-who-once-shared-a-desk-with-Erica, Haruto-who-she-used-to-save-the-window-seat-for-on-school-trips, Haruto whose handwriting she could still probably recognize from ten meters away.
The platform lights flickered overhead, casting moving stripes of white across her face. She adjusted the handle of her suitcase, cheeks pink from the cold, and the gesture was so familiar enough to hurt in the gentlest way.
"Seriously," she said, voice softer now, "what are you doing here? You look... kind of lost."
He exhaled a small laugh that fogged and vanished between them.
"I am, actually. Someone is coming and flight got delayed ten days. I’m stuck until the person come."
Erica’s eyes widened, then softened again, something tender and decisive settling behind them.
"Well," she said, reaching out to flick the frayed edge of his scarf the same way she used to flick his tie knot when it was crooked,
"then you’re not spending it alone. Come on. I know a place that still makes the best cream puffs in the whole city, and I’m not letting you stand here freezing while destiny decides when it feels like delivering mysterious passengers."
She didn’t wait for an answer, just turned toward the Yaesu exit, suitcase wheels clacking over the tiles, coat flaring behind her like a banner he suddenly wanted to follow. Haruto adjusted the duffel on his shoulder and fell into step beside her, the warmth in his chest spreading outward until even the November wind felt bearable.
For the first time since the train doors closed back home, he wasn’t counting the days until he could leave Tokyo.
He was just glad, bone-deep glad, that he was here right now, walking next to someone who still remembered the boy he used to be.
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