Anesthesia ~
Epilogue
And that was the last time I ever saw him. It’s just as
well; he was too high maintenance for me. He asked too much.
I’m lying, of course.
I’m used to impossible demands,
and as for Muraki… Well, I would have given him anything he wanted, if he only
asked me nicely.
But that’s not the lie I mean.
I did see Muraki after that. It was months later, and by then
Akihito was dead so I’m not certain it matters.
Even now, I feel as though I was one man before that night, and I am another
now.
But then, perhaps, things were different, still transitory. A week – two at the most – that lasted the millennia it takes
continents to drift apart and resettle.
After it was over, I tried to fill in what I didn’t remember. I
could have asked Kurauchi; he saw everything, much to
my embarrassment. But of late I’ve noticed a change in him. Or maybe I’ve only realized something that’s
been there all along.
No matter. I simply don’t like the way he watches me anymore, like
I’m a piece of crystal poised to break. I don’t like
the way that he seems perpetually ready to fly to my rescue.
It’s not that I’m not grateful to him. That night, he led me into the parlor and
constructed the story we would tell the police.
It was simple, uncomplicated. It kept my hands clean and, more
importantly, Akihito’s. I like to think
I could have done no better myself.
And so, of course, they believed it. And they left us for the
night.
And it was then I finally lost consciousness.
* * *
“Hirose. Hirose. Hirose.
Hirose!”
“What?”
I try not to move. My damn neck feels like it’s broken.
It probably is broken.
Kurauchi is probably waking me up in the hospital
to tell me that my neck is broken and I’ll never move anything below my
eyeballs again.
Only… that isn’t Kurauchi’s voice.
I turn, and that at least
rules out the broken neck. Although it doesn’t explain why I am most certainly hallucinating.
“Muraki?”
He looks up from the needle
he’s preparing.
Listen, imagine you’ve washed ashore on a desert island. Imagine
that you spend ten years on that island, with nothing to drink the milky yellow
sap from the cacti; with nothing to eat but locusts and scorpions. Then, imagine that one day, onto your island,
someone drops fresh meat. Kobe beef, rare, still steaming and
leaking rich red juice over the sand.
Imagine that, and you’ll have
some idea of how good that needle looks to me.
It doesn’t hurt that it’s Muraki holding it.
Now I understand why they use lingerie models to sell sports cars.
“Hirose…” He shakes his head,
and I find that I’m watching the spot where his face disappears behind his
hair, as though it will be easier to catch a glimpse of it now that I know what
I’m looking for.
“Or is it Nanjo-san
now?” He sits on the edge of the bed
beside me and holds up the needle.
“I-I don’t know
anymore…” I’m not sure if it’s my voice
that’s slurred, or if it’s everything else.
“Muraki. What…?”
“What am I doing here?” He smiles. “Kurauchi
called me. You didn’t take my number out
of your Rolodex. Should I be flattered?”
Actually, I had been trying
to ask him what was in the syringe. But
maybe it doesn’t matter. Morphine,
heroin, Drano, lye… anything would be good enough right now.
And Muraki says, “It only
hurts for a moment,” as he slides the needle into the bend of my arm, and I can
feel warmth crawl slowly towards my heart.
“You’ve been in shock,”
Muraki says, running his fingers through my hair. “You’re dehydrated. Blood sugar is down…
You’re a mess. What happened, Hirose?”
“I…” I know. I remember
everything, but I think that even if I wanted to tell him, I wouldn’t have the
words. “Nothing. It… was nothing.”
“I see…” He sighs, and then
nudges me over a little, stretching out next to me. The bed isn’t big. We have to lie close. “A
charming enigma as always, Hirose,” he murmurs.
“Since when do you have this
kind of bedside manner?”
My voice seems to pass
through sandstorms and broken glass in the back of my throat; it sounds rough
and shredded. But he laughs. “I reserve it only for my most esteemed
patients.”
He takes my hand. He’s laying
so near me that I can’t quite see his face; everything blurs together. “Where
did the bruises come from, Hirose?” he asks abruptly.
“Bruises?”
Two of his fingertips glide
over my left wrist. “Not Koji…” he muses quietly, while, in the back of my mind
something screams for me to stop him from seeing this through.
But I can’t do anything
except watch him, and I feel faint pinpoints of heat behind my eyes. I won’t
cry. I’m dehydrated, like he says; I’ll
save the moisture.
His lips pull tight, and he
says. “Ah. Akihito, then.”
“Akihito is dead.”
He blinks. “Oh.” The mark of a man who doesn’t surprise easily
is that he doesn’t know how to hide it when he is shocked.
“That does explain a few
things.” Before I can move to stop him,
his arms are around me and I’m curled against his chest. “The shock,” he says
quietly. “You ought to stay warm.”
And of course I don’t feel
any better, but, it’s strange, I do feel for the first time as though I might,
at some distant point – maybe years from now – I might begin to.
“Muraki…” When I breathe, I
can smell cigarettes and flowery shampoo, and I realized that I’ve missed
that. “If I asked you not to leave this
time, would I be making a fool of myself?”
“Perhaps not a fool, but…”
“But you won’t stay.” I had expected nothing else from him, but, there in his arms, I permit myself a little pang of bitter disappointment.
“No,” he says. “I will not.”
I nod, slowly. “I know.
You’re still searching for something…”
“No.” I feel him sigh, soft
and weary. “Not searching any longer.”
“Your demon?” It wasn’t that long ago that saying something
like that would have made me question the little sanity I had left. But now, it’s not so strange, is it? I think I could begin to believe in demons,
as long as I started with the one in whose shadow I have lived for the last
sixteen years.
Muraki shakes his
head. “Not quite. My little ghost.”
“You believe in ghosts now?”
“There are more things in
Heaven and Hell…” He shrugs. “Well, in Heaven, at least.”
“Who is this ghost, then?”
“In truth?” Muraki sighs. “He’s your replacement.”
And I feel that empty sting
of jealousy in the pit of my stomach, like an old friend. I shake my head. “Impossible.”
One of his hands slides down
my back, and he shifts so I can hear his heartbeat when I think to listen for
it. “Perhaps.”
And just that word leaves me
with hope, which is all I’ve ever had anyway.
“Muraki, please…” My fingers curl
in the front of his clothing. “Stay
here. Or let me go with you. I…”
My breath catches. The bitter
salt I can taste on my lips is from my tears. “I’m ruined. It’s not your fault.
It had nothing to do with you. But if you leave now…”
He’s right, though. It’s no good now; it really doesn’t matter.
"There's nothing else I can do for you, Hirose."
And already, he’s pulling
away, and I don’t know what to say to stop him.
“Won’t you at least tell me what I should do now?”
He slips out of bed and
straightens his clothing again before looking back. “Live, Hirose. That’s all.”
“Why?”
“Because I want to know
you’re here. That’s all.”
“Selfish…”
He nods. “I know.
But will you do that much for me?”
“You know I can’t tell you
no.”
He doesn’t smile, but he
leans over me again, kissing my lips first, then my eyes. Tasting my drying
tears.
Koji was right, when he said
I had never cried. Not in years, since long before he was born. But now, even as Muraki pulls away, licking
his lips and surely tasting salt, it never occurs to me to be ashamed.
I sit up, to see him out. My
head aches, and it’s too much trouble to straighten my slumped shoulders.
“Muraki… I hope you find what you’re looking for.”
“And you, Nanjo-san.”
I shake my head. “Not likely."
“You’ll be all right. I’m
sure of it.” He shakes his head, and his
hair falls over his eye again. It will
be the last time I see his face, I know.
“How?”
He only smiles, soft around
the edges. “Because you made me a
promise.”
When he leaves, neither of us say goodbye.