Original Stories Fan Fiction ❯ Akasaka Moon ❯ Beetle ( Chapter 40 )
[ Y - Young Adult: Not suitable for readers under 16 ]
Beetle
On March 11th, 1983, I got a chance to act on the promise I
made.
I found myself awoken in the middle of the night by someone
knocking on the front door. I walked over to the door, mumbling in
aggravation.
“Hold your damn horses!” I yelled. “I'm coming!
I'm coming!” slid the front door open. An eighteen-year-old
boy stood in the rain looking in. He looked like a high school
senior student. His black-brown hair had been neatly cut. The boy
still had on his school uniform. In his arms, he held what looked
like a little ten-day old baby. The boy kept his coat over her just
to keep her dry. I looked at him with tired eyes.
“What do you want?” I half-mumbled to the boy.
“Please sir!” the early-bird guest pleaded. “My
daughter and I need a place to stay for the night! Can you put us
up?” I stared blankly at the boy, then to the baby. She
looked so little and cute with her pink cheeks. The baby slept
peacefully, wrapped up in her little yellow blanket. Just seeing
her stirred something in my frozen heart.
Midori-chan…
The boy became desperate. He reached into his pocket and pulled out
a fist-full of yen.
“Here,” he said. “I've got the money!” I
looked on silently and kept my eyes on the baby. I felt great pity
for her. I held up my hand up to the boy.
“Keep your money,” I said. “You can stay as long
as you want.” The young man looked at me with big, happy
eyes. He bowed.
“Thank you, sir!” the boy said. I moved aside and let
him into my house.
March 12th, 1983.
I showed this young man around my quiet village the next morning.
The eighteen-year-old held his eleven-day old daughter close to his
chest the whole time as the baby slept on. I had many questions
about my new guest. What's a high school boy doing here with a
baby? He seemed like a teenage runaway. I wanted to ask, but
decided not to.
He'll talk when he's ready. The boy and his baby stayed
silent the whole time. He observed everything. At the end of the
tour, we came back to my house. I turned to the boy.
“So,” I started. “What do you think?” The
boy thought for a moment.
“No one comes looking for anyone here?” he asked.
“Nope,” I answered. “The police don't even bother
us here.” The boy raised an eyebrow at me.
“So you house criminals here?” he asked.
“No, no,” I said. “Rarely any persons your age or
younger come here.”
“Why is that?” the boy asked, holding his daughter
closer to him.
“Hard to find. Only when found by chance do we old timers get
any young people here,” I said, to try and ease his mind.
This boy nodded some.
“And this is all on consummated ground?”
“Yes, the main priest has blessed this village
himself,” I summed up. The boy began to smile.
“Great,” he said. “We'll stay.” Oh, you
have no idea how happy that made me.
Owari