Original Stories Fan Fiction ❯ Paradise Lost ❯ Break With ( Chapter 10 )
[ T - Teen: Not suitable for readers under 13 ]
Chapter Ten: Break With:
June 3rd, 1982.
Daisuke awoke to a cruel surprise that morning. First off, it was
dead silent in the house. Haruka would usually be yelling at Yasuo
in the mornings. That was the first thing the youngest son noticed.
At first, he thought he was dreaming. He pinched himself on the
hand. His kitsune appeared beside of him.
“Something wrong, Dai?” Jin whispered. The boy shushed
him as he waved him off.
“Do you hear that?” he asked. The kitsune took a
listen.
“I don't hear anything,” Jin answered. He turned to his
master.
“Daisuke…” the kitsune spoke up. Daisuke got out
of his futon and wandered around the house.
"Hello?" he asked as he looked around him. "Anybody here?" The boy
looked around as no one answered. A chill danced up his spine.
Maybe they've left for good and he's all alone now? No, even that
would be too much of a dream. So where are they?
Suddenly, Daisuke happened to look out the kitchen window and see
smoke. Curious, he walked to the back door for a better look. He
noticed that his mother was dumping a box of stuff in a fire pit in
the backyard. At first, Daisuke thought nothing of it. She was
probably cleaning out the house. That was until he noticed a
familiar fluffy pink bunny being sacrificed to golden yellow flames
below.
That's Kirika's bunny, he thought with big shocked eyes. It
didn't take long for the boy to piece together what was going on.
He raced outside to his mother in fear.
"Stop!" Daisuke cried out as he ran over to his family as fast as
he could. Haruka and the boys all paused and looked up. The
youngest boy stopped to catch his breath.
"Stop!" he cried again, "What are you doing?! That's Kirika's
bunny!" His mother sneered at him.
"For fuck sake, she and Yumiko are never coming back!" she yelled.
"It's time to forget about them!"
"No!" Daisuke argued. He tried to save what was left of his
sisters' belongings from the famished flames. He just about made it
to one box when Yasuo tackled him to the ground. Daisuke yelped in
pain.
"Get off me!" he cried, "Let me go!" He struggled to get away as
Haruka dumped another box into the growing fire.
"Keep still, runt!" Yasuo growled as he sat on his brother to keep
him pinned to the ground.
"No!" Daisuke shouted. The boys tussled on the ground even more.
Yasuo tried to use his weight to keep the seventeen-year-old from
moving around. The other sons watched silent.
"Make this easier on yourself," the third son said quietly.
Usually, that command worked. But today, Daisuke resisted his
brother's calm voice. Something in the youngest son completely
broke down and snapped. He shoved Yasuo off of his body. The oldest
son fell backwards with a thud. Daisuke scrambled to his feet and
raced to one of the boxes. He snatched up the nearest thing his
fingertips could touch. The boy would've grabbed more if Yasuo
hadn't come up behind him and roughly yanked him away. Daisuke fell
to the ground with Yumiko and Kirika's birth charms clutched in his
hands. Haruka was now pissed.
"Give those to me!" she snapped.
"No!" Daisuke protested.
"I said give those to me!" his mother yelled.
"No!" her son screamed as he held the charms to his chest.
"You!" Haruka snapped. Anger was visibly boiling in her eyes, her
muscles tightened and the boys knew she snapped. She picked up her
bamboo cane and began to beat the youngest. The force infused
within the bamboo stick made her anger be visibly known from the
bruises she left on Daisuke. Bruises everywhere, on the head, the
legs, the back and anywhere else she would guide her stick to. The
other boys watched as the lashes kept coming. Daisuke would've
usually folded by this point to stop the pain. This time, something
in him just wouldn't take his mother's abuse anymore. He couldn't
explain it at the time, but this was all he could do to fight
back.
Daisuke tried to go to school as if nothing happened. For first
time in years, he couldn't ignore the eyes locked on him. They all
gave him this judgmental look that screamed, “Murderer”
at him. Their whispers made his stomach ache.
Please don't look at me like that, he thought. I'm not a
monster like my mother. I'm actually a nice guy. I didn't choose
this as my life. He could barely eat during lunch. His teachers
showed great concern for him.
“Dai-kun,” Kuga-sensei addressed him. “What's the
matter?” The boy tried to make himself smile like he always
had.
“Nothing,” he lied like his brothers taught him to.
“I'm fine.” This time, his homeroom teacher didn't
believe him.
She rested her hand on his shoulder, “Please see me after
class.” Daisuke looked at her with big silent eyes. She
knows something is wrong, he thought. Despite the order, the
boy went straight home. As he walked home alone that hot summer
day, a realization woke up in his mind.
That woman killed my sisters, she thought, And I could be
next. The boy froze in place and shook his head. I don't
want to die! He needed to do something to stay alive. But what
could he do? Only one thing came into his mind. When he got home,
he acted as if everything was “normal” in that place.
His brothers ignored him just as their mother ordered them to. He
didn't even get dinner that night. As he took his bath that
evening, Daisuke began to map out what to do next. The water calmed
him enough to think. He would have to be quick in order to execute
this. He drew his eyes closed and gathered up his nerve.
I can do this, he thought. After his bath, Daisuke climbed
out of the tub and hurried straight to his room. He peeked through
the open crack.
“Nobu?” he whispered. “Are you sleeping?”
When he didn't get an answer, the boy slowly pushed open the door
and crept inside. Daisuke pushed his dark blue backpack onto the
futon and started packing. He made sure to pack only what he needed
such as clothes, his homework, and little personal items. Daisuke
kept Kirika's bracelet and diary keys well-hidden in his jacket.
Those were the only two things that Haruka couldn't get her hands
on this morning. Once he was packed, the seventeen-year-old boy
took one more look around the room. Going out the front or the back
doors would draw too much attention he pondered. He needed a quick
and clean escape. Only one answer came into his mind.
I have to try, Daisuke thought. He readied himself to go out
the bedroom window. The boy took one more look over at his older
brother. Lucky for him, Yasuo and Shichiro already moved out and
got married. Nobu only stayed over because he was visiting home for
the summer. Plus, Haruka could practically sleep through anything.
Daisuke steadied himself to the small closed window.
I only have one chance at this. The boy unlatched the window
and pushed it open inch by inch. He looked over his shoulder the
whole time at Nobu sound asleep in his futon. If he woke up and
caught him, the man would try to convince him to give up on this
plan. If Daisuke refused, the older brother would turn him over to
their mother. The boy tried to shake himself of those thoughts and
shoved his backpack out the window first. Once he heard it hit the
grass, Daisuke pulled himself together and pushed his head out the
open window.
“Need some help?” Jin whispered.
“Thanks,” the boy whispered back. The kitsune gave him
just enough of a nudge to go get the rest of his body out the
window. Daisuke hit the ground and landed on his hands and
knees.
“Ow,” he muttered to himself. Not how he wanted to get
out, but he got his wish. Daisuke pushed himself up to his feet,
grabbed his backpack, and began the run down the dirt road. He
didn't even bother to look back at that house.
“Where to now?” Jin asked as he flew behind his
master.
“Doesn't matter!” the boy yelled back. “I have to
get out of here.”
“So, you don't know, do you?” the kitsune questioned
him.
“Shut up!” Daisuke hissed. Jin drew his mouth closed as
he sailed behind his master.
“Alright,” he muttered. In fact, there was only one
place that Daisuke could take of running to now. The boy ran all
the way to his high school and pounded on the glass doors. He
didn't know why he chose to come here all places, but he felt that
was the only place that he had at the time. Jin shook his head as
he smirked.
“It's nighttime now,” he said. “Who the hell is
going to be at the school now?” To Daisuke's surprise,
Kuga-sensei just happened to exit her classroom when she looked up
and saw him pounding on the door. A surprised look came over her
face before she raced over and pushed open the door.
“Dai-kun?” she asked. “Where have you been? What
are you doing here?” The boy swallowed before he gathered up
his words to answer.
“Actually,” he admitted to his homeroom teacher.
“There is a problem at home.” She gave him both a
sympathetic and questionable look.
“You want to talk about it?” she asked.
“I do,” the boy admitted.
“Come with me,” the teacher told him. She walked him
back to the teacher's office. Once inside, Kuga-san prepared him
some green tea in the kitchen area of the office.
“Here,” she said. “Drink this.”
“Thank you,” the boy muttered. He took the cup and took
a big sip. His stomach growled loud enough to be heard from the
hallway. He gave off a nervous laugh as Kuga-sensei eyed him.
“Have you had anything to eat at home?” she asked. The
boy hung his head in shame.
“No,” he muttered. His teacher turned his head to face
her.
“You wait right here while I get you something to eat,
okay?” she said. The boy lowered his head.
“I am so sorry for this,” he said in a whisper.
“It's okay,” Kuga-sensei told him. “After you
eat, we can talk, alright?”
“Alright,” Daisuke replied.
“You stay right here,” his teacher told him. She turned
and went out the hallway to try and get him something to eat. The
boy slumped back into his chair. Daisuke's paradise he discovered
with his sisters might have been lost now, but there would soon be
a chance that another one would be regained again in the next
year.