Demon Child
by Ono Fuyumi
translated by Aili
and then translated again by Retrooo
©ONO FUYUMI, PINPOINT INC.
last modified, 10.18.2005
PROLOGUE
*
Snow drifted from the sky.
The large and heavy snowflakes fell as if they would never stop. To look up at
the sky was to see a canvas of white with countless dull, gray shadows painted upon it. His
line of sight followed the snow sweeping across his entire field of vision
into the sky, and before he knew it, all he saw was the white of the sky.
He watched as a snowflake lightly drift onto his shoulder. It was a big and
thick snowflake that looked like a crystal that was made of cotton. Snowflakes continuously
fell onto his shoulders, arms and his bright red palms. They immediately melted into the
transparent color of water.
His white breath really showed how piercingly frigid it was. He turned his small
child's slender neck and the white of his breath followed his movements and hung in the air,
making him feel even colder.
He had already stood there for an hour. His little hands and exposed knees were
all red like a completely ripened fruit, and he had lost all feeling in them. No matter how
he rubbed or covered them, he only felt the cold seep into his bones. So he was like this,
feeling nothing as he stared uncertainly into the air.
This was the yard on the northern side. A storehouse that was no longer in use
stood in the corner of the narrow yard. A crack in the earthen wall made the air even colder.
The three sides of the courtyard were the main building, the storehouse, and where the wall
contained the yard. However, at this frigid and windless time, there was nothing he could use
in this place to shelter him from the cold. There wasn't even anything in the yard you could
call a tree. For a time in the summer, the irises would bloom, but right now, the ground was
only scattered with the white snow.
"What a stubborn child." His grandmother had moved from the Kansai region when
she had gotten married, but when she spoke, she still carried a thick accent.
"He could at least cry a little. Even a little bit would let people know that
he feels bad."
"Mother, you don't actually have to be so harsh."
"It's because you dote on him so much that he's become so stubborn."
"But..."
"Today's young parents only know how to please their children. It's better if
the children receive some strict discipline."
"But mother, what if he gets a cold..."
"He won't get a cold from a little bit of snow. --You listen to me. Unless he
sincerely apologizes, he's not allowed back inside."
He just stood there.
In fact, all this had originally happened because of a small matter; someone had
dripped water onto the floorboards under the sink and hadn't wiped it up. His younger brother
blamed him and he denied that he'd done it. By his thinking, it was because he didn't remember
doing such a thing that he felt secure enough to say that he didn't do it. His grandmother
often warned him that telling lies was the worst thing he could do, so he didn't want to lie
and say that he had done such a thing.
"Just be honest and apologize, and the matter would be over." Grandmother had said it very severely, so he could only explain again that he
hadn't done it. "Why are you so stubborn?"
His grandmother always said this about him, so his young mind decided that he
was indeed stubborn. Even though he wasn't too clear on what exactly "stubborn" meant, he had
his own way of explaining it: because I'm a "stubborn" child, grandmother doesn't like me.
He hadn't cried because he was confused. His grandmother wanted him to apologize,
but if he had given in and done so, wouldn't he have become the kind of lying child that his
grandmother hated so much? He didn't know what the right thing to do was. He felt very anxious.
The hallway extended horizontally in front of him. Beyond the hallway's glass
window was the paper door of the kitchen. Through the half piece of glass installed in the
paper door, he could see his grandmother and his mother arguing in the kitchen.
The two of them arguing made him feel very sad. Usually, in the end his mother
would admit she was wrong, and then she would have no choice but to quickly clean the bathroom.
He knew that his mother would eventually hide in the bathroom and secretly weep.
--Is mommy crying again?
He thought about this as he stood uncertainly. His feet felt a little numb.
He moved all his weight onto one foot and felt a dull pain in his knee. He could not feel
the tips of his feet, but he still forced himself to try to move a little more. As a result,
he immediately felt and retreated from a sharp, cold pain. He could feel the snow melting on
his knees, melting into an icy water that trickled down his calf.
When he sighed heavily the way children do, a puff of wind suddenly brushed the
back of his neck. It wasn't a cold, empty draft but a very warm breeze. He looked around
because he thought that someone had felt sorry for him and opened a door for his sake.
However, after he looked all around him, he found that all the windows were
still shut tightly. The window facing the opposite room was covered in a thin fog because
of the warm air inside.
He tilted his head suspiciously and looked around once more. The warm air still
didn't stop blowing onto him.
He looked towards the side of the storehouse and immediately blinked his eyes
in surprise. A white object extended from the small crevice between the storehouse and the
wall. It looked like a person's arm, a completely bare arm, white and full, reaching out from
the crevice behind the storehouse, but he couldn't see to whom the arm belonged. He thought,
could they be hiding behind the storehouse?
He felt like that was unthinkable. The space in the crevice between the storehouse
and the wall was too small. Yesterday, his brother had cried the whole day because he couldn't
get the baseball that had rolled into the narrow crack. Even with his or his brother's small
bodies, they couldn't fit anything in the crevice but their arms. That arm looked like it
belonged to an adult, yet how were they able to fit into that space?
The forearm portion of the arm was swaying as if it were stirring water. He realized
that the hand was beckoning to him, and then he took a step toward it. It was very strange
that although his knees were numb from the cold, they didn't make any dry, rough sounds.
He didn't feel the least bit frightened, because he realized that the warm air
was blowing from that direction. He was really very cold and he also didn't know what he
should do, so he obediently walked over towards the arm.
The snow had already completely coated the ground, almost covering all of his
little footprints, eventually leaving no trace of him. The white sky resembled faded ink, the
color gradually changing.
The white of the short winter day gradually turned into the color of night.
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