…Mom, you can't just send Mahiru photos like that."
On the last day of Golden Week, Amane phoned his mother.
He was ostensibly calling to ask whether she would be at home on Mother's Day, but
before he could do that, he felt the need to stress his objection to her going behind his
back to send Mahiru photos of him. Nothing disastrous had slipped through the cracks
just yet, but this was his mother he was dealing with, and he knew if Mahiru asked,
she would absolutely send something mortifying.
So Amane rushed through the typical greetings and right into sullenly hurling
accusations.
"Uh-oh, you caught me," his mother replied in an indifferent tone.
She definitely was not remorseful.
"Mahiru was acting suspicious, so I questioned her, and then I saw the photos."
"Mahiru really needs to work on her poker face, huh?"
"Say you're sorry for sending them."
Thanks to Shihoko, Mahiru's image folder was full of all kinds of strange pictures, and
he was worried what else might make its way to her. For some reason, Mahiru seemed
to enjoy the photos, and rather than forcing her to stop looking at them, he had
decided it would be faster to go right to the root of the problem.
But his mother didn't seem the least bit ashamed. "What's so wrong about sending
photos of my adorable son to my adorable future daughter-in-law?"
"I don't even know where to start correcting everything wrong with that sentence…
Anyway, don't send stuff I haven't okayed."
"So if I get your permission, it's fine, right? The photos made Mahiru very happy, you
know."
"At least give me a chance to choose which ones you can send. I'd die if I found out
you'd sent anything embarrassing."
"Don't worry, I won't send any pictures of you in the bath."
"If you do, I'm boycotting Mother's Day." Amane scowled at his smartphone as he
delivered his ultimatum. His mother wasn't on hand to feel his wrath directly, so that
would have to do.
She obviously did not appreciate how upset he was, because she laughed gaily at his
demand. Before Amane could raise his eyebrows and go off on her again, she added,
"One way or another, you always show your appreciation for me every year, don't you?"
When Amane heard that, he held back his complaints.
"…I mean, yeah, you're my mom."
Of course, she could be irritating and obstinate, and sometimes he got completely fed
up with her, but his mother had carried him in her belly, given birth to him, lovingly
raised him to be healthy—and she did it all with plenty of love, so naturally he was
grateful to her.
Thanks to his parents, Amane had grown up okay and had rebounded whenever he'd
gotten hurt. He had turned out a little sulky, though.
But since it was embarrassing for a young man of his age to express gratitude directly
to his mother's face, he faltered a little.
His mother laughed cheerfully, as if she could see straight through her son. "It makes
a mother happy to see that she's raised a good child. I'm looking forward to this year's
flowers."
"…Yeah."
"Also, make sure you invite sweet Mahiru here for the summer, okay? I'm looking
forward to it."
His mother was obviously excited for his homecoming.
"Got it," Amane replied curtly, and he was treated to another laugh. "Well, Mahiru wants
to come anyway," he continued. "It seems like she's looking forward to it as well."
"It sounds like you are, too, Amane."
"Oh, be quiet."
He was excited about the prospect of spending the summer with Mahiru, but he didn't
appreciate being teased about it by his own mother.
Suddenly, Amane was in a bad mood, but Shihoko didn't seem to notice. On the other
end of the line, he could hear the peals of her cheerful laughter.
"Heh-heh. That's great. It sounds like you're okay with the idea of returning home."
"…I guess so."
She was probably thinking of the summer after his first year away, when he had
resisted going home during the break.
Now Amane was more positive about going home than he had once been. It wasn't
that he had forgotten the past. Even though he had experienced certain hardships, he
could see now that it had probably been for the best. Things were much better than
they would have been if he had stayed so trusting and good-natured, thus inevitably
exploited for all he was worth. More importantly, if he hadn't escaped those guys, he
never would have met Mahiru.
"If I let what happened derail my life any more than it already has, Mahiru would kill
me. So yeah, it pretty much doesn't bother me anymore."
"You told Mahiru?"
"Yeah."
"That's wonderful. That's one more person who really understands you."
His mother sounded very happy, and Amane felt his chest grow just a little bit warm.
"…Sure."
"So that must mean those photos of you from middle school I had held back on sending
are fair game. I've got one from when you hit your growth spurt. You looked so smug
because you'd gotten taller than me. And that's just the beginning!"
"Hey, listen, I'm not kidding. Cut it out, all right? You've got some awful stuff in reserve."
All the warm feelings he'd had toward his mother evaporated.
"But you were so cuuute!"
"Dammit. This time, when I come home, I'm taking those out of the album."
"I've got that album hidden," Shihoko countered. "So they'll be fine."
"I'm definitely going to find it," he insisted.
He had to dispose of the photos before Mahiru saw them. He could just imagine Mahiru
grinning as she told him what she thought of them after his mother smuggled them
into her hands behind his back.
He could hear Shihoko laughing at him on the other end of the line, and with a curt
good-bye, he hung up on her, sighing angrily.
"…What are you doing?" a quiet voice asked. He turned to see Mahiru, peeking
inquisitively at him from the living room door. It looked like she had heard him talking
and tried not to make any noise as she entered the apartment.
Amane averted his eyes. "I was talking to my mom, telling her how I've decided to
completely destroy her photo albums. Scorched earth."
"Wh-what do you mean?! That'd be awful!" she exclaimed. She sat down next to him
in an angry huff and jabbed him in the shoulder.
Amane grimaced. "What are you even hoping to see, Mahiru…?"
"Photos of you, from long ago, of course…"
"No way."
"…You see? I have no choice but to get them from Shihoko, behind your back."
"Hey, listen—"
"I'm just joking. Well, half joking anyway."
"Geez… It's the other half that worries me, you know."
Amane couldn't help but feel like if he dropped the matter, Mahiru would end up
plotting something with his mother behind his back. On the other hand, Mahiru was a
good person, and he trusted that, whatever happened, she wouldn't do anything too
outrageous.
Amane sighed dramatically, but Mahiru didn't seem bothered by it. Instead, she smiled
broadly, looking pleased. "…I don't think you're going to like this much, but I'm really
looking forward to summer vacation."
"You're kinda early," Amane replied. "Golden Week isn't even over yet."
"Well… I'm looking forward to seeing your mother and father again, and I can't wait to
check out your photo album, and I really want to see the place where you grew up with
my own eyes."
Amane felt his heart leap as she adorably rattled off her list, but she had added in one
item too many.
"Thanks… except for the album thing. The album is off-limits."
Mahiru gave him a peevish look when he shut her down, so he stroked her head to
distract her from the existence of the cursed photo album.
Mahiru apparently liked having her head stroked more than he had ever expected. She
still looked a tiny bit dissatisfied, but when he gently touched the top layer of her hair,
careful not to mess it up, she quickly settled down.
"…I'm looking forward to going home, too," Amane admitted.
"Really?" she asked.
"Why would I lie about that?"
"…I mean, with everything that happened…" Mahiru hesitated, probably recalling what
he had revealed to her yesterday.
"That thing with those guys doesn't really bother me anymore. Just the fact that you're
upset about something that happened to me really means a lot. How do I put this—? I
think I'm a pretty lucky guy to have someone who's willing to get genuinely angry on
my behalf."
He knew it was a small, simple thing, but just having someone who listened to him talk
about those old wounds—and be there to support him—had already gone a long way
toward helping him heal.
Besides, it was clear he couldn't carry on being depressed about it. Sooner or later, he
would exhaust Mahiru's patience with him, and he didn't want her to think he was
completely hopeless.
"It's only natural that I would be angry you were hurt, Amane. I mean, if someone was
to hurt me, you would be angry, right?"
"Of course I would."
"So it's the same thing," Mahiru asserted softly, letting her eyes drift closed. Amane
could tell how much she enjoyed it when he stroked her hair.
Amane felt a little embarrassed by how much she trusted him, but he continued gently
caressing her, and she smiled graciously and leaned against him.