Yukio looked at
Kyoko when Noriko answered his call.
“I’ve placed
the call on speakers, so I apologise in advance if the sound is bad.”
There was a
moment of silence.
“No problem.
I’ll do likewise.”
Huh? Why?
“Hi Noriko, are
you busy? We can call you later,” Kyoko said.
Oh, she’s
doing something at the moment. “Yeah, no problem,” Yukio
added. Kyoko’s quick to pick up on that. He leaned over the
table and squeezed her hand.
“Haven’t seen
you in a while,” Urufu’s voice suddenly said. “I’ll be absent
from school for some time.”
What’s he
doing together with Noriko? “Man, what do you mean by absent?” Yukio had a feeling he’d rather not hear the answer.
“I got
suspended for insulting the principal.”
“Damn it Urufu,
do you have to provoke him all the time?”
“I...”
Urufu’s voice got strangely muffled.
“I asked him
the same thing,” Noriko said. “He just won’t listen to reason.”
Yukio stared at
Kyoko’s phone on the table. “Man, I planned to take this with you
later, but I guess now is a good as ever.” He met Kyoko’s eyes
across the table, and she nodded at him. “We don’t feel good
about the situation with you and Kuri.” How am I going to
explain this? He fell silent for a moment.
“Shoot, I’m
listening,” Urufu said.
Knowing it needed
to be said was one thing. Saying it was another. “Look, you’re my
best friend, but Kuri is Kyoko’s. When the two of you are fighting
you force us to choose, and we’ve decided that we refuse.”
“I won’t pick
Kuri-chan over you, but neither will I support you,” Kyoko added.
“So we’ll
just stay out of it all. Until both of you’ve got your brains in
order don’t expect to see us a lot,” Yukio finished.
“Wait! You
can’t do that. You’re their best friends.” Noriko’s voice
almost broke.
Yukio had
expected a much. That was the reason they wanted to talk with her
first. Now she was with Urufu, so it couldn’t be helped, but Yukio
respected how she tried to protect the friendship of them all, but
with Urufu and Kuri gone as far as the had something drastic was
needed.
“Noriko, we’re
doing this exactly because we’re their friends. Friendship
goes both ways. Urufu and Kuri need to respect our needs as well.”
“Hear that,
man? You’re making Kyoko unhappy. You both are.”
The best thing
with Urufu was that Yukio felt comfortable talking about awkward
things with him. That way there was no better friend, and Yukio hated
how they’d become estranged after Kuri and Ryu became a pair.
Still, it wasn’t just Kuri’s fault. Urufu had a lot to answer
for.
“Sorry about
that. It’s just that seeing her with him makes me so angry. I’m
not used to being this way.” Urufu’s voice sounded clearer now,
as if he had sat down by wherever Noriko placed her phone.
“Urufu,”
Yukio said, “with the two of us being driven home every day there’s
no time left if you and Kuri are going to keep this up. Man up and
get your grips together!” As if he could tell someone thirty five
years his senior to man up.
Urufu’s
laughter didn’t come as a surprise, but the honest mirth in it did.
What did you do to him, Noriko. I haven’t heard Urufu laugh like
that in weeks. “Good to hear you’re feeling better,” Yukio
tried.
Kyoko took his
hand and looked at him. Yukio could feel the question in her eyes.
He covered the
phone with his other hand. “He’s laughing for real. That’s
good,” Yukio whispered before he removed his hand from the phone.
The question
didn’t entirely leave Kyoko’s eyes, but she squeezed his hand
acknowledging that she understood Yukio’s relief. He could feel
love and warmth from her fingers and squeezed back.
“Hey, stop
making out with each other. We’re trying to have a convo here,”
Urufu said.
“What’s that
noise?” Noriko asked.
“We’re
not...” Yukio began.
“...making
out,” Kyoko finished.
“You so are,”
Noriko retorted.
Kyoko giggled and
bent over the table. Yukio was caught in her full mouth kiss. “Now
we are,” Kyoko said after she released him.
You’ve grown
bolder since we met. This time it was Yukio who flared red.
“Did you call
us just to make us listen to the two of you kissing?” Urufu
laughed.
Yukio had no
problem visualising that grin on the other side of the call.
“We called
Noriko, not the two of you,” Kyoko said. “And no we didn’t. We
called to say you two better make up. We care for both of you, but we
can’t stand the way you treat each other.”
“So you’re
making it my fault that Christina...”
Yukio didn’t
allow him to get any further. “Yes, I do. Grow up man!”
Someone giggled
at the other end. It had to be Noriko.
“But she was
the one who...”
“… told you
how much she loved you just about every day. I was there, you know.
Not once, not even once did I hear you say you loved her.”
“I did.”
“Not when she
could hear. What was she supposed to do? Live on air?”
“Yukio!”
Noriko didn’t sound like she agreed with Yukio’s cutting Urufu
short, but truth be told he was sick and tired of his friend’s
attitude.
“No, Noriko.
Urufu is at fault here.”
“Actually
Kuri-chan is as well,” Kyoko said. “She knew how much you loved
her, but she wanted you to tell her so much that she broke up with
you. You’re idiots both of you.”
“Getting told
off by a bunch of kids,” Urufu murmured.
Yukio grinned. He
hadn’t lost his best friend yet. After all it was Urufu who once
told him to be frank, even if it hurt.
“Yeah, man, we
did. You deserved it.” Yukio hugged Kyoko before he continued. “Urufu, be the man I adored, that I still do. With all crap that’s
going on I need my hero.”
“I’ll do my
best.” Urufu’s voice sounded embarrassed. “Tell me if I’m
doing OK when I’m back at school.”