Tokyo Hearts: A Japanese Love Story (23 page)

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Authors: Renae Lucas-Hall

Tags: #Tokyo Hearts, #Tokyo, #Japan, #Japanese love story, #Renae Lucas-Hall, #Renae Lucas, #Renae Hall, #Japanese Fiction, #Kyoto, #love story, #young adult romance, #romance

BOOK: Tokyo Hearts: A Japanese Love Story
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‘You’re looking well, Haruka. I’ve missed you,’ Jun finally whispered to her.

‘Why are you whispering, Jun?’ Haruka asked, becoming more and more confused by his behaviour.

‘I have a sore throat,’ he replied. ‘I think I’ve caught a cold. Don’t get too close to me, or you might catch it.’

‘You poor thing,’ Haruka replied. ‘I hope you feel a bit better as the day goes on.’

Maybe I have nothing to worry about. Jun was probably acting strangely because he wasn’t feeling very well
, Haruka thought to herself.

‘You know, Haruka, I think you should change your hairstyle,’ Jun said to her, a little louder this time. ‘Your hair would look so much better if you dyed it a lighter colour.’

‘Do you think so?’ Haruka replied, not sure whether he was paying her a compliment or being critical. She reassured herself that his suggestions and the way he teased her so often were due to the growing closeness between them and not because he was being unkind again.

‘I do like my hair this colour,’ she continued.

‘Ultimately, it’s your choice, but I must still insist that it would look better lighter. I know a great hairdresser in Kyoto who could do it for you,’ said Jun.

‘I’ll think about it,’ Haruka replied.

She noticed that her mother had been watching them and she gave her a look as if to ask what was wrong. Haruka just dropped her head and looked at her feet. Jun looked out the window and said nothing for the rest of the bus trip.

‘Look, here’s our stop. Come on, let’s get off the bus,’ Haruka said to Jun. He held back to wait for his mother and Haruka stepped off the bus with her parents. She was a little taken aback by Jun’s unfriendliness.

At the remarkable rock garden of the Ry
an-ji Temple, renowned for its quintessential portrayal of Zen art, Haruka found another good reason to be grateful for joining her parents on this trip. The sightseeing was so lovely for them to share as a family. It was the first time she had seen the fifteen rocks resting in a sea of perfectly swept light grey gravel and like the many other visitors who looked at this 15
th
century masterpiece, Haruka was overwhelmed by its sense of calm and happiness. She imagined the large rocks representing the mountains and the moss surrounding them to be the land that stretched from the foot of the hills to the sea. To her, the gravel represented the ocean that swept in waves around the land and undulated peacefully until it met another stretch of land or another world. She wondered if all those sitting around her had entirely different interpretations of this formidable piece of landscape art.

Everyone felt spiritually enriched as they silently gazed over the garden and after reading the inscription on the stone washed basin in the tearoom – “I learn only to be contented” – they felt that they came away with a better appreciation of the Zen philosophy.

Unfortunately, discontent was not far away upon their return to the hotel. In the lobby, Haruka and her mother were talking to Jun’s mother Mrs Kurokawa about visiting Nijo Castle the following day, and Haruka’s mother offered Mrs Kurokawa their home phone number in
fune. She watched her mother searching for a pen to write down the number, but Mrs Kurokawa was quicker to take out a pen of her own. It looked like her father’s missing black and silver Mont Blanc pen – it even had the same scratch on the lid!

Haruka and her mother looked at the pen and then back at each other. Their mouths were wide open with disbelief. Haruka realised her mother recognised the pen that Haruka’s father had supposedly misplaced during Jun’s visit to their home in
fune months ago.

‘What a … what a … beautiful pen,’ Haruka’s mother stuttered, trying to regain her composure. The vein in her forehead was throbbing.

‘Oh yes, it is,’ replied Mrs Kurokawa. ‘Junichiro gave it to me for my birthday last week. Unfortunately, he scratched the lid when he was wrapping it.’

‘Jun gave it to you for your birthday,’ cried Haruka’s mother in despair, her face now the colour of rice paper. ‘How nice of him,’ she managed to say.

Haruka could see by the look on her face that she wanted to snatch back the pen that rightfully belonged to them, but her mother was much too polite to do that.

‘Yes, Mrs Yoshino,’ replied Mrs Kurokawa. Why she continued to spit out their surname whenever she pronounced it, Haruka did not know. ‘He’s a wonderful son, and I will soon have a terrific daughter-in-law,’ Mrs Kurokawa continued. ‘He’s just asked a gorgeous girl called Sakurako to marry him. Her father is the general manager of a huge textile company. They’ll make a lovely couple and her family will obviously be an excellent business connection.’

Haruka and her mother were absolutely flabbergasted. They couldn’t believe what Mrs Kurokawa had just said. Haruka noticed huge tears beginning to well up in her mother’s eyes.

‘Is that right?’ her mother exclaimed, patting her face with her handkerchief.

Turning, Mrs Kurokawa looked at Haruka with great pity etched across her face and said in a snobbish voice, ‘I hope that you find a nice husband. You’re not getting any younger, are you, Haruka? Maybe a factory worker or someone that has a Pachinko gambling business … that would suit you very well wouldn’t it?’ Looking back at Haruka’s mother, she continued, ‘Mrs Yoshino, your husband looks like he enjoys a bit of Pachinko gambling. Am I right?’

Luckily, Haruka’s mother refused to lower herself to Mrs Kurokawa’s level by responding with a catty remark. She just shook her head in disbelief. If Mrs Kurokawa had wanted to humiliate and degrade them, she’d certainly achieved that, but Haruka’s mother was not the type to be rude, especially to a lady that they’d only met a couple of times.

Jun walked over to join them, oblivious to what had just happened and to the words that had burst forth from his mother’s cruel mouth.

‘How about dinner tonight, Haruka?’ he asked with an annoying confidence.

Haruka looked at him blankly and nodded towards his mother holding the Mont Blanc pen. He saw the pen, made the connection, and realising he’d been discovered as a thief, turned to hurry away, making some excuse about dropping his keys earlier or something to that effect. Haruka strode up to him and reached his side as he paused at the flower arrangement in the centre of the lobby.

‘I need to talk to you, Jun. Your mother just told us that you’re planning to marry a girl called Sakurako. So why have you been taking me out, continuously complimenting me and leading me and my mother to believe that you were going to ask me to marry you?’ she demanded to know.

‘Marry you? When did I ever mention marriage to you?’ he replied. He looked down at Haruka, quite amused at her presumption that he was going to propose to her.

‘Well … um….’ Haruka was trying to think fast, but she was too furious to think logically. ‘Um … Yuriko saw the engagement ring you bought in Ginza and we’ve just thought for quite a while now that … um….’

‘And you thought the ring was for you, did you?’ said Jun, laughing at Haruka’s mistake.

‘Of course I did,’ she replied. ‘Well, we were dating quite seriously … you even took me out for kaiseki-ry
ri in Ginza. You don’t take friends to a restaurant that expensive unless you’re dating. You had Yuriko, my mother and I all convinced that you were my boyfriend, and we all thought it was serious,’ she said. Haruka pulled out the Tiffany & Co. heart pendant from under her scarf. ‘And what about this romantic gift you bought me?’

‘I didn’t actually buy those,’ he replied.

‘Did you steal them?’ she asked him.

‘No … the pendants I gave you and your mother belonged to my sister and she never actually wore them, so she said I could take them and give them to you as presents – and since they were still in their original boxes….’

‘And the scarves?’ said Haruka, pointing to her Hermés scarf.

‘I bought those,’ he replied. ‘Listen, Haruka, I have to tell you that I get bored, and that’s the reason I took you out a few times,’ Jun said to her, more gently this time as he watched tears fall down her cheeks. ‘I think you’re nice and very pretty, but it was never going to be serious.’

‘Well you could have mentioned Sakurako,’ Haruka hissed back at him, spitting out each word. She turned away from him and stormed back to her parents’ side, wishing she’d never met Jun.

Haruka’s mother had taken out the handkerchief again that she’d handed to her that morning and was dabbing her cheeks as she stood with her father away from the others. Haruka went up to her and put her hand on her shoulder.

‘Haruka, I think a bug has flown into my eye – could you have a look at it in the bathroom with me, please?’ she said to her. They turned adroitly and made for the ladies room, arm in arm – mortified and humiliated by this turn of events.

In the bathroom, Haruka’s mother let her tears flow naturally. Haruka didn’t shed any more tears, as she was now more angry than upset. As she held her mother’s shoulders, it occurred to her that she was more concerned about the Kurokawa family upsetting her mother than her questionable relationship with Jun.
Damn that family
, she thought to herself.

‘I’m sorry, Haruka,’ her mother said to her. ‘I should never have organised this trip to Kyoto.’

‘It’s not your fault, it’s mine,’ Haruka replied. ‘When Yuriko told me about the engagement ring, I should have realised it wasn’t for me.’

‘No, Haruka,’ said her mother firmly. ‘It’s all Jun’s fault. He encouraged both you and me to believe he was really interested in you again. He even invited us to Kyoto. Do you remember that all those months ago when you came back from your date with Takashi?’

‘Yes,’ Haruka replied. She was now thinking of Takashi and how wonderful he’d been through this whole ordeal.

‘I think you should call Takashi as soon as we get back to
fune,’ said her mother, as though she was reading her daughter’s mind.

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