Aaah! I'm writing a multi-part fic! For shame! Especially because I haven't finished my first one...ah, well, it's a good fic. ^_^
This takes place four years after the 02 season starts. At
some point in these four years, the digimon went back to their
own world and the digital world's problems were solved until the
next batch of poor suckers become digidestined. ^_^;;
Age-wise, here you go:
Iori - 13, seventh grade
Takeru, Hikari, Daisuke - 15, ninth grade
Miyako, Ken - 16, tenth grade
Koushirou, Mimi - 17, eleventh grade
Taichi, Sora, Yamato - 18, twelfth grade
Jyou - 19, first year of college
For the sake of being able to incorporate all characters easily,
Iori, Takeru, Hikari, and Daisuke all go to Odaiba Junior High
(yes, with the GREEN outfits) and Miyako, Ken, Koushirou, Mimi
(who's back in Japan), Taichi, Sora, and Yamato all go to Odaiba
High School. Jyou still lives at home and goes to college. ^_^
This is mostly an Iori fic, because Iori doesn't get enough fics.
And 'cause he's cute. And because he's disturbingly easy for me
to write in Teenage Angst mode, while it's so hard to write him
in character...-_-;; The rest of the characters will show up, I
promise! It's haaaaard to juggle twelve characters! No wonder why
a lot of people try to kill off everyone in fics..^_^;;
This is not a romance. It's not a romance, although there is
elements of romance in it. It's an Ioriance, which is completely
different.
Yes, I know that technically Jyou's crest is the crest of
Sincerity. I dislike that translation. I prefer it to be the
crest of Faithfulness, 'cause that's a translation of seijitsu,
and it describes Jyou well and Iori better. ^_^
I don't own Digimon. If I owned some of the characters, I would
be a happy camper. But I don't. And I'm not. So, um, foo. ^_^;;
Thank you, Mimi-sempai, Tracie-oneechan, and Kay-chan, for
beta-ing and being awesome people and letting me forget about my
bedtime. ^_^
Kyoudai 01
by Rb
After I walked into my apartment, I remembered it
was the sixth month anniversary, and I was ashamed for not
remembering earlier.
I don't have a photogenic memory, not exactly. I remember lots of
stuff; passages from books I read, what my teacher says from
three years ago, the type of mundane, ordinary things that
everyone remembers. Then I have memories of horror that go back
so many years, that they've twisted into part of me. I remember
the look in my father's eyes when I saw him for the last time. I
remember every bit of self-doubt and loathing I've ever felt.
But I still felt ashamed for going to school, taking tests,
watching _her_ furtively, and walking home with Takeru-san
laughing about something that I can't even remember now.
The only reason I realized today was the anniversary was that I
opened the apartment door and was stuck by a feeling of
emptiness. The apartment was so quiet...My mom's a journalist and
she's often at home, so the emptiness really isn't noticeable,
normally.
Today it was there, a musty scent that invaded all corners of the
apartment. I went to the refrigerator: it was Mom's and my way of
communicating when either of us went out.
I read the note out loud, unsettled by the quiet of the
apartment. "Iori, I'm going to work late tonight, I won't be
back until about ten. Do your homework and please do a load of
laundry afterwards. There's some food in the frigerator and some
money on your desk if you want to order out. Love ya!"
Doesn't she realize what today is? Or had she, like myself,
forgotten?
I walked into my room and set my bookbag on my bed, anyway.
Faithful, reliable me. I'll always do what others ask. I looked
around my neat and orderly room, making sure nothing was out of
place, before sitting down at my desk and doing homework. Math.
Too easy. I've learned to fudge, however, to be less than perfect
in many things. There's no use to be picked on without reason --
even though I've grown a lot, I'm still rather slim and lanky. I
can't always depend on having 'Takaishi-san' and 'Motomiya-san'
appear to fend off would-be bullies.
After finishing off the load of laundry and eating whatever was
in the fridge -- I didn't inspect it carefully -- I trudged into
my grandfather's unoccupied room and laid down on the bed he
hadn't slept in for months.
Only then did I cry, in memory of the dead.
---
She came back late that night. I was sitting on top of my own
neatly-made covers, reading a book. She smelt of perfume and
wine.
"Hey, Iori," she said, sitting down next to me.
"Have a good day at school?"
"Mm," I said.
"That book interesting?" she asked, peering at the
cover. I held it up. "Anyway, Iori, on Friday night I'm
inviting a friend over."
"What type of friend?" I questioned, my attention
arrested. She hadn't brought home any male friends recently,
normally it was only inviting a female friend from work or Miyako
(when she wasn't busy) and her parents -- quite rarely a
potential lover/husband/father.
"A male friend. Hush, you," she said at the look on my
face. "He's a nice guy, he's got a son in the high school
and another one close to your age, I believe."
When I showed no reaction, she continued, "and they're both
coming over for dinner on Friday night, too."
I raised an eyebrow. Normally, kids don't come to dinner unless
it _is_ serious. It might not be so bad, though. The last time a
kid came over with his father -- about a year ago -- he was five,
and ended up throwing food at the walls, cursed off my
grandfather, and insisted on watching the most idiotic cartoons
I've ever seen. That affair ended quickly.
"I'm sure his children are potty-trained," she said,
grinning. Oh, I'd forgotten about that part. "Well, be good,
all right?"
"May I invite a friend for dinner that night?" I asked.
"I don't see why not," my mother considered. "Good
night, Iori." She walked to her own room.
I looked at my clock. It wasn't that late. I dialed Miyako's
number.
"Moshi moshi, Inoue residence," said Miyako's familiar
voice.
"Miayko-san, it's Iori."
"Iori!" she said after a pause. "Haven't seen you
for a while. What's up?"
"I just wanted to know, do you want to come over for dinner
on Friday night?"
Once upon a time, only a few months ago, Miyako would have said
"Dinner? At your place? All right! Make sure your mom makes
my favorites!" -- which, in Miyako's case, changed nearly
every week. And she would have waited at school for me on Friday
afternoon, and she would have walked home with me for certain,
and gone to my apartment with me, and talked with my grandfather,
and fixed my computer, and had dinner with my family and me, and
stayed late into the night -- so late her parents would have been
worried about her if not for the fact that we lived in the same
apartment building. We would have made plans, maybe to go to the
park or to the mall and a movie, or just to be together, because
we were friends. She would have told me secrets, and I would have
listened in awe, just being able to have such a peek into a
different person's world. That was what she would have done for
practically my entire life, since I moved into the building when
I was in first grade and she befriended me.
Instead, she replied hesitantly, "Friday night? I'm sorry,
Iori, but I promised Mimi-chan I'd see a movie with her. I've
gotta go, see ya!" And I heard the annoying dial tone.
Then, I thought bitterly, Tachikawa Mimi moved back to Odaiba.
I hit the flash button and dialed Takeru.
"I'm sorry, Iori, but I'm going to spend the weekend with my
brother and dad," he said, and there was true regret in his
voice. "I haven't seen them for a while, and my dad's made
it clear he really wants me to be there this weekend." I
felt so bad, because Takeru always tries to make time for
everyone -- his mother, his brother and dad whom he doesn't see
as often as he likes, his other friends, Hikari, me... I could
hear the anguish in his voice as he let me down.
"It's all right, don't worry. I'll see you tomorrow,
right?"
"Yeah!" He cheered up. "I'll try not to be so late
tomorrow, see ya!"
"See ya!"
A click.
I considered my choices. I didn't really have many friends
outside the digidestined. Making friends has never been easy, and
I've always tended to associate with those intellectually equal,
rather than physically and biologically equal. Daisuke and Ken
always had soccer on Friday evenings; often in the past few weeks
I'd watched them. I always felt awkward when inviting a girl
other than Miyako to dinner. With Miyako, we'd been friends for
so long it didn't matter that she was an older girl. A girl like
Hikari would be awkward, especially if Mother's date was the type
to make crude jokes. Out of the older children...Mimi was busy,
Yamato would be with his brother, and Taichi and Sora would
likely be 'studying' with each other. (Hikari sometimes reported
how many dirty jokes, pillow fights, and jokes of long-time best
friends went on during the study sessions. I wondered sometimes
whether Miyako and I would have been like that if she still liked
to hang out with me...)
The only two I could have really called, in any case, were my two
mentors, two boys I thought of as older brothers to me. Jyou, the
serious and reliable boy who had helped me often during the
fiercest battles and had helped me redefine myself, and
Koushirou, the intelligent and polite boy whose personality was
uncannily like mine. It was their traits that I had inheirited,
Knowledge and Faithfulness.
I couldn't ask Jyou. Jyou was in college now, and constantly
busy. I was so afraid of interrupting his studies. Koushirou
would be a better choice. I dialed.
"Moshi moshi, Izumi residence, Koushirou speaking."
"Hello, Koushirou. It's me, Iori."
"Hey, Iori!" His familiar voice crackled with genuine
warmth. "How's junior high for you?"
"Good, thank you."
"Making friends?" Great, he sounded like a second
mother.
"A few. And how's high school?"
"Ah, challenging but fun!" I heard the steady clicking
of keys on the other side of the phoneline as he rapidly typed.
I half-smiled. "Koushirou-san, there's something I have to
ask you. Would you come to dinner at my apartment on Friday
night?"
"Sure! I can be there by...six? Is that all right?"
"Yes!" We talked of other, trivial things until he had
to go. With a promise made, I hung up and laid down flat on my
bed.
I think about things when I sleep. I think about my past, I think
about the future. I think about friendships, I think about
school. I think about _her_. I think about my father, my
grandfather, a long line of men going back into the medieval
times, lines of duty, lines of honor I'll be expected to uphold.
I think about math problems. I think about anything to distract
me from how I feel that my life is one huge gaping hole
stretching to infinity, nothing new, everything there already but
empty, bare of life...
Sometimes I think of that, too.
---
School days. I now wear the Odaiba Junior High uniform. It fits
me perfectly, although ironed stiffly. Three buttons buttoned,
collar stiff, blue tie tied correctly.
I ate breakfast swiftly and walked downstairs, backpack balanced
on my back. I pressed the button for the elevator and it arrived.
I entered and pressed the ground-floor button. It's all automatic
by now.
The elevator stopped on the fourth floor. Takeru's cheerful face
appeared. He wore the same uniform that I did, but it's slightly
rumpled, didn't fit him as immaculately as my own. His red and
orange cap was on his head, a cheerful monstrosity.
"Good morning."
"Good morning."
We talked as we walked to the junior high. Other students passed
us, sometimes waving hello to Takeru. "Hey,
Takaishi-san!" No one said hello to me, I'm too new and
insignificant. Daisuke ran up and grabbed Takeru's hat. There was
a good-natured scuffle to get it back. Takeru won, of course;
he's taller than Daisuke by a few inches.
I smiled at my companions' chatter and caught a glimpse of _her_
across the street and a few paces ahead. My heart lifted. A boy
walked up to her and started chatting. I stifled an urge towards
homicide.
When we entered the school, I seperated from my companions and
went to my classroom. I daydreamed through my morning classmates,
occasionally scribbling down a note or two. Her seat was right
next to the window, I could make it look like I was looking out
the window, instead of staring at her. I always retreated into my
head for most of the school day...
Lunch passed. I ate with Takeru, Daisuke, and Hikari. They're all
popular and well-liked in their class, and the only reason I'm
known for anything in this school is because they're my friends.
I don't care, but I'm glad that they made a space for me. It was
what Miyako did when we were in the same school.
"Hey, Iori-kun," said Hikari. "Do you have any
friends in your own grade?" she asked cautiously, sweetly.
My insides curdled. She had that look on her face, the look she
always got when she was trying to cut people up and dissect them
into bits. "Friends?" I blinked, hoping to give off an
air of innocence. "Yes."
Well, it's not a lie, technically. I do have friends, sort
of...in a casual way...not friends like them, but friends
nonetheless. I mean, they're nice enough...I help Koji with his
homework, and Keiko sticks up for me sometimes, when she gets her
nose out of her books, and _she's_ a friend of everyone...
Hikari looked at me strangely.
"You know I don't lie," I said steadily.
"Yeah, but..."
"So! Takeru!" broke in Daisuke. "Do you have
basketball practice Friday? 'Cause I was thinking if you didn't,
then you could come to Ken's and my game. You too, Hikari-chan,
Iori."
"Sorry, it's Friday," Takeru said, frowning. "I'm
going to my dad's house."
"My mom wants me home," I sighed.
"Hikari-chan?" he asked.
"Sure, I'm free," said the girl.
"It's too bad you guys can't go," Daisuke groaned, then
proceeded to take up the rest of the lunch period talking about
how he and Ken would rule at their soccer match. "You'll
take pictures, right, Hikari-chan?" He was babbling to get
Hikari and me to stop arguing, in some subtle way proving his
role as the Keeper of Friendship.
Peacemaking was never really Daisuke's thing, not when he was a
rambunctious kid pretending to be the leader, but he's grown up
and matured a lot. He no longer flirts as obviously with Hikari
-- there's still affection for her, anyone can see that with how
he treats her, but he's not head-over-heels, he's kinder.
The bell rang, and I left to throw away my trash. I left them
all.
---
"Hey, Iori, wait up!"
It's Daisuke. I waited, holding my briefcase in one hand. His bag
is crammed full of books; I only have two. He rushed to get
closer to me.
"Yes?" I asked when he's close enough to talk to.
"Iori...do you want to talk?" he gasped between
breaths.
I gave him a look. "Why?"
"No reason, just though you might want to."
"Did Hikari-san set you up to this?"
"Nnnnn...yeah."
"I don't need Hikari-san to psychoanalyze me. I'm perfectly
fine."
"You know how Hikari-chan is!" said Daisuke, grinning.
He adopted an outrageously high falsetto. "Daisuke-kun, why
haven't you been hanging out with Iori lately? He looks sad. Why
don't you talk to him, Daisuke-kun?" He coughed and reverted
to his normal voice range. "But, Hikari-chaaaaan, what if
Iori doesn't want me to talk to him? I might be older than he is,
but he's strong, he won the kendo championships last year, he
could pulverize me! But she said, so, Da-i-su-ke-ku-n," he
enunciated, "you're afraid of a little boy, you big strong
maaaaaan? So, of course, I had to talk to you."
I smiled. Daisuke has that effect on anyone. He makes you smile,
through any way possible. Pride is the least important thing for
him, and his friends are everything. It's a rare quality among
most people I know. It's always nice to be reminded that there
are people like him around.
"Seriously, Iori...if anything's bothering you, you can talk
to me or one of the others, you know." His voice is warm.
"Daisuke-san..." I considered for a moment. "When
you had a crush on Hikari...how did you feel?"
His face changed, but just for an instant. Instead of the
grinning boy, there's a flash of pain and a look of sorrow. Then
his face changed back. "Iori, is there a girl in your life
that you're not telling us about?"
"N-n-no! There's no girls!"
He considered. "Any boys?"
"No!" I blushed. Great. "I just wondered...what
it's like to have a crush on someone."
"How do you know..." He paused. "Well,
I...I...she's a very pretty girl, you know. And she's kind. And I
thought she was perfect in every way. And I couldn't give up. And
she never really did reject me, so..." It's his turn to
blush. "I guess I was wrong, but..." He flashed a grin,
white teeth against his tanned skin. "It's kind of hard to
be wrong. Hikari-chan's still one of the most wonderful people I
know, and it turned out all right, in the end. I'd rather be her
friend than have _nothing_."
I can see the pain in his eyes, though, and I know Daisuke's
never really given up, that even now he's still hanging onto her
every word, even though he knows he'll forever remain just
friends, even though he's dated other girls. I don't know if I
want love to transform me into that. I don't know if I could
accept that pain into my heart.
I don't know if I can stop it.
You know, there's love and then there's crushes and then there's
other things, and I really don't know what my feelings for her
are. But a glimpse at her can lighten my day, and when she talks
to me I'm so happy, even when it's not very personal, and I wish
she talked to me and only me, even though I have no claim over
her except for in my own heart. And it's irrational; I have no
way of having any control over her, no way to stop these feelings
except to confront her...and I can't. I'm a coward, I'm an idiot,
I let fear control me, because I just can't take the pain that
love causes.
"Thank you, Daisuke-san." I bowed and walked on.
---
"Iori!" Mom yelled the next night. "Are you
ready?"
"Yes," I whispered. The safest thing to do when my
mother was like this was to retreat. She was cooking, cleaning,
and snapping at me all she could. She wanted tonight to be
perfect, to impress her guy.
It was too bad Takeru-kun couldn't come, I reflected. He was good
at discouraging his mother's would-be suitors. Me, I tended to
stare at them and they would try to involve me in conversations
with syrupy tones or ignore me completely and ask my mother in
the kitchen whether I had any 'problems.'
"Someone's at the door! Go get it, I'm not ready yet!"
Which I translated as, I only have one earring on and my makeup's
only half-finished. Having Miyako as a friend for so long has
given me a unique view into the female psyche.
I swung the door open. I was wearing my school uniform, still; it
was neat and clean and fit me.
"Hey, Iori-kun!" said Koushirou.
"Koushirou-san!" I grinned. "Good to see
you!"
He was also wearing his school uniform. After taking off his
street shoes, we retreated to my room.
"So, was there any particular reason you wanted me to
come?" Koushirou asked me, once we were in the relative
privacy of my room.
"Well, my mom's bringing some guy and his kids to dinner,
and I wanted someone to talk to -- a buffer, if you would."
"Ah." He wrinkled his nose. "No other
reason?"
I gritted my teeth. "Has Hikari-san been telling everyone
that she thinks I'm depressed?"
Koushirou squirmed. "Yes."
"I think those psychology classes are ruining her
mind," I said bitterly.
"That's not fair." Koushirou ran a hand through his
thick red hair. "I took the same classes she did."
"Sorry, Koushirou-san."
"And even besides that, changing schools is a traumatic
thing for anyone of any age level. And... well, you're the only
digidestined since Jyou to have been the only digidestined in
your grade level."
I frowned in concentration. "Mimi wasn't in your grade for a
while, she was all by herself in America."
"Yeah, but she had friends in both places." He
chuckled. "Do you know how many e-mails she sent a week? At
least three e-mails a week to every single digidestined, not to
mention her other school friends here. She even sent e-mails to
me and Yamato, and we were never really close to Mimi. And she'd
call all of us constantly! I think her parents moved back to
Japan because it was cheaper than having those long-distance
calls to Japan -- of course, now she calls her American
friends." He winked.
I grinned, despite myself. "I get it."
"So now we're worried about you, Iori-kun, because you don't
seem to have many friends in your grade level, and you seem
distracted when we talk...is anything bothering you?"
By now, Daisuke's conversation must have been passed on to
Hikari, and from there Hikari would distribute the gossip. Who
needs a grapevine, when you've got Yagami Hikari? Sometimes she'd
pass on the gossip to _me_, I don't know what she thinks I'd do
with it. It was a lot like how Miyako would treat me, but Miyako
was different. When Miyako told me information, it was to keep
secret. When Hikari told me gossip items, there was always an
implication to pass it on -- although she'd never say so, of
course.
And that's okay for girls, the people like Hikari and Miyako and
Mimi and I guess Sora, to talk and talk and talk and pass on
information without ever taking it in, sifting fact from fiction,
trying to decide what was real and what was formulated opinion,
what I should believe and what I shouldn't. Having that kind of
knowledge is much better than gossiping about it.
"No," I shook my head firmly. "No, there's nothing
wrong with me."
"I didn't mean wrong, Iori-kun." His voice was gentle.
"Is there anything you just want to talk about?"
I met his gaze. "No. Nothing."
I've told a lie, but is it a real lie? Because I don't really
want to talk with him, not here, not now. I want to talk about my
feelings sometime, yes, but not right now, and maybe not with
him. Koushirou-san, for all that he's my friend, is like me. We
look for logical patterns in things, and sometimes feelings just
aren't logical. He's too much like me to be able to understand
love.
I need to talk to Miyako, like how she talked to me, and how we
best friends could speak, but because Mimi stole her away, I
don't have anyone to talk to anymore...
"Nothing," I repeated, looking Koushirou in the eye.
He started to say something, but he was interrupted my my
mother's voice calling "Iori! Get out of your room! Our
guests are here!"
I walked out of my room, Koushirou beside me, until I reached the
dinner table and met my mother's date.
Her date was an older man, dark hair, sort of rugged looking, a
bit tired. He smiled uneasily when he saw me, as if he wanted to
place me but he couldn't.
His kids...I sucked in my breath. One was a bit taller than the
other, but they had the same blonde hair and cold blue eyes.
"T-T-Takeru-san?" I gasped. "Yamato-san? What are
_you_ doing here?"
"Ah!" my mother said happily. "I see you know each
other already, there shouldn't be any need for introductions, but
we shouldn't forget to be polite! This is my son Hida Iori, and
his friend Izumi Koushirou. Iori, this is Ishida Ryuichi, and
these are his sons Yamato and Takeru. Now that we've been
properly introduced, why don't we eat?"
To Be Continued...
Will Iori survive the dinner? How serious is this parents' romance? Who is this girl that Iori loves? Find out next time. ^_-
