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Shadow (paper gods), Page 7

Amanda Sun


  “So give up on the ladies for a while and focus on kendo, yeah? You know Takahashi’s going to be in the ward tournament and he’ll be tough.”

  “Yeah, ’cause you’re a model kendouka,” I grinned. “Your shinai binding still unraveling?”

  “Screw you,” Sato laughed.

  When the bell chimed, we filed into the auditorium for the annual welcome ceremony. After three years it was getting old, so I spent most of it trying not to nod off—I’d been up early putting together my own bentou lunch. No way was Myu going to cook for me now, but I didn’t care. My own imperfect sweet egg was good enough, a splash of cold water in the face that I sorely needed.

  The headmaster went on and on—welcoming the new students, greeting the old. The introduction of a new math teacher, the induction of the freshman class.

  And then I saw her when we stood to sing the school anthem, a bob of blond hair tied back in a ponytail amidst a sea of black and brown dye jobs. The American girl. Sato noticed too when my singing died in my throat. He jabbed an elbow in my side as I stared.

  I couldn’t help it. It wasn’t that she was pretty, although she was that too, all curves and uncertainty as she tucked her hair behind her ears with delicate fingers. And it wasn’t even the stupid pull I felt toward her, like a spark buzzing through me and pissing me off. I didn’t want to be that stupid beast falling for a beauty, especially while I was still dating someone else. Especially when I had just resolved to stay the hell away from relationships.

  I couldn’t stop staring because it was her, the girl from my nightmares. The one holding the mirror on the shores of Itsukushima, the one in the pale kimono.

  Her hair wasn’t black, and her features were different. She was American, blond, but there was an unmistakable feeling that I’d seen her before. Sometimes faces aren’t quite right in dreams, but this time it wasn’t quite right while awake. There was a connection, but I didn’t understand.

  What the hell was going on?

  “I knew it,” Sato mumbled. “God, you are so screwed.”

  I dropped my eyes as the last verse of the school anthem sounded around us.

  “Whatever,” I said, joining back in with the song. He thought it was a stupid crush. If only it was that trivial.

  And then the floor trembled, the notes of the song pulled from my lungs as I lurched forward. It was just a tremor, but it had caught me off guard. Sato stared at me, his head tilted to one side.

  “Aren’t you overreacting?” he said as the ground shuddered beneath us. “It’s just a tiny earthquake.”

  But I felt off balance as the world shook. I had that same sense of dread that always hit just before the nightmares materialized. The shadows clawed at the seams of me, ready to rip right through. I clenched my fists, willed myself to calm down. The tremor stopped.

  The headmaster sighed with relief. “I think we shook the very earth with our singing,” he chuckled before introducing the next teacher.

  Just a tremor. But why did it feel so personal?

  I stared at the blond girl in the row below our balcony.

  Why did it feel like my world had shifted?

  Chapter Thirteen

  Katie

  The classes poured into the auditorium from all sides, new students and senior classes. High school in Japan was split into junior and senior schools, so our school had students for the three highest levels—grade ten, eleven, and twelve. We all wore the same uniforms, row after row of matching outfits. For the girls, navy skirts and white blouses with red handkerchiefs tied around our necks, the boys in navy pants and dress shirts with ties. The ceiling lights glared off the gold buttons on our matching navy blazers adorned with the school crest. Like some sort of march of the penguins, I smirked. All the same—except me, of course. I was the only blond American girl. The only one whose name was on the list spelled with katakana, the alphabet used for foreign words, instead of kanji.

  The headmaster of the school started a welcome speech, but I tuned out, fiddling with the long ends of my necktie and tucking the loose strands from my ponytail behind my ears.

  Like Diane when I’d first seen her at the airport, I was the piece cut from the wrong puzzle. I felt stupid standing here. Sure, Diane had shown the school my marks pre-Mom-crisis and gone through interviews to get me into the school, but I wasn’t like Yuki and Tanaka. I hadn’t done an entrance exam to get in.

  I didn’t belong here.

  We stood to sing the school anthem, the words on an overhead for the freshmen’s benefit. The students around me sounded like some sort of heavenly choir—was singing a requirement for entry, too? I faltered as I sang, feeling the eyes of the auditorium on me. I knew I was being watched, like the attention had lit me on fire.

  My blood pulsed, and I snapped my head forward. It did feel like I was on fire. The turbulence and the heat from the plane had returned, the ground dipping below me.

  No, I was imagining things. That was impossible—I must have drifted off, dreaming. No one else seemed to notice the ground shifting.

  But then it shook again in time with my heartbeat.

  The headmaster stopped singing. Others started looking around.

  And then everything was still, and he let out a sigh. With a smile, he waved away what had happened and invited the new math teacher to speak while everyone applauded.

  “What was that?” I whispered into Yuki’s ear. She leaned toward me.

  “Just a tiny earthquake,” she said. “What’s it called in English—a tremor? Nothing to worry about.”

  But it had shaken in rhythm with my pulse. That was definitely something to worry about.

  I looked around the room, staring at the sea of uniforms and black hair—mostly. The auditorium was peppered with students who’d dyed their hair blond or brown. One girl had pink highlights that had nearly grown out. I even saw a shock of white hair in the balcony, and beside it copper. But none of them looked concerned about the earthquake, so maybe I was overreacting.

  The speeches finished and the balcony of third-years filed out first, followed by the second-year students. When it was finally our turn, we strode up the aisle to the exit doors. The line slowed to almost a stop.

  “What’s the hold-up?” I wondered aloud.

  Yuki smiled. “Look!” she said. On either side of the door, students stood with armfuls of white flowers. Volunteers beside them plucked the blooms one at a time from the bunch and handed them to the freshmen as they passed. “Carnations. They’re so pretty!”

  “Yeah,” I said. It was definitely something that wouldn’t happen at my school in Albany.

  I stepped forward, my turn to receive a bloom. A third-year senior reached for the bouquet her classmate held and slid out a long stalk. Her glittery pink and silver fingernails wrapped around the stem as she passed it to me.

  “Welcome to Suntaba,” she said. Her eyes looked puffy, like she hadn’t slept in a week.

  “Thanks,” I said. I took the flower from her hands as she sighed, turning to take another bloom for Yuki.

  “What’s her problem?” Yuki whispered as we headed down the hallway. “Like she was at a funeral or something.”

  Tanaka grinned. “Yeah, yours if she hears you! Don’t you know who she is? Good thing my sister taught me the social ladder at this school because for once, Yuki-chan, you’re clueless!” He grabbed her flower and took off running.

  “Hey!” she shouted, racing after him.

  “No running in the halls!” snapped Suzuki-sensei, stopping them both in their tracks. I couldn’t help it—a giggle escaped my lips as Yuki and Tanaka made their way back, sticking their tongues out at each other.

  Some things so very different, and others so much the same.

  Maybe I’d be all right after all. Maybe there was a life for me here.

  Mom, I know you’re here with me. And I’m going to take this mountain one step at a time.

  My heart pulsed like the earthquake, like the turbulence on the pl
ane. I looked at the bloom in my hand, brushed my fingers over the soft petals. I lifted the flower to my nose and breathed in the sweetness, feeling like I’d been dreaming all this time.

  Feeling like I was about to wake up.

  Epilogue

  One Last Dream

  The shadows chased me as I raced along the shore, my sandals sinking into the sand. I stumbled out of one, then the other, the curl of a smoky claw scraping against the backs of my legs. The tide lapped against the bare soles of my feet, the spray of salt water burning like a demon’s tongue.

  In the distance, the Torii rose like a great yawning mouth to swallow me whole.

  I burst through, the shadows slamming against the gateway with flashes of golden lightning. Dust glittered downward and peppered the beach with volcanic ash.

  “Why do you run from yourself?” said a familiar voice, and I twisted toward her in the sand. The girl, standing in her golden kimono, held a mirror the size of a shield.

  Blond hair spilled over her shoulders and splayed over the silver-embroidered phoenixes on her sleeves.

  “Who are you?” I said.

  “You must bear the marks, Taira no Kiyomori,” she said.

  “I’m not Taira. And I saw you. In my school.”

  “It is what it means to be one of us.”

  “Answer me,” I said. “Why were you at my school?”

  She paused a moment, as she decided whether she’d tell me. “We are not the same.”

  “But she looks like you somehow. Why?”

  “Because the time is at hand,” she said. “Because she has a part to play. But there is only death ahead.”

  “You’re wrong,” I said. “You’re wrong about me. And I think you’re wrong about her.”

  She pressed her lips together in a thin, grim line. And then she turned her shield with both hands, the sound of it grinding into the sand filling my ears.

  It was me in the reflection, but different somehow. A darkness in the eyes, hollow and sleep deprived. Monstrous, alien pupils, scars bleeding ink down my wrists. I looked cold, uninterested. Somehow less than human.

  This was the part where I would wake up, where Taira would see me and panic. But this time I was me, not Taira. I saw myself, and I was frightened.

  I reached for the sword at my side, shouting and leaping forward as I swung.

  I watched myself splinter into a thousand pieces as shards of glass sprayed across the sand. They cut into my bare feet as I dropped the broken sword with a thud.

  The base of the mirror stood empty in her hands. No reflection, nothing but a frame of tarnished brass.

  “I will fight until the end,” I said, heaving breath into my burning lungs.

  She pulled her lips into a tight smile.

  “And you will fail,” she said.

  I woke to the sound of my clock ticking in the darkness. I woke to shadow, and silence, and the uncertainty of what was to come.

  * * * * *

  Glossary of Japanese Words and Phrases

  Chan: Suffix used for female friends or those younger than the speaker

  Chigau yo: “It’s not like that” or “No.” Literally, “It’s different”

  Deshou: “Right?” Used to look for agreement when the speaker isn’t sure what’s being said is accurate

  Furoshiki: A cloth traditionally used to wrap lunch boxes or other goods

  Genkan: The foyer or entrance of a Japanese building. Usually the floor of the genkan is lower than the rest of the building to keep shoes and outside things separate from the clean raised floor inside.

  Hai: “Yes.” Also used as a filler word to show that one is listening to the speaker

  Heiki: “It’s fine” or “I’m not concerned”

  Ii yo: “Sure”

  Inugami: A dog demon from Shinto tradition. Known for their uncontrollable wrath and murderous instincts

  Ittekuru: Tough guy slang for Ittekimasu, “I’m leaving (and coming back).” Said when leaving the home

  Itterasshai: “Go (and come back safely).” Said when someone is leaving the home

  Kaasan: Tough guy slang for Okaasan, “Mom”

  Kagura: An ancient style of theatrical dance

  Keitai: Cell phone

  Kendouka: A kendo participant

  Kotatsu: A heated table used in Japanese homes in the winter.

  Mou: As used in SHADOW, depicts annoyance at the situation. “Jeez!”

  Nani: “What?”

  Ne: “Isnt it?” It can also be used as “Hey!” to get someone’s attention (like “Ne, Tanaka”)

  Ohayo: “Good morning”

  Oi: “Hey”

  Onigiri: Rice balls

  Sakura: The cherry blossoms

  Sa-me zo: Tough guy slang for Samui yo, “It’s cold”

  Shabu shabu: Japanese hot pot, a popular meal. Raw vegetables, meat and fish are cooked in a shared pot of boiling broth on the table and then dipped in various sauces before eating

  Shinai: A sword made of bamboo slats tied together, used for kendo

  Shinkansen: The bullet train

  Suki: “I like you” or “I love you,” often used when confessing feelings for the first time

  Tatami: Traditional mat flooring made of woven straw

  Torii: Shinto entrance monument to a shrine. The O-Torii is the famous orange gate in front of Itsukushima Shrine

  Tousan: Tough guy slang for Otousan, “Dad”

  Tsuki: A kendo hit to the throat

  Urusai: “Shut up!” Literally, “it’s noisy”

  Yokatta: “Thank god”

  Yuzu: A citrus fruit popular in Japanese sauces, drinks and dishes

  About the Author

  Amanda Sun was born in Deep River, Ontario, a small town where she could escape into the surrounding forest to read. She is an archaeologist by training, but her intense fear of spiders keeps her indoors, where she writes novels instead. She will write your name in Egyptian hieroglyphic if you ask, though. The Paper Gods is inspired by her time living in Osaka and traveling throughout Japan. She currently lives in Toronto, where she keeps busy knitting companion cubes, gaming and sewing costumes for anime conventions. Ink is her first novel. Visit her on the web at www.AmandaSunBooks.com and on Twitter at @Amanda_Sun.

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