Saturdays: part two
By Uozumi
Author’s Note:
This is the first Banana Fish fanfic (that I know of) to go into chapters! Don't ever expect chapters to go in some
semblance chronological order unless perchance it happens. I own nothing.
----
Two: August 17, 1985
It was early,
and Eiji found his brown eyes staring up at the ceiling of Shorter's apartment,
mind too full to sleep. He always
stayed up all night when Shorter wasn't going to be in the apartment. He was amazed at how Ash could just sleep
all night long. If Ash knew all of the
dangers so well and Eiji had barely gotten his feet wet, how was it that Ash
could sleep and he couldn't? Could it
be that because Ash knew the full extent of what could happen to them that he
slept better? Since Ash's imagination
couldn't take what he had experienced, seen, or hear of and make it something
else, was that why?
Eiji studied
Ash a moment, then sighed. It was six
in the morning, and he still couldn't sleep.
Getting up, he pulled on a dark blue shirt, and went out into the
kitchen.
Glancing warily
at the stove, Eiji started rummaging through the cabinets finally settling on
two rolls and a glass of water. Holding
up the glass to his eyes, Eiji mused over why they would call the NYPD coffee
mud, if really the water was the mud and not the coffee.
Taking it over
to the small and cramped table, Eiji reached into his shirt pocket and pulled
out several cards before selecting one and putting the rest in his pocket. Staring at it a moment, he pulled out a pen,
and wrote the sending address upon the card before pausing. What could he write? Not much had changed, and he didn't want to
worry the recipient, but he couldn't lie either . . . .
Could he?
Shaking his
head, Eiji tapped his pen thoughtfully upon the table. Then watched the pen shoot across the room
at a creak in the doorway.
"Oh!
Ash! I did not see you," Eiji
hurriedly went to stand, but Ash bent down, picking up the pen.
Studying the
pen a moment, Ash glanced at Eiji, "What you doing?"
Eiji indicated
his card, "Writing."
Ash narrowed
his eyes. Had Eiji been doing this all
this time? He might have given their
position away! However, Eiji wasn't
that stupid, he could be stupid at times, but he wasn't all the time . . . .
"It's to
my mother. I promised her that I write
a lot, and I have."
"How?" Ash kept the pen as he stood in the doorway,
Eiji somewhere between standing and sitting.
"By not
giving her a return address, and making sure it's deposited in a different post
box each time."
Ash studied the
older boy. He didn't like this postcard
business. It wasn't sitting with him,
but they had been with Shorter for months, and nothing had happened . . . .
. . . yet.
"Can I
have my pen?"
"I'm
thinking."
"I have not
given us away."
"Let me
think."
"Ash
-"
"Just shut
up a second, will you?!"
An almost
visible spark went between them. They
had been cooped up together in hiding for so long that their tempers would
flare simultaneously constantly. They
held many of the same traits, however the fact that Ash was jaded, and Eiji
still had some semblance of innocence about the world, was what set the two
apart.
"What are
you writing anyway?"
Eiji narrowed
his eyes, "A letter to my mother."
"I know
that," Ash sighed. "What I
mean is, 'what are you writing in the letters?'"
"Stuff."
"Eiji
-"
"I don't
have to tell you," Eiji pointed out.
"It is American law that states that mail is private."
"Not when
-"
Eiji held up
the card with what he had started, "Read it if you can."
Ash took the
card, then raised an eyebrow before looking to Eiji, "This is -"
"Japanese,
I know," Eiji nodded, taking the card back, "I am Japanese."
That made
sense. Ash felt stupidity seep into
him. Why did he think that Eiji would
write out blatantly where they were in English? Of course, he would write home in Japanese! "Sorry."
"It okay,
you were only thinking of what is best," Eiji sighed, accepting the pen
back as well.
Ash nodded,
then watched as Eiji began to write quickly with the pen. How could he write that so fast? The characters looked so complex, but he
wrote it out effortlessly, only faltering a few times.
"What are
you writing?"
Ash wanted to
retract the question after he had asked it.
He didn't like prying, but it was fascinating, and an escape from
planning his next move. Shorter was out
gathering intelligence to make that move even better, and that was really what
he should be thinking, but right now, his brain wanted to understand kanji and
forget about his next move.
"I wrote:
"'Mother,
"'I am
doing more of the same, but am doing just fine. I want to apologize again for leaving before my birthday, but
hope that your birthday is going well -'"
"So, it's
her birthday today?" Ash inquired,
a small smirk adorning his features. He
gained that face every now and then, and so far only Shorter and Max had
pointed it out. He only used that face
around Eiji if the older boy was peaking his curiosity.
"Yes,
she's forty-three," Eiji smiled slightly, "I wish I could be
there."
Ash nodded,
"Interesting."
"What
is?"
"That
today's her birthday," Ash looked out the window, "Mine was
yesterday."
Eiji's eyes
widened. He wasn't sure what surprised
him more, but as he took in Ash, he had to admit that the boy seemed older
suddenly. It was so odd how just by
turning eighteen, someone could look so different . . . .
"What?"
Eiji blinked,
then smiled, "Happy Birthday."
Ash stared at
him a moment, growing quiet, Eiji watching unsure as to if he had said
something wrong. Then, he took the pen
from Eiji's hand and turned the postcard so it faced him. Quietly he scribbled something on the card,
then passed it back across the table, setting the pen beside it.
"Wha . . .
?" Eiji looked at Ash, then down at the card.
Dear Mrs.
Okumura,
Your son is fine. Happy birthday.
-
Aslan
Eiji stared at
it a moment, then looked up at Ash, searching his eyes, "Who's Aslan? Is that you?"
Ash stopped
leaning on the table, and moved towards the kitchen silently. Methodically he retrieved some form of
breakfast, acutely aware that Eiji was watching his movements. Quietly, he drank some water, had a roll,
then he rinsed his glass out, and turned to Eiji. Studying the Asian, Ash finally shrugged, "It's just an
assumed name," and then he padded off to the bedroom, shutting the door
behind.
Staring at the
door, Eiji nodded to himself. Ash had
most likely gone back to sleep. It was
such a stupid question. Ash would never
put his real name down . . . .
. . . would he?
THE END