âTarot Girls 22 here! First it was burgers, then it was gyudon, and now we have a brand new fast food revolution! The revolutionary restaurant Neko Manma is exactly what it sounds like! This bowl full of rice covered in exactly the kind of miso soup you want is a friend to the masses. And of course you can choose red miso, white miso, bonito broth, sea slug broth, pork broth, or seafood broth. As the Empress of the Major Arcana, I, Anemura Kaede, am rooting for this nostalgic yet new style of food!!â
An idolâs recorded announcement played on a loop to match the commercial playing on the restaurantâs TVs.
I copied the mascotâs cry of âMiso soup splash!â as I poured the shark broth on the steaming white rice in my bowl.
Ahhh!! Working out of the office is so hard!!
Investigation Department 1âs chief was shoving all the worst jobs on me to repay me for acting without permission so much lately. Food was the only thing I had to look forward to, which seemed like a major red flag from a mental health perspective.
âEh, ah, ahem!! âUchimaku, take this file and get investigating. A coronerâs autopsy isnât enough to determine whether the old folks who died alone in their homes and then mummified really did die natural deaths or not. Go reinvestigate everything to see if there was a crime involved.â Detective, your colleagues really do hate you, donât they?â
âWhy are you here, Miss Compulsory Education? And how can you do such a spot on impersonation of the chief from this morning!?â
âThatâs. A. Secretâ By the way, detective, if youâre gonna eat at Neko Manma, you need to get the famous Miyazaki cold miso. Honestly, donât you know anything? Thatâs the #1 dish here.â
âYouâre kidding. Wouldnât that leave you with cold rice?â
The twintailed Mystery Freak was pretty much wearing a swimsuit around town again. She suddenly appeared in the seat next to me and took a bowl. The one thing that was appropriate for her age was the scarf modeled after a character with a really long body. It was midday, so the counter seats were packed full and she used that fact to press up against me more than absolutely necessary.
âYou arenât going to find any new evidence in this reinvestigation. How many years ago did the first investigation end? How many decades ago did those old people die? Unless the blunt weapon or blade reached the bone, not even an autopsy would find anything at this point. You arenât going to find any new witnesses or a murder weapon. Thereâs just nothing there.â
âThe chief probably knows that and wants me to waste my time. To hell with him.â
If you were willing to live with a corpse, it might be possible to commit the perfect crime without dumping the body in the forest or ocean. As long as you didnât illegally take money from their pension, it would be treated as a natural death and no criminal case could be made. And as long as the family living in the same house âdidnât noticeâ, it didnât count as abandonment of a corpse. Of course, it would take twenty or thirty years of living with the stench of death to receive the benefits of mummification, so it was simply too frightening to imagine.
âWhat are you doing, Mystery Freak?â
âWell, my actions might overlap with yours, so I thought I should pop in to say hello.â
â?â
âHey, hey. If youâre investigating the mystery of the old mummies, why not go on a date with meâ? Splitting up would be inefficient, so if weâre both going after the Ubasute Apartments, we might as well flirt along the wayââ
âUbasuteâŚApartments?â
That unexpected term left me in shock.
âUbaâ was rarely used to mean âold womanâ in modern times, but it could still be seen in the name of a Youkai called a Yamanba.
Ubasute was the act of abandoning oneâs parents in the mountains because you didnât have enough money to support them or were sick of taking care of them. And the fate of an old person abandoned in the dark mountains was obvious. People argued about the ethics of euthanasia in modern times, but the concept of Ubasute made it hard to say the past was always better. The topic made my food seem completely flavorless.
I didnât know what exactly this was about, but I knew where the name Ubasute Apartments had to have come from.
Meanwhile, the Mystery Freak spoke up while rubbing her head on my shoulder.
âIts official name is different of course, but over fifty old people have died alone there in the last three years and they were all immediately deemed natural deaths. Donât they seem oddly unwilling to call it a crime? Are you feeling a little more motivated now?â
Part 2 (Uchimaku Hayabusa)
Sugamo was known as the Old Ladyâs Harajuku, but it was slowly changing. Trees had been planted here and there to add a little more green to the scenery and residential areas were popping up for old people who wanted a peaceful life. Of course, land was always at a premium, so the apartments tended to be in high-rise buildings.
Ikebukuro was nearby, so it might have been something like Daikanyama was to central Shibuya.
âThatâs not an apartment building. These days, graveyards are built in high rise buildings too.â
âSeriously? Well, at least I canât imagine any ghosts or offering thieves showing up there.â
âAnd that tree over there is a grave tree. They get a whopping fifteen applications for every open spot. âŚBut I feel like a lone tree standing in the middle of a park would end up withering away from all the things people would do to it.â
We spoke back and forth as we made our way to the investigation site on foot.
The Ubasute Apartments in question were outside the aforementioned residential area.
Around twenty identical buildings were squeezed in together like bookcases in a library. The buildings themselves looked old, but they seemed properly maintained and didnât feel unclean. Still, their overall atmosphere was somehow different from the other places. The area had a lot more trees than elsewhere, so the apartment buildings seemed to poke out from a thick forest. Just by blocking the view and the road gave the entire place a sense of rejection.
âIs this really the only way in?â
âIt certainly is inconvenient.â
The brick-paved road was narrower than a farm road and it meandered back and forth. The road itself was quite bumpy because tree roots were pushing it up from below.
I doubted you could get a scooter through, much less a car.
We continued down the awful road for two or three hundred meters as if going for a picnicâŚno, for a light hike. If the path had been straight, it wouldnât have been half that long.
Finally, the manmade forest cleared up and an impressive form stood in our way.
We had reached the Ubasute Apartments.
The closest buildingâs entrance was a lot like a schoolâs main entrance or a hospitalâs visitorâs entrance. According to the plate set up there, the official name was Wankashi Camp Apartments.
As I read that name, I heard a slamming. I looked up at the six or seven story building and saw one of the many windows slam shut.
No, it wasnât just one.
After that first one, that sound of rejection continued from all over. It was just like when a meeting had fallen silent and someone cleared their throat.
âNow thatâs what I call a warm reception.â
âI donât care as long as they donât drop a flower pot on us from the balcony. âŚAnyway, what are these?â
Several metal buckets were sitting around here and there. They were dented and filled with dirty water. Were they full of rainwater?
Then I noticed an old man in a track suit watering a flower garden with a watering can. After using up the water in the watering can, he grabbed one of the buckets from the ground and poured its contents into the watering can. Filled with that much water, the bucket had to be quite heavy.
The Mystery Freak immediately jumped at this chance.
âHey, mister.â
âWhat?â
The old man sounded incredibly suspicious, but he didnât refuse to talk altogether.
Enbi used that to her advantage and pushed further.
âThat looks tough. Why do you collect the water in buckets?â
âThe buckets gather rainwater. This is the most efficient way.â
âŚWhat?
âMister, but wouldnât it be easier to use the faucet?â
âWater is valuable. Kids these days might not get that, though.â
He then asked us a question with the refilled watering can in hand.
âWhat are you two doing here? I didnât think door-to-door salesmen would visit a place like this.â
Letâs see. Where did I put my police badge?
I checked through my pockets and finally pulled my ID from my back pants pocket.
âIâm from the police. Iâm here today for, well, additional investigation on some people who died alone.â
âYouâre a police officer?â
He clearly frowned and gave me an even more skeptical look.
âDonât the police normally work in groups of two?â
âNot always.â
Police officers in dramas were sometimes mocked for acting alone, but it was pretty common in reality. If there was a rule forcing us to work in pairs, weâd be spotted right away if we tried to tail someone. It would completely undermine the concept of a plainclothes officer.
âBut it certainly isnât normal for one to be working with a teenage girl.â
âThat is very true. I am well aware of that fact and I have nothing to say in my defense.â
âI donât care how kids dress, but at least cover up your midriff. Youâre only hurting yourself doing that.â
After spitting out those words, the old man started toward the building with the empty watering can in hand.
âUm, uhâŚâ
âMy name is Tayama Sunao. You can check around the apartments if you want.â
âIâd like to speak with the manager, so do you know where they might be?â
âNo. In fact, havenât seen them in a while.â
Tayama-san didnât even turn back our way.
âOh, and while I donât care what you do, donât use the elevator.â
With that, he really did vanish into the building.
The Mystery Freak and I exchanged a glance.
âWhat should we do?â
âWhatever we can. We donât really need his permission.â
I pulled out a cellphone equipped with a police SIM and called up the file for this job. I decided to check the rooms of the deceased old people and then ask around at the neighboring rooms.
I walked through the large apartment grounds based on the file.
As we made our way through the closely packed buildings, the windows slammed shut around us. They were rejecting outsiders, but they werenât ignoring them. The buildings were filled with countless eyes and I could tell they were all focused on us.
These were the Wankashi Camp Apartments, aka the Ubasute Apartments. According to the Mystery Freak, more than fifty people had died alone here in three years, but the closest such room was on the sixth floor of Building 3.
The building had nothing as fancy as automatically locking doors, so we walked right in. The first floor was not part of the living area. Instead, it seemed to be focused on recreation. A lobby for chatting was filled with benches and a large room was lined with health equipment. We passed through that area and climbed the stairs.
âHey, Mystery Freak, whyâs this place known as the Ubasute Apartments anyway?â
âIâm sure you can guess. Itâs an inexpensive option for old folks to live alone. It made waves online for being so incredibly cheap in the city center. The problem is no one knows how to contact the real estate agency.â
ââŚ?â
âDonât ask me. Iâm only repeating the rumors.â
We discussed the case as we climbed the stairs, but the Mystery Freak was already worn out by the third floor.
âWait, detective⌠Iâm tiredâŚâ
âHow!? You have to climb three or four flights of stairs at school, donât you!?â
âMy school has elevators. So how about we use the ones here? That old manâs not looking.â
It was true the apartments had seven stories. And twenty buildings, too. If we had to go up and down the stairs that many times, it would be about as much effort as some light mountain climbing.
The Mystery Freak walked right past the next flight of stairs and entered the hallway. There, she pressed the button to one of the four elevators.
âLook, it isnât even malfunctioning or anything. The light came on, soâŚâ
But Enbi was cut off by another voice.
âHold iiiiit!! Didnât anyone tell you not to use the elevator!?â
The roaring voice sounded like a nearby lightning strike.
âHyah!â
The Mystery Freak jumped and I looked over to find an old lady in an apron poking her head out from a door and giving Enbi a devilish glare. She stomped over, grabbed the Mystery Freakâs hand, and pulled her away.
It almost looked like she was moving her away from the elevator door.
âHonestly. Donât you give any thought to your safety? âŚAnd what kind of outfit is that!? A young girl shouldnât be walking around in public with her midriff showing!!â
âIf that dense man would finally give in and have his way with me, I wouldnât have to dress like this to seduce him! And itâs already October, you know!? Even I know wearing a swimsuit now is weird!! This scarf is a decoration! This is the surefire sexy swimsuit scarf! Tah dah!!â
âIf you know itâs weird, then why donât you stop!?â
I shouted back with my skin crawling, but no one was listening.
At any rate, the old lady seemed to have taken that conversation at face value.
âHm? The population has grown to 150 million, but there are still traces of the Immoral Ten Year Project meant to increase the birthrate? How sad. If that scarf is fur, I might faint.â
The apron old lady sounded angry, but she didnât seem to have all that bad an impression of us. It may have been that she was scolding us instead of angry with us. And her issues with the Mystery Freakâs clothing seemed grounded in worry for the girlâs safety, not her own displeasure.
Tayama-san from the flower garden may have been the same.
In that case, why were they telling us not to use the elevator? I had initially thought it was a way of telling us we were uninvited guests, but that didnât seem to be the case.
âSo what are you two doing here?â
âThis doesnât explain her, but I am a police officer. âŚUm, this is hard to say, but Iâm performing some additional investigation into the death of some people who died alone.â
âOh.â She readily answered without seeming displeased. âYou mean Akasabi-san. That isnât entirely unrelated to me.â
â?â
Akasabi-san?
I was confused, but the old lady also seemed confused.
âIs that not it?â
âWell, the investigation has only just begun, so I donât know any of the details yet. But if youâre willing, could you tell me about this Akasabi-san?â
âThatâs fine. Besides, whoever you ask, youâll end up talking about Akasabi-san. Thatâs just how well-known the story is.â
Part 3 (Hachikawa Tomoe)
I had completely forgotten we had school off after the midterm exams, so I had no real plans despite the day off. With nothing else to do, I decided to visit âhisâ grave since Iâd been putting it off for quite a while.
That was because my mom had gotten remarried. My new dad was nice and I had no real complaints about our new family, but it was still hard to talk about âhimâ.
Well, since I was able to dig up those old memories, maybe I had finally managed to come to terms with that incident involving a Jinmensou and my friend Mio.
I left home on the pretext of going shopping and boarded the train to Sugamo. I had to wonder what my mom thought when I left in my beige blazer-style winter uniform despite having the day off. I chose some random flowers at the florist by the train station and walked to the graveyard with the bouquet. It was a weekday, so it must have been a strange sight to anyone who didnât know about our post-exam day off. Still, I wasnât stopped by a police officer. The big city really could be cold.
On the way, I spotted a middle-aged man and woman arguing at the main gate of what seemed to be an elementary school.
The man looks like a teacher, but whoâs the woman?
âPlease calm down, maâam. Just calm down a little, okay?â
âShut up!! I know they did it! Who else could have? You suspect them deep down too, donât you!?â
âLike Iâve been saying, thereâs no way to be sure.â
âBut they brought a weapon to the school that other time⌠If you arenât going to report this, Iâll do it myself. But if I do it, you might just be found complicit in this!!â
âŚWhat in the world is going on?
The woman returned my curious look with a sharp glare, so I made a rapid exit. I had no concrete dreams for the future, but I had a few clear ideas of what I didnât want to be. A housewife who only caused trouble without doing any housework was one of those. If you didnât do any housework and didnât have a job, you were just a grown-up shut-in.
I regathered my thoughts and continued toward the graveyard.
High-rise graveyard buildings and grave trees had become common in recent times, but âheâ had prepared himself a stone grave on the grounds of a Buddhist temple. And he had done it long before he died. He had pretentiously said a policeman never knew when he was going to die so he had dealt with that ahead of time, but I doubted that was the real reason.
The buildings and grave trees had people to look after them, so the family didnât have to maintain the grave. I was pretty sure he hadnât liked the sound of that.
He tried to keep a composed appearance, but he could actually get pretty lonely.
I set foot in the templeâs graveyard while messing with my cellphone, but I found someone was already there.
The man was a police officer just like âhimâ.
I was pretty sure his name was Sotobori Gaku. His most noticeable features were the solid build of a judo ace and an extremely intimidating face. He also had plenty of scars. Of course, he was a professional who fought day and night against large criminal organizations, so he had probably given himself that look on purpose.
He had arrived ahead of me, so the grave was already clean and the withered flower and old offering had been replaced with new ones.
He smiled bitterly when he saw me.
âWhatâs this, Tomoe-chan? Are middle school girls so attached to their electronics that they canât put them down in a graveyard?â
âIâm playing this for âhimâ. Itâs Tarot Girls 22âs new song. âŚHonestly, can you believe a man of his age was supporting some teenage idols behind his daughterâs back? That man really loved his fads.â
âEh? What? Really!? Iâll never be able to think about him the same way again!!â
âAh ha ha. And heâs not going to drink that sake you brought as an offering. He would act cool and go along when his colleagues went out drinking, but when he got home, heâd start vomiting into the toilet.â
But despite what I said, I wasnât confident I knew who he really was either.
He had lost his life during the Jinmensou incident involving my friend Mio, but I hadnât noticed a villain had taken his place until the very, very end.
If the detective named Uchimaku hadnât saved me, that villain probably would have killed me.
I separated my bouquetâs flowers and placed them around the grave as offerings. Then I held my hands together in front of the grave.
Thanks to my momâs remarriage, I was now part of the Hachikawa family, so I didnât know if I would end up in this grave engraved with the name âToujouâ. Still, I thought I should at least be allowed to pray for the deceased.
After I reopened my eyes, I asked Sotobori-san a question.
âHey, what kind of person was âheâ to you?â
âA detective.â
His answer came without a momentâs delay, but he must have thought that wasnât enough because he scratched his head and said more.
âBeing a police officer is an occupation. If they didnât pay you, no one would do it. But once you keep at it for five or ten years, it starts soaking into every part of you. Thatâs what I mean when I say he had brought being a detective to the level of a lifestyle. Even if he had been fired for some reason, I doubt he ever could have escaped that way of living.â
ââŚâ
âThatâs just how it is. You may not like to hear it since he was always neglecting you, but Toujou Miyabi lived the life of a detective to the very end. If he didnât have steadfast convictions, he would have stopped before he was killed.â
Honestly. Does that mean he grew up or that he never grew up?
Sotobori-san here and Uchimaku-san who had saved me may have been the same.
And speaking of Uchimaku-sanâŚ
âH-hey. You know Uchimaku-san, right? Whatâs he doing now? He seemed a lot like âhimâ, so is he doing well?â
âOhhhh, I see.â
âWh-what?â
âThat guy only seems to attract the ones who âarenât quite there yetâ. If they just had another tenâŚno, even just five more years, he would have had a manâs idea of heaven waiting for him.â
âWh-what are you trying to say!?â
âLet me ask you something instead, Tomoe-chan.â
Sotobori-san grinned as he pulled a cellphone from his pocket.
âI know Uchimaku, so I naturally have his phone number and email address. So what are you going to do, Tomoe-chan? This is the perfect chance if you want his address.â
They really are kids! The police are nothing but children!!
âWh-what? What are you-⌠I donât, um, wantâŚâ
âThis might be your one and only chance, you know? Over thirty million people move through Tokyo every day, so surely you arenât thinking youâll just so happen to miraculously bump into him again without putting any work into it yourself.â
âUuhâŚâ
I looked away from him.
Damn, I can feel the heat in my cheeks. I know what this means, so why canât I stop myself from holding out my cellphone!?
My voice was barely audible as I announced my surrender.
âPleaseâŚgive it to me.â
âSure thing. âŚYâknow, this means Iâm giving a grown manâs address to a manâs daughter right in front of his grave. I hope he doesnât start haunting me.â
âSh-shut up. That isnât what this is about! And I donât care if he does show up as a ghost! That would probably make things a little livelier around here!!â
My argument was losing any coherence as I held the cellphone close to my chest.
I-I have it.
But what am I supposed to do with it!?
Sotobori-san then turned his head as if he had noticed something.
âNow, then. I canât intrude any longer, so Iâll be going. Itâs probably been a while for you, so take your time.â
â?â
I gave him a puzzled look as he waved and left, but I soon realized what this was about. Someone else was approaching through the graveyard.
ToujouâŚMidori-san.
She was âhisâ younger sister. That made her my aunt.
âLong time no see, Tomoe-chan.â
I didnât know what to call her, but I finally smiled and called her the same thing I had the last time we had met.
âIt's nice seeing you again, Aunt Midori.â
Part 4 (Uchimaku Hayabusa)
The old lady in an apron we met in the Ubasute Apartments was apparently named Nezu Yuki. We didnât want to stand around and talk, so she showed us to her apartment.
It seemed to have been designed with a family in mind because it had a fair number of rooms. It was all well-maintained, so it looked old yet clean. However, the size of the apartment made it feel a little lonely for an old woman to be living there alone.
Also, the lighting was oddly dim, but it wasnât enough to make reading difficult. She probably just wanted to save electricity.
âI wonât serve you any tea. Iâm out of tea leaves.â
She was also incredibly blunt.
âWell, this topic will kill your appetite anyway, so it may be better this way. Anyone who could eat while discussing Akasabi-san couldnât be human.â
âSo who is this Akasabi-san?â
âProbably one of the people youâre investigating.â
Nezu-san sat at the kitchen table with a groan of effort. The Mystery Freak and I decided to sit in the opposite seats.
âAkasabi-san was one of those who died alone, but the situation was a little different from the bedridden folks without anyone looking after them who dried up, collapsed from a sudden illness, and werenât found by anyone. Akasabi-san was trapped inside.â
âTrapped inside?â
In where? And by who?
If a third party was involved, it wouldnât be a natural death. That was more than enough to be a crime.
But when she saw the sharp look in my eyes, Nezu-san waved her hands in front of her face.
âHear me out first. Iâm talking about the bath door. It had apparently already been old and rattling in its frame, but at some point the door seems to have soaked up enough water to expand. That kept it from moving at all. Akasabi-san was trapped inside the bath.â
âOh, I get it. So they were trapped inside all on their own.â
Nezu-san nodded at the Mystery Freakâs comment.
âRegardless, they couldnât get out. At first, they apparently didnât feel much danger since they were still inside their own house. âŚBut that doesnât change the fact that they were trapped inside. And people die if they donât have anything to eat. After realizing the danger, they banged on the door, but it was no use. They couldnât use the phone and no one showed up after they shouted from the small window.â
âYou meanâŚ?â
How would that have felt?
No one ever thought of their own home as a dangerous or deadly place. The trapped person might laugh at what had happened, but as soon as they realized itâs no laughing matter, everything they thought they knew would be turned on its head.
âThere was some bathwater left in the bathtub. Drinking that was enough to stay alive, but only stay alive. Their strength faded as the days passed and they lost the strength needed to break down the door or even shout out the window. This continued for a week or two. âŚThey couldnât even die. They knew they were going to run out of strength eventually, but they extended their suffering. They probably wished they hadnât had that lifeline so they could have just given up. I heard the bathtub plug had been pulled out by the time the body was found.â
It was an unimaginable story.
Had their thoughts on life and death been turned upside down along with everything else?
In that small world, living had become suffering and death had become a salvation.
âBut apparently the dampness of the bath hadnât completely vanished. Finding a naked corpse would be disturbing enough, but the group that found Akasabi-san apparently saw a pile of bright colored mold covering the entire bath. The corpse was curled up in the center of it all and I hear the mold had turned it to mush like severe athleteâs foot covering the entire body.â
She was right about this not being a topic to discuss over tea.
I was a detective and seeing crime scenes was a part of the job, so I was fairly accustomed to seeing corpses. But this was different. There was no malicious trick yet someoneâs life had been carelessly lost. It felt so empty because the only solution was to accept that these things happened.
âEveryone in the apartments started talking about how we didnât want the same thing to happen to us, so we started worrying about how the bath doors fit in their frames.â
But if this womanâs story was true, there was no crime involved. It wasnât something a police officer like me needed to investigate any further. âŚIf it was true no one else was involved, that is.
A drowning could be disguised by letting the corpse mummify or decay. Strangling them could leave a rope mark around the neck or break their neck, but nothing of the sort remained if they were drowned. The mold would have caused the corpse to decay in an extremely short time, so what if someone had intentionally set the room temperature and humidity to promote its growth?
I pulled out my cellphone to find this Akasabi-san on the list of those who had died alone, but then the Mystery Freak spoke to Nezu-san.
âHey, maâam, I have one question about this famous Akasabi-san.â
âWhat is it?â
âWhich room did they live in?â
It was an obvious question and the old Nezu Yuki-san gave a clear answer in a tone that seemed to ask why we were asking something so silly.
âThatâs the thing. Everyone will point to a different room if you ask them. Well, Iâm sure one of them is the real one.â
Part 5 (Hachikawa Tomoe)
It had truly been a long time since I had visited a relativeâs house for fun.
Toujou Midori-sanâs house was near the graveyard. It was a small house, but I thought it was amazing enough to have your own home in Tokyo when the countryâs population had grown to 150 million.
âSorry. Takkun would have wanted to play with you, but sheâs still at school. Sheâs probably only just getting back from her field trip. Would you mind killing some time with your aunt instead?â
âTakkun, hm?â
Despite the âkunâ, Takkun wasnât a boy. The girlâs name was Toujou Takumi-chan and that had been shortened to Takkun. I couldnât quite remember how old she would be, but I was pretty sure she would still be in elementary school.
We watched TV in the living room and I had a meaningless chat with Midori-san. She would complain about how the beautiful had all the luck since the Tarot Girls 22 could have a scandal but come out of it more popular because it made them seem âmore humanâ.
At some point, Midori-san changed the subject.
âCome to think of it, Tomoe-chan, did you see anyone strange on your way here?â
âStrange?â
I remembered the woman throwing a fit at the elementary school, but that didnât seem to be what she was talking about.
âThereâs an apartment complex just outside of this area and the old people that live there, wellâŚâ
âWhat about them?â
âI guess you could say they get angry easily and, well, theyâve been causing a lot of trouble in the area lately. But as long as you werenât caught up in it, it doesnât matter.â
She seemed hesitant to speak, so she was clearly choosing a softer way of putting this.
HmmâŚ
It might have been forcing my own image or role onto them, but I felt like old men and women should be living in big rural houses. The old folks who would snap angrily at anyone and got so obsessed with the horse races honestly seemed to be wasting their time and it felt kind of sad. It was too painful to watch when they started shoplifting because they wanted attention or started stalking any young woman who so much as smiled their way.
Of course, old people were human too, so there were good ones and bad ones. They had their own thoughts and some would always be filled with shallow desires no matter how long they lived. That was probably all it was.
âAnyway, Iâm glad to hear you didnât see anything like that, Tomoe-chan.â
That was all Midori-san said.
We watched TV for a while longer and she commented that they got the seasoning wrong on the cooking show and told me how many times a certain actress had been married. At some point, I realized quite a bit of time had passed.
Toujou Midori-san checked the clock and tilted her head.
âOh? She should have been back by now.â
âMaybe she went to a friendâs house.â
âI tell her to send an email when she does that.â
I decided not to mention how restrictive that rule sounded to me.
I stood up from the table.
âThen Iâll go check at her school.â
âEh? You donât have to do that. It would be meaningless if you just missed each other.â
âAh ha ha. To be honest, I just wanted an excuse to go jogging. Youâve been having me eat so much that I canât even calculate out how many calories Iâve had.â
With that said, I put my shoes on in the entrance, but my aunt still looked troubled.
âTomoe-chan, I know youâre on a diet, but donât force yourself. They said on TV some female athletes get irregular periods.â
âIâm not working myself that hard, so donât worry. Iâll be back soon.â
I opened the front door with a bitter smile.
As I did so, question marks danced inside my heart.
I know they might be causing trouble, but was Midori-san really the type to bad mouth people like that?
Part 6 (Uchimaku Hayabusa)
It made no sense to me.
Nezu Yuki-san, the old woman in an apron, claimed to know the story of Akasabi-san quite well, but she also didnât know where the deceasedâs room was. In that case, what was that story? Since everyone here supposedly knew it, I doubted she had simply made it up.
âDetective, do you think this Akasabi-san person actually exists?â
âEh? What?â
âYou might be able to look through your list with a number of different kanji spellings in mind, but I doubt youâll find anything. Akasabi isnât a name.â The Mystery Freak grinned. âWhen the body was found, Akasabi-san was covered in bright-colored mold, remember? I bet it was the rust-like color of the mold that led to the name.1 They were simply given a name based on how they looked. I bet there really was an original decayed corpse covered in mold, but was it really someone named Akasabi? What about the story about the bath? I donât know about that. The story might even be based on more than one person.â
Oh, I get it.
When I thought of it like that, it started to make sense and it was a lot easier to judge the credibility of that old womanâs story.
Still, it wasnât an entirely baseless rumor. It wasnât something hidden deep in the ocean or the mountains. Someone had died here and no one knew who it was.
The person had died all alone, they had been left to rot, and the facts had deteriorated with time. It felt different from the murder cases I had faced in the past. This was someoneâs very existence vanishing, not just their life.
âWh-whatâs this all of a sudden!? And after I was kind enough to tell you my story!â
âOkay, maâam, then do you know whether Akasabi-san was a man or a woman?â
âUm, wellâŚâ
She immediately started mumbling. We werenât talking about a beautiful Thai shemale, so she would at least know the sex of someone she had actually met.
âSo you could say this Akasabi-san existed or that they didnât. At the very least, you arenât going to find them in your data and they arenât just a rumor. I doubt anyone knows who they were anymore. You might want to check through the past deaths in these apartments. That would probably narrow it down a little in some normal apartments, but this place has an oddly high rate of people dying alone. It would be really hard to determine exactly who this was based on.â
That seemed to settle things for the time being.
Of course, actual investigations werenât so simple that everything people told you led directly to the truth. With all the people dying alone in the Ubasute Apartments, it was easy for speculation and assumptions to get out of control. I decided I needed to be extra careful as I gathered more information.
And then a heavy rumble and vibration filled the entire building.
â!? What!?â
I looked to the ceiling instead of front, back, left, or right. I belatedly realized I was reacting as if it were an earthquake, but that was not what this was. The shaking was focused on a single point as if a dump truck had crashed into the building.
Even more surprisingly, the old woman sitting across from us did not seem at all concerned.
Nezu-san sounded perfectly calm when she spoke.
âThat may have been the elevator.â
That was hard to believe, but the Mystery Freak and I decided to check it out. We left Nezu-sanâs room, but there was no one in the hallway. Not a single person had left their room despite the entire building shaking.
What was going on?
The elevator doors were still closed on this middle-level floor, so checking it here wouldnât help. Enbi and I ran down the stairs and finally caught a glimpse of the oddity on the first floor.
One of the elevator doors had bulged outwards and fallen over. The elevator inside was tilted outwards. The mirror meant to reveal anyone hiding inside was broken and glass shards were scattered across the floor.
âLooks like it fell from pretty high up. Did the wire snap? But the emergency brakes must not have worked.â
âMore importantly, Iâm glad no one was riding it at the time.â
I breathed a sigh of relief and a voice reached me from behind.
âOf course not. Who would go out of their way to ride something so dangerous?â
I turned around and found Tayama Sunao-san, the old man in a track suit who had been watering the flower garden.
âSomething so dangerous?â The Mystery Freak sounded confused. âYou make it sound like you knew that already.â
âOf course I did. I donât think itâs been inspected for at least twenty years.â
He made that sound obvious, but I was utterly shocked.
What!? Twenty years!?
âUm, wait a second! That canât be true. What is the manager doing? Havenât you ever heard of the Fire Services Act!?â
âDonât ask me.â
Iâm not saying itâs your fault!!
âBesides, if you go over all the laws, itâll probably turn out that weâre the ones in the wrong. Thatâs why we canât rely on the police or lawyers. To be honest, Iâm still not sure what a police officer like you is doing here.â
âWhat are you talking about?â
Wasnât this an obvious case of neglect by the manager or real estate company? What would have happened if one of the residents had been riding that elevator?
Tayama-san answered my questions by pointing to a poster on the elevator hall wall.
âJust look at this.â
Confused, I slowly followed his instructions and only found more confusion.
The poster contained the contact information for the real estate company that managed the Wankashi Camp Apartments.
Or it should have.
âKeep out!! This condemned building is the property of Wankashi Real Estate and entrance is strictly forbidden. If anyone disobeys this warning, we are prepared to press charges. âWankashi Real Estate. Reception Desk: email protectedâ
If I had skimmed through it without paying much attention, it might have seemed perfectly normal. It wasnât uncommon for managers to forbid anyone but residents so they could keep out malicious solicitations.
But this was definitely odd.
âWhat is this? Condemned building!?â
âOhhh, so thatâs it.â
I shouted in confusion, but the Mystery Freak smiled as if it had all clicked for her. She then asked Tayama-san a question.
âHey, mister, how much of a security deposit or key money did you pay when you rented a room here?â
âThere was nothing of the sort.â
âThen one more question. Who was your guarantor when you rented a room here?â
âI didnât need anything of the sort.â
I frowned at the consecutive denials.
Those circumstances were too far out of the ordinary. The lack of a guarantor was especially damning. While there were celebrities who bought a luxury mansion with cash, anyone else would need a guarantor when making residency arrangements.
There were even young folks who had a job and a decent social standing but were forced into homelessness because they were too isolated to get the guarantor needed to lease an apartment.
At that point, it all started to make sense.
Werenât there illegal businesses that preyed on people with precisely those problems?
âThatâs what this is, detective.â The Mystery Freak grinned as she gave her conclusion. âOn paper, these arenât apartments at all. Theyâre disguised as abandoned buildings and these old people are technically living here without permission.â
âYou mean this is the largest illegal apartment business in Japan!?â
The entire apartment complex!?
I was shocked and Tayama-san gave an exasperated sigh.
He almost seemed to be speaking to two children who just did not understand.
âIf that was all, this would be a lot easier.â
Thereâs more?
âListen. Itâs true that this place is known as an abandoned building on paper. We live here illegally and we keep sending money to someone who âtechnicallyâ isnât affiliated with the real estate company. That of course means the elevators arenât inspected and they have no obligation to send us any electricity, gas, or water. Itâs an abandoned building after all.â
The old man told us something unbelievable.
But he wasnât the one being unreasonable. It was the circumstances he had found himself in.
âSo if they want to, they can cut off our lifeline as easily as turning off the tap. Thatâs perfect for anyone who wants us to hurry up and die in our rooms.â
âYou donât meanâŚâ
These were known as the Ubasute Apartments.
The apartments were filled with an unnatural number of old people who had died natural deaths all alone.
âWe were intentionally abandoned here,â spat out the old man in the track suit. âThe families that were sick of looking after us worked with the real estate company that had prepared this dumping ground for pure profit. The unusual number of deaths didnât happen naturally. Theyâll cut off our water during the summer or cut power to our heater during winter, so weâre left with no way to survive.â
What the hell is that?
Isnât that just a large-scale automated execution device?
Since they could wait for the old people to die without dirtying their own hands, the killers wouldnât feel any guilt. By so thoroughly preparing the environment, the families could easily drive them to their deaths while thinking âthatâs just how it isâ.
It was exactly like the Ubasute Mountain from long ago!
Part 7 (Hachikawa Tomoe)
I didnât have a jogging outfit to change into, so I ran more leisurely down the unfamiliar road. The colors of Tokyo changed a lot depending on which region you were in and this one seemed to slow the flow of time. Or maybe the Ochanomizu and Jinbocho area I lived in was just too intense. That area was full of musical instruments, old books, and universities.
But the commotion that awaited me blew that atmosphere away.
It was at the gate to the same elementary school as before.
I was worried it was that same woman again, but there were more now.
Ahh! That shrill middle-aged woman has multiplied!
âWait! What do you mean they werenât here!?â
âManaging the route to school is the schoolâs responsibility! Explain yourselves!!â
âSee? This is what happens when you assume it isnât your problem!!â
Some of them seemed to be directing their anger in a bit of a different direction, but the middle-aged army was making a scene all the same. I felt bad for the male teacher who had waves of old lady smell pressing in on him. The children who cheerfully passed by and said goodbye to the teacher also had a hard life.
I decided to get out of here as soon as possible after I checked to see if Takkun â Toujou Takumi-chan â was here.
âHow many times do I have to ask!? Tell me where my Megumu is!! Do you really think Iâm going to accept that no oneâs seen her as if she vanished into thin air!?â
âŚEh?
I briefly doubted my ears.
What was that?
If it was true, this was no laughing matter.
âUm, uh, wait a second!! Wait!!â
âWhat do you want!?â
âHave you seen a girl named Toujou Takumi!? Sheâs my cousin and she hasnât returned home from her field trip!! She was supposed to be back by now!!â
My shout filled the area with a strange atmosphere.
An eerie sense of camaraderie pressed in on me as if to say âoh, her tooâ.
But that couldnât be it. It just couldnât. That would mean Takkun was missing too!
âPlease check. This wonât be a problem if sheâs in the school.â
âYes, but all of the students should have received an email saying the field trip had been canceled.â
âOh, honestly!!â
I ignored the teacher and jumped over the half-closed gate. He shouted âHey! Wait!!â, but I looked around the schoolyard and made my way to the building. I removed my shoes, held them in my hand, and ran down the hallway and up the stairs to check each room.
Sheâs not here.
Sheâs not here, or here, or here!
âYouâreâŚkidding.â
I pulled out my cellphone and called my aunt, Toujou Midori-san. Takkun had apparently not returned yet. I asked about the security buzzer she carried with her, but it apparently wouldnât send out a GPS signal unless she pulled the string herself.
That meant we had no clues.
She truly had vanished into thin air.
âNo, I must have missed her on the way to the school. That has to be it. If I head back to her house, I should see her on the way.â
I muttered to myself as I returned to the entranceway.
But what if I didnât find her? What if we missed each other again? How many times would I have to run back and forth before I started thinking of another option?
I held my spinning head with a hand, walked over to the gate, and heard the women shouting again.
âI told you those old people were trouble!!â
âI heard they brought a blade to school last month!â
âOur Megumu was hurt by that old man! Who else could it have been!?â
Those comments caught my attention.
What was going on at this school?
âUm, uh, what do you mean by that?â
âWhat? Youâre still here?â
âOur Takkun might have disappeared! You know how it feels to want to know everything you can, donât you!?â
I shouted back, and the women fell silent.
Oh, no. I might have talent as a strong-willed old woman.
My worries were cut short by one of the women pouting her lips and answering me.
âWeâre talking about those old people. You know who we mean.â
âNo, I donât.â
âThem! The ones from the Ubasute Apartments!!â
Part 8 (Uchimaku Hayabusa)
âLike I said, you are currently on private land managed by our company. Those are condemned buildings and are not meant to function as apartments. Contact the government office and they will tell you the same thing.â
âYes, but arenât you keeping the power and water shut off when you know these old people are living here? That counts as willful negligence.â
âI am not aware of anyone living there. No one has submitted a certificate of residence, have they? We have nothing of the sort on record and we are not receiving any rent for that facility. Doesnât that mean no one is living there?â
âYouâŚ!!â
âLet me ask you something: why would we need to send water and power to abandoned buildings? Negligent management? How much private land do you think there is around Japan without a single guard watching over the place? If you pressed charges against everyone who abandoned their property, you wouldnât have enough detention cells for them all.â
The voice on the phone seemed to be mocking me.
They were used to this. It felt like they were following the arrows on a flowchart prepared in advance.
âYou and your company have created an automated execution device or Ubasute Mountain that lets you accept money as these old people die. If the police take this seriously, weâll crush this system before long.â
âFeel free to try. We would like nothing more than for you to drive out any illegal occupants. But what would happen then?â
â?â
âWhere would the old people go once they were driven out? It is none of our concern, but they would probably end up living on the streets. And wouldnât a lot of the elderly be unable to survive that? Oh, but I guess thatâs none of the policeâs concern either. You donât interfere in civil matters, so thereâs nothing you can do if someone is withering away on the streets. Thatâs why you just do your own job. Ah hah hah. You do such a wonderful job of keeping your public and private lives separate.â
They clearly understood everything.
For one thing, the people who stayed in illegal apartments like the Ubasute Apartments tended to be those who could not get a normal apartment. Crushing those corrupt apartments was easy enough, but since the victim had to go somewhere else afterwards, the police would often end up leaving the same victims with fewer and fewer options.
The ancient Ubasute Mountain would have been the same.
It was true the old people would have been too weak to descend the mountain and might have starved to death before long.
But even if they did make it down, what was left for them there?
If they returned to their home, they would be thrown out again. If they went to some other village at the foot of the mountain, who would look after them? With no options left and nowhere to go, they would eventually wither away and breathe their last.
Still, I could not allow this to continue.
All these people had nowhere else to go, so they were being trapped here until they died. They knew exactly what was happening, but they had no way out and could only put up with it.
That was the Ubasute Apartments.
It was a man-eating mountain made of concrete.
To automatically prey on the living, this twisted system had been resurrected in the modern day!
I grabbed my cellphone again and forced out the words.
I was keenly aware that Wankashi Real Estate was my enemy here.
âI will make you regret this.â
âFeel free. Of course, if the police start taking this seriously, I imagine only the illegal residents will be arrested. Regardless, we will be waiting with the best army of lawyers money can buy.â
They hung up and I very nearly crushed the phone in my hand.
âWell, it was pretty suspicious from the moment they gave a cellphone number and not a toll free number or a landline number. And with the email protected at the start, itâs probably a throwaway address using an online social game. In the worst case, the phone number might not be enough to track them down.â
âThat doesnât matter. The basic plan hasnât changed. We need to have this investigated bit by bit.â
Since it had to do with real estate, I called up Department 2.
âHey, Four Eyes. Ever heard of Wankashi Real Estate?â
âDo you want me to transfer you to the anti-organized crime group? That company doesnât do any real business, so it doesnât fit Department 2âs focus on financial crimes.â
âHey, Heavy Tank. I have a question about Wankashi Real Estate.â
âWhat, those low level guys? Theyâre cruel, but theyâre small time. Youâre after someone pretty boring.â
That annoyed comment came from Sotobori Gaku, a fifth-dan in judo who worked to bring down gangs.
âAs you might imagine, theyâre the lowest level of a large criminal organization. The Japanese branch at the top is the frightening Kiseki Kaikei. Theyâre into assassination, organ trafficking, murders for life insurance payouts, human trafficking, corpse disposal, and pretty much anything that puts a price tag on a human life.â
âWhoâs at the top doesnât matter right now. Tell me about Wankashi Real Estate themselves.â
âIf you want. They excel at buying and selling land for profit, but whenever they make a mistake, they abandon the company and change their name. To be honest, their performance is pretty lackluster.â
âWhen you say buying and selling land, what exactly do you mean?â
âYouâve heard the stories about whatâs happening to abandoned houses lately, right? When oneâs been abandoned and no one knows where the owner is, the rights to the house are confiscated, claiming itâs a hotbed for criminal activity or dangerous insects. Wankashi Real Estate uses that to steal the rights to peopleâs land and house without them even knowing. Itâs gotten so forceful that they donât even have to get the owner to nod their head. Thereâs even a case where a family spent two weeks in Hawaii for summer vacation and came back to find their house had been taken. Forceful, right?â
âIn other words, they donât have any land of their own?â
âWhat about it?â
âHave you heard of the Wankashi Camp Apartments in Sugamo?â
âNo. I can look into it if you want, but itâs probably their usual MO. They use a single document to swipe ownership of a building that was abandoned because its owner went out of business and it would cost too much to demolish.â
The real estate company had to know this was forceful.
They were grabbing and selling these buildings for some easy money, so they had no real attachment to any of them. I could understand why they didnât care too much if I interfered.
The ancient Ubasute Mountain did not refer to just one place.
It had existed everywhere in Japan.
Was this the same? They had set up an automated execution device to bury family members without guilt. Even if one was shut down or demolished, they could change their methods and product to keep providing the service.
âOh, right, right. Uchimaku-chan, have you been feeling more popular lately?â
âWhat?â
âOh, nothing. Heh heh heh. But, wow. Someone from a previous case, the daughter of a dead coworker, and a middle school girl. Thatâs like a negative triple seven. If that actually sounds good to you, you have my respect in a backwards sort of way. You do not have an easy life, pretty boy.â
He hung up before I could figure out what he was talking about.
And when I turned around, the Mystery Freak was surrounded by a massive curse-like aura.
âRumble, rumble, rumble. Hey, detective, what was that about, I can think of a girl who fits those criteria, thatâs clearly Tomoe from my class, when did that start to be a thing, even my information network wasnât able to detect or defend against that one, I need to be more careful. Rumble, rumble rumble.â
âTomoe-chan? Are you completely insane!? No detective would go after a girl he met while working on a case. This isnât a job where you can ask for a girlâs number at the funeral!!â
âUm, do you have anywhere to meet girls outside of work?â
âPlease stop depressing me!!â
And why are we getting so off topic!? What happened to the Ubasute Apartments driving these old people to death because they have no one left!? No, if Tayama-san was telling the truth, itâs because their families actively want them gone!
But even though we had abandoned the old man in the track suit and even though our conversation had taken an inappropriate turn given the gravity of the situation, Tayama Sunao-san did not seem angry.
In fact, the corners of his eyes looked gentler than when we had first seen him.
âItâs been so long since Iâve been around anyone so lively. You reminded me what human life is like.â
ââŚ?â
âWeâre being left to wither away here. We have a place to sleep and to eat, but thatâs all. We canât leave now. Weâre monitored until we wither away and then weâre removed. The atmosphere here has completely dried up, so that really took me back. Sorry about smiling like that.â
That was not living.
It was true clothing, food, and shelter were necessary and irreplaceable, but that wasnât the only nourishment a human needed. If simply breathing and keeping your heart pumping counted as living, then prison would be enough.
Some people without enough to eat would intentionally commit a crime to get arrested. That way they could get the awful prison food. But these people had not taken that route. Nor had they grabbed a blade and taken revenge on the families that abandoned them. If doing anything else would bother someone else, they had decided withering away in their rooms was the best option.
Why were people like that the first ones to be preyed on?
Thirty million people moved throughout Tokyo every day, but not one of them had any connection to these people!
These were the Ubasute Apartments, an automated execution device or a modern man-eating mountain made of concrete. They were essentially being shut in a box while the air was slowly removed, but had these people done anything to deserve that?
âHey, mister, did you never think about going on public assistance? With that money and a guarantor company, you might be able to find a proper place to live.â
âI told you my family abandoned me, didnât I? On paper, I have land and a house. I even have my own bank account. But in reality, my son and his wife have hidden the bankbook and deed from me. So no assistance program will determine I need any help.â
They had wanted the house and they had not wanted him to insist he had the rights to it, so they wanted him gone as soon as possible.
And so they had abandoned their own relative using the new version of Ubasute Mountain that existed in the middle of the nationâs capital.
âŚI canât believe them.
âBesides, public assistance is the tax money of strangers, right? Then no thank you. Iâm not going to take other peopleâs money just to extend what little life I have left.â
No, that isnât how youâre supposed to think about public assistance.
It was true there some idiots who illegally accepted payments because they didnât want to work or because it paid more than a part-time job, but why focus on them? When someone had nowhere else to turn and they needed an opportunity to get back on their feet, what was wrong with asking for help? Wasnât that what it meant to support each other? And if the taxes taken from the people werenât given back to the people, what would be the point?
âWe donât need anything.â
No.
âWe have complaints and we could only agree if you asked us if we were angry about any of this, but whatâs the point? We donât have much life left, so why make a fuss that will only make the younger generation suffer? What will that accomplish? So we donât need anything. Just leave us alone.â
No, no, no!!
Everything about that was wrong, but I couldnât find the words to argue back. The person I needed to save was right in front of me, but he wasnât asking for help. I couldnât tell what would actually hit home for him.
With how long Tayama-san and the others had suffered here, I would probably get some decent hints toward judging the true monsters behind this if I asked them for details.
And yet they would never help me do that. Not as things were anyway. That was clearly true of Tayama-san, but Nezu-san, who had told me the story of Akasabi-san, had not said a word about her own circumstances here. I had revealed I was a police officer, so if she truly wanted help, she would have started by telling me about the situation in the Ubasute Apartments. Even when the elevator had fallen, I hadnât heard a peep from anyone. It was a matter of life or death and yet the only reaction was wondering who would be next.
These old people were not maliciously hiding the crimes being committed.
They just didnât want to cause any trouble.
They were sealing away their own lives in a twisted form of self-sacrifice.
They were just like the old people who had been abandoned in the mountains by the children they had raised.
They felt betrayed, they were filled with despair, they thought they must have done something wrong raising them, and they found themselves rejecting every part of their lives. And in the end, they lost even the will to live.
What was I supposed to do? Their resignation and weariness was as heavy as the fog hanging over a damp mountain, so how could I get them moving again? The words of some young stranger wouldnât be enough. I needed something bigger that was guaranteed to shake their hearts.
At that very moment, I heard a scream from directly overhead. It seemed to have been forced from a dried throat.
âWhat!?â
âThat was close by. That old ladyâs room had thin walls, so Iâd guess that was on the third or fourth floor.â
While I looked blankly up at the ceiling, the Mystery Freak calmly analyzed the situation. And for some reason, Tayama-san looked sad. I didnât know what had happened, but I ended the conversation and made my way to the stairs with the Mystery Freak. Then I ran up them.
A small crowd had formed in the fourth floor hallway.
When I got closer, I saw an old woman in an apron lying face down on the floor. She was the one who had told us about Akasabi-san.
âNezu-san!? Dammit!!â
I crouched down and frantically rolled her onto her back. I didnât see any obvious injuries or bleeding, but she was as unmoving as a doll packed with dirt. I placed a hand near her mouth and two fingers on her neck. She wasnât breathing and she didnât have a pulse.
What the hell happened!? Did her heart suddenly give out!?
âDoes anyone know any medical conditions Nezu-san had!? Anyone at all!?â
I shouted to the surrounding old people, but none of them answered. But this wasnât them being coldhearted.
âWe havenât been to a hospital in years. None of us know whatâs going on in our bodies.â
No help there either. We were in the middle of Tokyo, but I felt so isolated I would have thought we were abandoned deep in the mountains. It wasnât surprising given their situation, but we felt so far away. Why were they hated so much?
âMystery Freak, you call an ambulance. Iâll try CPR!!â
As I shouted to the girl, I pulled handkerchief from my pocket, placed it over Nezu-sanâs mouth, and placed my mouth over that. I pinched her nose with my fingers and blew air into her lungs. Then I placed my right hand in the center of her chest, placed my left hand over it, made sure not to put too much weight on her, and started making chest compressions.
26, 27, 28, 29, 30!
I breathed into the old womanâs mouth again.
How much time had passed since she collapsed? I knew the odds of success with CPR dropped considerably which each minute, so I could only hope Iâd made it in time.
Meanwhile, the Mystery Freak grimaced with her smartphone to her ear.
âWhat is it, Mystery Freak?â
I continued making rhythmic chest compressions, but she did not answer me and simply switched the phone to speaker phone.
âYouâre talking about those Ubasute Apartments, arenât you? We donât have the time to deal with some lonely old person. Listen, if you call 119 for such a ridiculous reason again, weâll press charges!â
What are they talking about?
My mind immediately started to boil over, but then it hit me. There was clearly something wrong here. All emergency calls were recorded, so this person was wrapping the noose around their own neck if something happened. That seemed like too much of a risk even if they did hate the old people here.
Or was there something pushing them in that direction? Was there some kind of system being used to isolate the old people?
âIt doesnât matter.â
I spat out the words and continued breathing into Nezu-sanâs mouth.
She had gotten angry easily, but she had politely told us what we wanted to know. Both with the elevator and Enbiâs outfit, she had scolded us for our own good. She had taken on an unpopular role out of concern for complete strangers. She wasnât just a doll or a name on a document. She was a human being.
I wasnât going to let her die here.
Everyone would die eventually. That was unavoidable.
But they didnât have to be carried to death on a conveyer belt.
With all the Youkai filling this country, it may have been wrong to call humans the greatest form of life, but couldnât we have something?
Couldnât humans have some small hint of pride and respect?
Please open your eyes! Please, please, please!!!!!!
ââŚAhâŚâ
Not even I knew how many times I had repeated the process, but a hoarse sound finally escaped Nezu Yuki-sanâs throat.
âCough!! Cough!! Cough!?â
When I saw her coughing and removing the handkerchief from her own mouth, I fell back into a sitting position. My hands were stinging. The heart was a mass of muscle and I only now realized how hard it was to externally support its movements.
At first, Nezu-san didnât seem to know what had happened.
But when she looked around, it seemed to come into focus for her. She held her hurting chest, slowly sat up, and looked to me.
She gave a thin smile.
âYou didnât have to help me, you know?â
Like I would let that happen.
How many times has this happened!? How many times has someone collapsed without anyone noticing, with no ambulance coming, or even with no one finding them until months later? Have they done anything wrong? Theyâve lived their lives to their fullest, worked hard, raised children, paid their taxes, and supported the backbone of this country, so why do they have to go through this!? Why do they have to have their own children abandon them in this concrete mountain without feeling even a twinge of guilt!? Itâs like theyâve been thrown into the back of the garbage truck!! Even the information concerning them deteriorates until they only leave a rumor like that Akasabi-san!! What the hell is this? What the hell are these Ubasute Apartments!?
ââŚâ
I also saw Tayama-san in his track suit after he finally caught up through the crowd.
When our eyes met, he silently shook his head. His eyes were telling me not to investigate any further.
Do you really think I could stop now?
Even if I didnât have any more hints and even if the victims werenât asking for help, how could a police officer not continue investigating when he saw something so cruel and heartless?
That was when something interrupted.
My cellphone began to ring. I checked the screen and found an unfamiliar number. I frowned and answered. The phones issued to police officers were convenient because I could instantly turn things around on any scammers who called.
And when this unknown caller spoke, it was with a young girlâs voice.
âD-Detect-âŚDetective! Um, itâs me, Tomoe! Itâs Hachikawa Tomoe!! Um, dammit, my mind is going blank⌠Anyway, come here right away!! I have something important to tell you!!â
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