Summary : A powerful man learns a familiar lesson and tries to heal an old wound.
(Note : Normally I at least try to make my stories accessible; But in this case, without reading the entire manga of Ai Yori Aoshi, you will be badly lost--sorry)
A Carol Of Wonder
By Rob Morris
He noted immediately that the car was not in its usual pristine condition. When he leaned forward to look in the front seat, he now saw also that his driver was not who they should be.
"Miyabi-San?"
Why would she be there? Wasn't she running one of his largest stores-and had she not been formally adopted into his family, an honor she had long since earned back?
"We will be there soon, sir."
‘Sir'. No name, no honorific, merely ‘Sir'. The girl had always been reserved. This was part of her great strength. It was largely why his daughter's training had been left in her hands, from a very tender age.
"We are here, sir."
Now, though, her face actually looked dour, and gravely displeased.
"You would have me walk in unescorted?"
"You may ask anything of me, sir. But not that. Never that. For if I should face your heir, there would be blood. Add to that, I doubt very much his guards would allow me to get that close."
Her explanation reeked not so much of defiance as grim resignation, even despair. Despite his own insistence on protocol and obedience when sworn to, he chose not to challenge her. Even if this had been his every intent, it would have soon evaporated in any event.
"Hanabishi Zaibatsu?"
The sign above the company his family had fought so hard to create no longer carried his name, even in part. What had happened? Was the old man's death a dream and a buy-out had occurred, possibly a hostile one? Had the second man to be called Kaoru Hanabishi sued based on some obscure technicality, after the marriage contract had fallen through, and taken what Aoi's hand would no longer give him?
"Miyabi-San spoke of...my heir?"
His heir. He-a male. He now wondered, had Aoi herself been nothing but a lovely dream? He had never once regretted not having a son, except when the taunts of some friends with too little tact in their souls and too much strong sake in their stomachs cut him. Yet had not the mere sight of her smile, the feel of her beneath his arm, always erased that?
*Whatever I wished for in my private moments, her place in my life was never at issue.*
"Sakuraba-San. He will see you."
The hulking bodyguards had always put him off. Their demeanor always seemed to confirm the rumors that Old Hanabishi had fringe dealings with the Yakuza, much like the American crooner Frank Sinatra, ties maintained in order to make him seem roguish. There had even been rumors that the death of his grandson's mother had been no mere accident, but these were dismissed as something the old man had spread in order to make rivals fearful.
"Tell your employer I thank him."
He did not feel like a man who had everything taken from him. He also doubted that Hanabishi would see him so readily if this were the case. His eye was caught by a painted portrait on the wall.
"That young woman? Is that my daughter?"
The guard who wore sunglasses regardless of time, day, or place, now looked very badly displeased.
"That is Aoi Hanabishi, our Chairman's lovely wife. That is how she is to be referred to, even by yourself, Sakuraba-san. In this, there is no leeway. Employees, even long-time ones, have been dismissed on this basis alone."
A move that he was certain had to be illegal, not to mention petty and vicious. Perhaps Hanabishi-San could be dissuaded from it, and perhaps he would be reminded about honoring his lovely wife's family.
"Sakuraba-San! Please come in!"
The man was not old, and nor was he the second man of that family to bear the given name Kaoru. Despite sporting a moustache much like his late grandfather, his identity was obvious.
"Kaoru Honjō?"
The smile vanished as the head of the Zaibatsu conglomerate closed his office door.
"That surname belonged to my late mother. I do not care to be reminded of her. Even to you, father of my wife, this must be known and understood-always."
As Sakuraba grew chill, the smile returned to his heir's face.
"On the other hand, it was holding on to her memory that held me back for so long. It was at your urging that I finally let those memories go, and returned to my grandfather in time to absorb his lessons on business and strength. Indeed, I should thank you anew, Sakuraba-San. But do not raise the matter of my mother again. Her ghost walked between me and my destiny for far too long. It made me think my grandfather cruel, when he was only preparing me for life."
This was everything he had wished for, but somehow this man was not the husband he had wished for his daughter. His eyes were empty, his voice cold, even when speaking in supposed gratitude.
"I am greatly pleased that you were able to reconcile with your grandfather, based on my humble advice."
Kaoru Hanabishi waved his hand in the air dismissively.
"You are far too modest. Not only did I follow your advice on resuming my place in the family, but you were so on-target about the appearance projected by having all those young women around. The day I moved on that was a true mark of maturity for me."
Sakuraba decided he did not like the sound of that at all.
"So you have taken steps in that regard?"
"Quite so-forceful steps, as would make my grandfather proud. One fawning idiot was pulled away by her father, who was reminded of just how much business he does with Hanabishi. One will never be permitted to enter Japan again, being on several watchlists. The others, including slacker associates at university, I hold the mortgages to their properties."
Sakuraba wished to question if this was the sort of thing one did to one's friends, but the thought that this was not the sort of man such a question was asked of restrained this impulse.
"Forceful steps indeed."
Hanabishi seemed to anticipate his next question.
"Do you wish to see my wife, during your visit?"
Sakuraba found himself wanting to refuse anything this man had to offer, yet his heart ached to see his Aoi again. Could it have been years since he last saw her?
"I will arrange with you a visit to your home-at your convenience, of course."
Hanabishi smiled.
"You are at my home, honored founder. Given the ruckus raised by that impostor and his shrewish mother, I grew concerned for my wife and our children, and for all our safety. They and I now dwell in the suite of apartments several floors above us."
A way to maintain safety, thought Sakuraba-or a way to maintain control? He feared it sounded like the latter, even though it was impossible to imagine his Aoi, even at her most defiant, being out of control. So why did he recall her virtual imprisonment, aided and abetted by a vicious lie? When would that have even occurred?
He was *permitted* to ascend via the elevators unescorted, and yet he noted that the entrance to the apartments floor still had armed guards waiting.
"Lady Hanabishi will see you now, Sakuraba-San."
He hesitated to turn the door handle before him. Yet finally, he did. The woman in front of him reminded him of his own wife. Not even his wife at that age-but his wife as she appeared now.
"Aoi?"
"Even though that is not how you should address me, Father, I am pleased to see you."
No, she wasn't. The woman before him didn't look like she was pleased by anything.
"You are well?"
Her look turned fearful.
"Father, please, do not cast such aspersions on my husband's treatment of me."
"I cast no aspersions. I merely asked how you were."
Her head tilted as though somehow hearing the words of her husband.
"But to ask such a thing is to imply that I am treated anything less than in a manner befitting the wife of the head of the Hanabishi Zaibatsu. I will implore you not to ask so leading a question ever again."
*There is steel beneath those long sleeves*. That is what was always said of a Yamato Nadeishko, the kind of wife that Sakuraba had, and the kind of wife their child had been raised to be. But the creature before him now had no steel. She was a bubble, a balloon animal filled with hot air by her man. It was very nearly revolting.
"May I see the children?"
"I do not think that wise, Father. It would only excite them, and it is best that they are not excited when their father returns from his long days. They might draw his ire, and what sort of wife would I be to permit such a thing?"
They both stood up, and Sakuraba noticed two things. Under one eye was a great deal of makeup, the same tone as Aoi's skin. The other eye did not seem to move correctly, and even seemed reflective in nature.
"He has dared hurt you?"
Now, her face took on a harsh and unforgiving aspect.
"Sakuraba-San, you must leave."
"The children? Is he hurting them as well?"
"Security! You will show our ungracious guest out-well out of sight of my husband. He is not to be disturbed by the filth this stranger peddles."
"Aoi, I am your father!"
"Go away, old man. We don't need you. What good we have, you may not improve, and what is wrong..."
She turned away, and he saw her touch her eyes.
"...your wild rants will only make worse."
He was thrown out, crying her name. Miyabi stood outside to collect him.
"Be mindful of your wishes, Old Man. Show respect for creation's path as it played out, not how you planned and then re-planned it."
She drove him home-home to a small guest house next to a now-boarded up house that was nearly a mansion. He ran to be near his beloved wife, fell and slipped in the mud, crying his eyes out.
----------------------------------------------------
(Note : Normally I at least try to make my stories accessible; But in this case, without reading the entire manga of Ai Yori Aoshi, you will be badly lost--sorry)
A Carol Of Wonder
By Rob Morris
He noted immediately that the car was not in its usual pristine condition. When he leaned forward to look in the front seat, he now saw also that his driver was not who they should be.
"Miyabi-San?"
Why would she be there? Wasn't she running one of his largest stores-and had she not been formally adopted into his family, an honor she had long since earned back?
"We will be there soon, sir."
‘Sir'. No name, no honorific, merely ‘Sir'. The girl had always been reserved. This was part of her great strength. It was largely why his daughter's training had been left in her hands, from a very tender age.
"We are here, sir."
Now, though, her face actually looked dour, and gravely displeased.
"You would have me walk in unescorted?"
"You may ask anything of me, sir. But not that. Never that. For if I should face your heir, there would be blood. Add to that, I doubt very much his guards would allow me to get that close."
Her explanation reeked not so much of defiance as grim resignation, even despair. Despite his own insistence on protocol and obedience when sworn to, he chose not to challenge her. Even if this had been his every intent, it would have soon evaporated in any event.
"Hanabishi Zaibatsu?"
The sign above the company his family had fought so hard to create no longer carried his name, even in part. What had happened? Was the old man's death a dream and a buy-out had occurred, possibly a hostile one? Had the second man to be called Kaoru Hanabishi sued based on some obscure technicality, after the marriage contract had fallen through, and taken what Aoi's hand would no longer give him?
"Miyabi-San spoke of...my heir?"
His heir. He-a male. He now wondered, had Aoi herself been nothing but a lovely dream? He had never once regretted not having a son, except when the taunts of some friends with too little tact in their souls and too much strong sake in their stomachs cut him. Yet had not the mere sight of her smile, the feel of her beneath his arm, always erased that?
*Whatever I wished for in my private moments, her place in my life was never at issue.*
"Sakuraba-San. He will see you."
The hulking bodyguards had always put him off. Their demeanor always seemed to confirm the rumors that Old Hanabishi had fringe dealings with the Yakuza, much like the American crooner Frank Sinatra, ties maintained in order to make him seem roguish. There had even been rumors that the death of his grandson's mother had been no mere accident, but these were dismissed as something the old man had spread in order to make rivals fearful.
"Tell your employer I thank him."
He did not feel like a man who had everything taken from him. He also doubted that Hanabishi would see him so readily if this were the case. His eye was caught by a painted portrait on the wall.
"That young woman? Is that my daughter?"
The guard who wore sunglasses regardless of time, day, or place, now looked very badly displeased.
"That is Aoi Hanabishi, our Chairman's lovely wife. That is how she is to be referred to, even by yourself, Sakuraba-san. In this, there is no leeway. Employees, even long-time ones, have been dismissed on this basis alone."
A move that he was certain had to be illegal, not to mention petty and vicious. Perhaps Hanabishi-San could be dissuaded from it, and perhaps he would be reminded about honoring his lovely wife's family.
"Sakuraba-San! Please come in!"
The man was not old, and nor was he the second man of that family to bear the given name Kaoru. Despite sporting a moustache much like his late grandfather, his identity was obvious.
"Kaoru Honjō?"
The smile vanished as the head of the Zaibatsu conglomerate closed his office door.
"That surname belonged to my late mother. I do not care to be reminded of her. Even to you, father of my wife, this must be known and understood-always."
As Sakuraba grew chill, the smile returned to his heir's face.
"On the other hand, it was holding on to her memory that held me back for so long. It was at your urging that I finally let those memories go, and returned to my grandfather in time to absorb his lessons on business and strength. Indeed, I should thank you anew, Sakuraba-San. But do not raise the matter of my mother again. Her ghost walked between me and my destiny for far too long. It made me think my grandfather cruel, when he was only preparing me for life."
This was everything he had wished for, but somehow this man was not the husband he had wished for his daughter. His eyes were empty, his voice cold, even when speaking in supposed gratitude.
"I am greatly pleased that you were able to reconcile with your grandfather, based on my humble advice."
Kaoru Hanabishi waved his hand in the air dismissively.
"You are far too modest. Not only did I follow your advice on resuming my place in the family, but you were so on-target about the appearance projected by having all those young women around. The day I moved on that was a true mark of maturity for me."
Sakuraba decided he did not like the sound of that at all.
"So you have taken steps in that regard?"
"Quite so-forceful steps, as would make my grandfather proud. One fawning idiot was pulled away by her father, who was reminded of just how much business he does with Hanabishi. One will never be permitted to enter Japan again, being on several watchlists. The others, including slacker associates at university, I hold the mortgages to their properties."
Sakuraba wished to question if this was the sort of thing one did to one's friends, but the thought that this was not the sort of man such a question was asked of restrained this impulse.
"Forceful steps indeed."
Hanabishi seemed to anticipate his next question.
"Do you wish to see my wife, during your visit?"
Sakuraba found himself wanting to refuse anything this man had to offer, yet his heart ached to see his Aoi again. Could it have been years since he last saw her?
"I will arrange with you a visit to your home-at your convenience, of course."
Hanabishi smiled.
"You are at my home, honored founder. Given the ruckus raised by that impostor and his shrewish mother, I grew concerned for my wife and our children, and for all our safety. They and I now dwell in the suite of apartments several floors above us."
A way to maintain safety, thought Sakuraba-or a way to maintain control? He feared it sounded like the latter, even though it was impossible to imagine his Aoi, even at her most defiant, being out of control. So why did he recall her virtual imprisonment, aided and abetted by a vicious lie? When would that have even occurred?
He was *permitted* to ascend via the elevators unescorted, and yet he noted that the entrance to the apartments floor still had armed guards waiting.
"Lady Hanabishi will see you now, Sakuraba-San."
He hesitated to turn the door handle before him. Yet finally, he did. The woman in front of him reminded him of his own wife. Not even his wife at that age-but his wife as she appeared now.
"Aoi?"
"Even though that is not how you should address me, Father, I am pleased to see you."
No, she wasn't. The woman before him didn't look like she was pleased by anything.
"You are well?"
Her look turned fearful.
"Father, please, do not cast such aspersions on my husband's treatment of me."
"I cast no aspersions. I merely asked how you were."
Her head tilted as though somehow hearing the words of her husband.
"But to ask such a thing is to imply that I am treated anything less than in a manner befitting the wife of the head of the Hanabishi Zaibatsu. I will implore you not to ask so leading a question ever again."
*There is steel beneath those long sleeves*. That is what was always said of a Yamato Nadeishko, the kind of wife that Sakuraba had, and the kind of wife their child had been raised to be. But the creature before him now had no steel. She was a bubble, a balloon animal filled with hot air by her man. It was very nearly revolting.
"May I see the children?"
"I do not think that wise, Father. It would only excite them, and it is best that they are not excited when their father returns from his long days. They might draw his ire, and what sort of wife would I be to permit such a thing?"
They both stood up, and Sakuraba noticed two things. Under one eye was a great deal of makeup, the same tone as Aoi's skin. The other eye did not seem to move correctly, and even seemed reflective in nature.
"He has dared hurt you?"
Now, her face took on a harsh and unforgiving aspect.
"Sakuraba-San, you must leave."
"The children? Is he hurting them as well?"
"Security! You will show our ungracious guest out-well out of sight of my husband. He is not to be disturbed by the filth this stranger peddles."
"Aoi, I am your father!"
"Go away, old man. We don't need you. What good we have, you may not improve, and what is wrong..."
She turned away, and he saw her touch her eyes.
"...your wild rants will only make worse."
He was thrown out, crying her name. Miyabi stood outside to collect him.
"Be mindful of your wishes, Old Man. Show respect for creation's path as it played out, not how you planned and then re-planned it."
She drove him home-home to a small guest house next to a now-boarded up house that was nearly a mansion. He ran to be near his beloved wife, fell and slipped in the mud, crying his eyes out.
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