Cherreads

Chapter 5 - Coincidences Aren’t Accidents

> I couldn't bring myself to tell her.

That the boy with the knife, with the shadow in his eyes — was me.

But her story… it was a mirror of mine.

And there's no way that's just a coincidence.

No… this is fate.

— After that, — Chiori continued, as if telling just another boring fact — I rented a small house on the outskirts. Still live there.

— That's… really touching. I'm sorry. It must've been painful.

She gave a faint smile. The kind that brushes sympathy aside like it's routine.

— Don't be. I hardly remember my parents. I'm trying to forget the past anyway.

— Well… alright…

— Alright, class dismissed! — the teacher's voice rang out, and with it, the atmosphere of her confession vanished like smoke.

> Four more classes to go... Chemistry, history, biology, and English... Pure torture.

And I've got barely any money left — 356,988 yen. Enough to last maybe a month.

And now… I feel like I have to look out for her too. Even if I don't show it.

Damn it. I'm getting out of here.

I was almost out the door when I heard a soft voice:

— Wait! — Chiori stood slightly from her seat. — Where are you going?

— Huh? Uh… got called in for work. Urgent. Sorry I didn't mention it.

— Oh, I see. Well… take care, Fio.

— You too. See ya.

> Phew. Free at last.

School lessons kill faster than a blade to the ribs.

Time to… make some cash.

...

> A dim basement. The scent of blood. Damp cement floors.

The cold metal table — all too familiar.

Sixteen people. Different faces. Same ending.

Thud — the last one drops.

> Three kidneys. Six eyeballs. A couple of hearts.

All accounted for. Not a great haul, but decent. Maybe two million if I don't haggle.

I left like always — silent, trace-free.

— Here to cash in?

— Yeah. Everything's here.

— Same warehouse. Nakume, pay him.

— Done. Check the amount.

> Nice. 2.7 million. More than expected.

Home. I need sleep. No thinking. No memories.

Night. Streets silent. The city looked… dead.

— Fio!

I flinched. Chiori?

— What are you doing out here? It's almost midnight! — her voice was sharp, laced with concern.

— Huh? Just heading home from work. You?

— I went to the store. Ran out of groceries.

— I see… well, alright. See you tomorrow then.

— Bye.

> Why did I run into her… today, of all days? At this exact hour?

And why does it feel like this is only the beginning…

of something much darker — and far more important?

More Chapters