"Hah! Oh, that's fun," she laughed in surprise, despite how... stiff? Cold? That Shibusawa was being.
...But despite the fact that he was cold, that in and of itself was... a relief. He was unpleasant, in a way that someone that knew what before was like could only be. And despite being unpleasant, there was still a normal man behind the wall he was holding up.
Maybe that's why Hamuko felt a little tug at her heart. Something warm, something that gave her... purpose. Hope. Resolve.
There WAS a world before. Nyx does exist, but something else is happening. She just needs to figure out what.
Shibusawa is just trying to cope with the world they're in now, and she can't begrudge him that.
"You're right, though. It'd be a little glum to only keep meeting at a doctor's office. Let me give you my number... that way we can go on a date."
Maruki had already begun his usual routine—his quiet, polite exit.
His fingers tucked back into his pocket, and with an easy, practiced motion, he dipped forward slightly, just the barest inclination of a bow.
“Well then,” he murmured, the words smooth, automatic. “I won’t keep you any longer—”
And then—
"—that way we can go on a date."
For the first time in a long, long while, Takuto Maruki stopped.
It wasn’t just a slight hesitation, not the quiet, calculated pauses he sometimes took in conversation. No, this was a full stop, a complete derailment of the train of thought he had so carefully constructed.
His breath hitched just slightly, his weight shifting awkwardly as his head lifted to look at her, blinking rapidly, dark brown eyes staring in what could only be described as pure, unfiltered confusion.
His mouth, which had been poised to continue speaking, parted—then hung open.
A single, awkward laugh slipped out of him, utterly unguarded, more of a startled chuckle than anything else. His hand came up, fingers rubbing at the back of his neck as he let out another awkward, breathy, “I—I don’t follow.”
Oh, he did follow. He just really, really wasn’t sure how to process it.
Because—
A date? A date?
His gaze flickered to her, as if trying to assess if she was serious or if this was some elaborate joke at his expense.
"Did you think I was joking about how handsome you were?" she teased.
...It felt good to tease someone like this. And not have it feel... wrong.
"We got off on a strange foot, but...! I think we could have a little fun seeing a movie, or going to a cafe. Probably a much better way to pass the time waiting for appointments, right?"
'Shibusawa' truly looks at her like she's grown a second-head. It's not like he isn't aware that people...seem to hold that opinion of him. Even back in Shujin Academy some of the students used to comment on his looks. Most of them were rather overwhelmingly positive or pointedly neutral.
Which was strange since Takuto only ever really put the effort in making himself look more put-together.
His lips parted again, before closing, before parting again, his brain actively short-circuiting. He hadn’t had a patient catch him this off guard since—
Since—
...It had been a while.
So, with a slightly forced, slightly frazzled chuckle, he cleared his throat and gave a helpless sort of gesture, waving a hand lightly as if that would dispel the sudden shift in atmosphere.
“Aha, um—” His voice cracked. “That’s... very kind of you, but I—uh, I really don’t think that’s—”
Still, spending time with her might give him an idea of what aspect of his reality makes her click away.
He's thinking.
He's been seeing people-couples and others laughing away to themselves, holding hands as they go on dates, shopping away with their friends and what not. Maybe if she saw what made his reality so beautiful, she would find it easier to accept it again without feeling like she isn't a part of it. That she could thrive in it.
Takuto didn't have any particular feelings to the date itself. His goals and his research took a lot of time from his normal life and a part of him knew that spending time on distractions would be another second he wasted where someone might be going through something far worse.
"...I'm not sure," he looks away, slight red on his cheeks. "I'd hate to take up your time like that."
Maruki would level her a look for her laughing if he wasn't already so conflicted by said events. What was her play here? What was she going to achieve by seeking him?
Fix this, Azathoth murmured into his psyche. Or leave.
He can fix this.
He just needs to know what makes her click.
His arms folded across his chest, posture tilting slightly as he regarded her, unreadable. “You’re quite relentless, Arisato-san,” he mused, voice light yet carefully measured. “No offense.”
He meant it. But this was her game, wasn’t it? He was merely playing along.
For now.
"But..." A small pause, deliberate. A tilt of his head, the ghost of a thoughtful smile tugging at his lips. "I suppose it wouldn’t hurt.”
Because how could he ever say no to someone's wishes?
Still, he turned her words over in his mind, analyzing them as if they were pieces of a puzzle.
He shifted his weight slightly, glancing at her with something between curiosity and calculation.
“A long train ride, huh?” His voice carried a trace of amusement, but his eyes were sharp, quietly prying. “Do you live far?”
"Sure do! This isn't even the farthest I've been going for seeing specialists," she laughed a bit, rolling her eyes.
If it was a change in reality, no wonder none of them could help her. It's the same thing she experienced after the car crash.
"Buuuut the specifics... well, you'll just have to wait for next time, right? I'll text you to let you know when I'll be around next. Then we can more properly get to know each other."
Maruki’s expression didn’t shift, not even a flicker of reaction as Hamuko spoke—but his thoughts stirred, curling inward like ink spreading through water.
He should have known. Should have realized sooner.
The guilt pressed at the edges of his mind again, creeping in like an unshakable fog. He had overlooked her condition, dismissed it when he shouldn’t have. He was better than this—he was supposed to be better than this.
And yet, outwardly, his demeanor remained composed, his face betraying nothing.
Instead, he let out a soft, almost amused hum, slipping back into the easy rhythm of conversation. “You know, you could’ve just left a review with a phone number on the handkerchief instead,” he quipped lightly, his tone teasing but clearly joking.
Still, he shook his head, slipping a hand into his pocket to retrieve his phone. His fingers hovered over the screen for a brief moment before he finally glanced back at her, one brow slightly raised.
“I’ll warn you now,” he added, his voice dipping into something quieter. “There really isn’t much to know about me. You’ll probably just be disappointed.”
He didn’t mean for it to sound self-deprecating—if anything, it was just a matter of fact.
But this outing, this so-called date... it had its purpose.
Beyond the pristine white walls of the labs, beyond the sterile, calculated environment, this was an opportunity.
Because that was what mattered.
And if that meant indulging in whatever this was...well.
At the comment about a more smooth way to share a number, Hamuko snapped her fingers and uttered damn - her game really had been getting rusty from just half a year of not flirting! Noted for if these dates went anywhere - she wasn't worried about whether or not they'd romantically hit it off, but there's no way she'd let him win.
There really isn't much to know about me.
That just has her laughing. The laugh carried the weight of all of her feelings.
He could be dull as a rock, for all she cared - he was real, deeper than a shallow puddle, there was no way she wouldn't appreciate him and all of his weird, surly, meanness.
"Here. I'll step my game up next time - it's a guarantee," she chuckled, sharing her phone number and exchanging contacts. "Alright. I'm gonna be late, I'll let you go. Next time, I promise we'll have fun."
He didn't know what exactly was she going to look forward to without any of the happiness that she blatantly refused or found herself struggling to accept. Maruki was just a man. A man who dreamt of a better place.
Beyond that? Beyond Azathoth? He was the only permitted blemish here.
"Now you have made me curious," he smiled softly at her supposed promise. "But yeah sorry- like I said, lost track of time myself. I think my specialist is practically getting used to it now. I am sure yours will be forgiving as well." There was a sigh following that sentence, a measured crack in the abrasive man. He stepped back, placing the hand holding his phone back in his pocket.
"See you around." He threw back with a quick lilt of a bow before turning around completely, not sparing another glance still even by the other rather amusing turn of events.
He already knew what exactly he will be drafting in the folder titled: "Case 40382917: Hamuko Arisato" after all.
It was time for her appointment, and this time... she didn't feel nearly so lost.
She sat with this doctor. Described her physical symptoms - periodic mental fog, lethargy, dreams. Body dysmorphia... not from dissatisfaction from how she looked, but from how she felt detached from the body she had now.
(Now, though, she knew exactly why.)
Pressed to explain her disconnect, Hamuko nodded and did just that - in a session recorded, being viewed though Hamuko did not suspect it would be.
"The reason I struggle to emotionally connect to other people is because no one has a depth of experience to connect to. No one else is as impacted by their troubles as I am. And no one seems... to even be able to handle me struggling. It's as if my existence is troublesome, and it gets glossed over until the problems are forgotten.
"But it wasn't always like this. I remember that those closest to me... they had also gone through pains like mine. They understood me, and I understood them... and we found a lot of meaning, together, about why we should keep living and striving for happiness together--"
"I assume this is from the dreams you claim to have, where those around you and yourself both were living through trauma?"
A pause. Swallowed frustration. He's missing the forest for the trees, again, they keep DOING that...!
"...Fate is not kind. And it isn't cruel, either. Life, death, happenstance, twists of circumstance... I won't run away from that truth anymore. The people around me don't deserve that. So, doctor-- please help me figure out what's happened."
"Alright... let's see. What would you like us to do next, Arisato-san?"
"Scans, biopsies, bloodwork - I want to know every inch of what my body is doing, especially my brain. I want to rule everything else out, please."
Once she had the confirmation that the physical was not the problem, she would know for sure that what had happened was metaphysical. Supernatural. She pressed for all of those today, and-- well, of course everything was ready even if it wasn't scheduled. Who else was suffering, right now, after all?
"Arisato-san... you are free to head home now. But before you go... these notes on Shadows, on this Dark Hour... do you still perceive these hallucinations?"
"...I don't. Not those specific things, no. The other feelings, though... the connections I feel from before... I think those still exist. I'm sure of it."
It's there that Hamuko bows, thanks him, and excuses herself. She has another appointment at this office in ten days clutched in her hand, and she has to decide what she wants to do after that.
Observed today's session in full. Subject continues to display clear signs of dissociation and a persistent, unresolved fixation on an alternate perceived reality. Emotional detachment from the present remains prominent—though she masks it well, there are definitive patterns:
-Disinterest in forming new, meaningful connections with other patients. -Strong attachment to a past she believes has been “erased.” -A fundamental rejection of the happiness available to her in the present.
There is no biological root cause. No neurological abnormalities. No markers of disease or damage. Her cognition functions at an optimal level—above average, even. By all accounts, her body is fine.
And yet, she suffers.
Her self-perception is fractured, disconnected. She seeks validation through pain, through struggle. There is no meaning in joy unless it is hard-earned, unless it is fought for. She will not accept happiness if it is freely given.
That is...troubling.
At this rate, she will continue to search. She will tear herself apart looking for answers that do not exist. No, that should not exist.
And so, the question remains: what does she require?
A place where pain is shared? A world where others have suffered as she has, where hardship is a necessary prelude to fulfillment? She claims that those closest to her once understood her because they, too, had endured. That their suffering was not a burden, but a bond.
If that is what she truly believes, then she will never—never—find peace here.
Not as things are now.
...She needs to heal.
Not through further struggle. Not through the endless, obsessive pursuit of something long gone.
She needs to remember what happiness feels like. True happiness.
She needs to see them again.
Not me—not this—not this careful, measured attempt at connection that she only barely entertains.
She needs them.
Her friends.
She needs to hate Shibusawa.
And if that still doesn't convince her. If she's still stubborn- slight misdirection, then. A carefully constructed truth.
Her tests will return mostly normal. Mostly. No glaring abnormalities, nothing that would disprove her own experiences outright—but just enough to keep her engaged. Just enough to keep her here.
The bloodwork, for instance. A slight anomaly—perhaps a minor hormonal imbalance, an unusual neurotransmitter pattern. Nothing alarming. Nothing definitive. Just a thread.
The neurological scans—clear, but...irregularities in sleep cycles, activity in regions associated with memory retrieval and emotional processing. A vague but plausible finding. A hypothesis worth exploring.
She will not question it. Not immediately.
Hamuko Arisato is not naïve, but she wants answers. And if I provide them in the right increments, if I give her just enough to validate her feelings without letting her spiral into paranoia, she will continue to trust me.
no subject
...But despite the fact that he was cold, that in and of itself was... a relief. He was unpleasant, in a way that someone that knew what before was like could only be. And despite being unpleasant, there was still a normal man behind the wall he was holding up.
Maybe that's why Hamuko felt a little tug at her heart. Something warm, something that gave her... purpose. Hope. Resolve.
There WAS a world before. Nyx does exist, but something else is happening. She just needs to figure out what.
Shibusawa is just trying to cope with the world they're in now, and she can't begrudge him that.
"You're right, though. It'd be a little glum to only keep meeting at a doctor's office. Let me give you my number... that way we can go on a date."
1/2
His fingers tucked back into his pocket, and with an easy, practiced motion, he dipped forward slightly, just the barest inclination of a bow.
“Well then,” he murmured, the words smooth, automatic. “I won’t keep you any longer—”
And then—
"—that way we can go on a date."
For the first time in a long, long while, Takuto Maruki stopped.
It wasn’t just a slight hesitation, not the quiet, calculated pauses he sometimes took in conversation. No, this was a full stop, a complete derailment of the train of thought he had so carefully constructed.
His breath hitched just slightly, his weight shifting awkwardly as his head lifted to look at her, blinking rapidly, dark brown eyes staring in what could only be described as pure, unfiltered confusion.
His mouth, which had been poised to continue speaking, parted—then hung open.
Nothing came out.
A blink.
Another.
And then, finally—
“Uhh.”
no subject
Oh, he did follow. He just really, really wasn’t sure how to process it.
Because—
A date? A date?
His gaze flickered to her, as if trying to assess if she was serious or if this was some elaborate joke at his expense.
no subject
...It felt good to tease someone like this. And not have it feel... wrong.
"We got off on a strange foot, but...! I think we could have a little fun seeing a movie, or going to a cafe. Probably a much better way to pass the time waiting for appointments, right?"
no subject
'Shibusawa' truly looks at her like she's grown a second-head. It's not like he isn't aware that people...seem to hold that opinion of him. Even back in Shujin Academy some of the students used to comment on his looks. Most of them were rather overwhelmingly positive or pointedly neutral.
Which was strange since Takuto only ever really put the effort in making himself look more put-together.
His lips parted again, before closing, before parting again, his brain actively short-circuiting. He hadn’t had a patient catch him this off guard since—
Since—
...It had been a while.
So, with a slightly forced, slightly frazzled chuckle, he cleared his throat and gave a helpless sort of gesture, waving a hand lightly as if that would dispel the sudden shift in atmosphere.
“Aha, um—” His voice cracked. “That’s... very kind of you, but I—uh, I really don’t think that’s—”
Still, spending time with her might give him an idea of what aspect of his reality makes her click away.
He's thinking.
He's been seeing people-couples and others laughing away to themselves, holding hands as they go on dates, shopping away with their friends and what not. Maybe if she saw what made his reality so beautiful, she would find it easier to accept it again without feeling like she isn't a part of it. That she could thrive in it.
Takuto didn't have any particular feelings to the date itself. His goals and his research took a lot of time from his normal life and a part of him knew that spending time on distractions would be another second he wasted where someone might be going through something far worse.
"...I'm not sure," he looks away, slight red on his cheeks. "I'd hate to take up your time like that."
no subject
...It was a complex little web of emotions. She missed that.
"I'd like to get to know you. And besides - it'd made the hour-long-plus train ride less of a drag. Give me another shot?"
no subject
Fix this, Azathoth murmured into his psyche. Or leave.
He can fix this.
He just needs to know what makes her click.
His arms folded across his chest, posture tilting slightly as he regarded her, unreadable. “You’re quite relentless, Arisato-san,” he mused, voice light yet carefully measured. “No offense.”
He meant it. But this was her game, wasn’t it? He was merely playing along.
For now.
"But..." A small pause, deliberate. A tilt of his head, the ghost of a thoughtful smile tugging at his lips. "I suppose it wouldn’t hurt.”
Because how could he ever say no to someone's wishes?
Still, he turned her words over in his mind, analyzing them as if they were pieces of a puzzle.
He shifted his weight slightly, glancing at her with something between curiosity and calculation.
“A long train ride, huh?” His voice carried a trace of amusement, but his eyes were sharp, quietly prying. “Do you live far?”
no subject
If it was a change in reality, no wonder none of them could help her. It's the same thing she experienced after the car crash.
"Buuuut the specifics... well, you'll just have to wait for next time, right? I'll text you to let you know when I'll be around next. Then we can more properly get to know each other."
no subject
He should have known. Should have realized sooner.
The guilt pressed at the edges of his mind again, creeping in like an unshakable fog. He had overlooked her condition, dismissed it when he shouldn’t have. He was better than this—he was supposed to be better than this.
And yet, outwardly, his demeanor remained composed, his face betraying nothing.
Instead, he let out a soft, almost amused hum, slipping back into the easy rhythm of conversation. “You know, you could’ve just left a review with a phone number on the handkerchief instead,” he quipped lightly, his tone teasing but clearly joking.
Still, he shook his head, slipping a hand into his pocket to retrieve his phone. His fingers hovered over the screen for a brief moment before he finally glanced back at her, one brow slightly raised.
“I’ll warn you now,” he added, his voice dipping into something quieter. “There really isn’t much to know about me. You’ll probably just be disappointed.”
He didn’t mean for it to sound self-deprecating—if anything, it was just a matter of fact.
But this outing, this so-called date... it had its purpose.
Beyond the pristine white walls of the labs, beyond the sterile, calculated environment, this was an opportunity.
Because that was what mattered.
And if that meant indulging in whatever this was...well.
He could play along.
no subject
There really isn't much to know about me.
That just has her laughing. The laugh carried the weight of all of her feelings.
He could be dull as a rock, for all she cared - he was real, deeper than a shallow puddle, there was no way she wouldn't appreciate him and all of his weird, surly, meanness.
"Here. I'll step my game up next time - it's a guarantee," she chuckled, sharing her phone number and exchanging contacts. "Alright. I'm gonna be late, I'll let you go. Next time, I promise we'll have fun."
no subject
The strangest problem case yet.
He didn't know what exactly was she going to look forward to without any of the happiness that she blatantly refused or found herself struggling to accept. Maruki was just a man. A man who dreamt of a better place.
Beyond that? Beyond Azathoth? He was the only permitted blemish here.
"Now you have made me curious," he smiled softly at her supposed promise. "But yeah sorry- like I said, lost track of time myself. I think my specialist is practically getting used to it now. I am sure yours will be forgiving as well." There was a sigh following that sentence, a measured crack in the abrasive man. He stepped back, placing the hand holding his phone back in his pocket.
"See you around." He threw back with a quick lilt of a bow before turning around completely, not sparing another glance still even by the other rather amusing turn of events.
He already knew what exactly he will be drafting in the folder titled: "Case 40382917: Hamuko Arisato" after all.
no subject
She sat with this doctor. Described her physical symptoms - periodic mental fog, lethargy, dreams. Body dysmorphia... not from dissatisfaction from how she looked, but from how she felt detached from the body she had now.
(Now, though, she knew exactly why.)
Pressed to explain her disconnect, Hamuko nodded and did just that - in a session recorded, being viewed though Hamuko did not suspect it would be.
"The reason I struggle to emotionally connect to other people is because no one has a depth of experience to connect to. No one else is as impacted by their troubles as I am. And no one seems... to even be able to handle me struggling. It's as if my existence is troublesome, and it gets glossed over until the problems are forgotten.
"But it wasn't always like this. I remember that those closest to me... they had also gone through pains like mine. They understood me, and I understood them... and we found a lot of meaning, together, about why we should keep living and striving for happiness together--"
"I assume this is from the dreams you claim to have, where those around you and yourself both were living through trauma?"
A pause. Swallowed frustration. He's missing the forest for the trees, again, they keep DOING that...!
"...Fate is not kind. And it isn't cruel, either. Life, death, happenstance, twists of circumstance... I won't run away from that truth anymore. The people around me don't deserve that. So, doctor-- please help me figure out what's happened."
"Alright... let's see. What would you like us to do next, Arisato-san?"
"Scans, biopsies, bloodwork - I want to know every inch of what my body is doing, especially my brain. I want to rule everything else out, please."
Once she had the confirmation that the physical was not the problem, she would know for sure that what had happened was metaphysical. Supernatural. She pressed for all of those today, and-- well, of course everything was ready even if it wasn't scheduled. Who else was suffering, right now, after all?
"Arisato-san... you are free to head home now. But before you go... these notes on Shadows, on this Dark Hour... do you still perceive these hallucinations?"
"...I don't. Not those specific things, no. The other feelings, though... the connections I feel from before... I think those still exist. I'm sure of it."
It's there that Hamuko bows, thanks him, and excuses herself. She has another appointment at this office in ten days clutched in her hand, and she has to decide what she wants to do after that.
end of thread for now
Entry #01
Observed today's session in full. Subject continues to display clear signs of dissociation and a persistent, unresolved fixation on an alternate perceived reality. Emotional detachment from the present remains prominent—though she masks it well, there are definitive patterns:
-Disinterest in forming new, meaningful connections with other patients.
-Strong attachment to a past she believes has been “erased.”
-A fundamental rejection of the happiness available to her in the present.
There is no biological root cause. No neurological abnormalities. No markers of disease or damage. Her cognition functions at an optimal level—above average, even. By all accounts, her body is fine.
And yet, she suffers.
Her self-perception is fractured, disconnected. She seeks validation through pain, through struggle. There is no meaning in joy unless it is hard-earned, unless it is fought for. She will not accept happiness if it is freely given.
That is...troubling.
At this rate, she will continue to search. She will tear herself apart looking for answers that do not exist. No, that should not exist.
And so, the question remains: what does she require?
A place where pain is shared? A world where others have suffered as she has, where hardship is a necessary prelude to fulfillment? She claims that those closest to her once understood her because they, too, had endured. That their suffering was not a burden, but a bond.
If that is what she truly believes, then she will never—never—find peace here.
Not as things are now.
...She needs to heal.
Not through further struggle. Not through the endless, obsessive pursuit of something long gone.
She needs to remember what happiness feels like. True happiness.
She needs to see them again.
Not me—not this—not this careful, measured attempt at connection that she only barely entertains.
She needs them.
Her friends.
She needs to hate Shibusawa.
And if that still doesn't convince her. If she's still stubborn- slight misdirection, then. A carefully constructed truth.
Her tests will return mostly normal. Mostly. No glaring abnormalities, nothing that would disprove her own experiences outright—but just enough to keep her engaged. Just enough to keep her here.
The bloodwork, for instance. A slight anomaly—perhaps a minor hormonal imbalance, an unusual neurotransmitter pattern. Nothing alarming. Nothing definitive. Just a thread.
The neurological scans—clear, but...irregularities in sleep cycles, activity in regions associated with memory retrieval and emotional processing. A vague but plausible finding. A hypothesis worth exploring.
She will not question it. Not immediately.
Hamuko Arisato is not naïve, but she wants answers. And if I provide them in the right increments, if I give her just enough to validate her feelings without letting her spiral into paranoia, she will continue to trust me.
She must.
This is for her own good.