Editing Tsukumodo:Volume 2 Eyes of Death

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Line 917: Line 917:
 
And if that was too much to ask for, I at least wanted to look into an eye that had seen death once more.
 
And if that was too much to ask for, I at least wanted to look into an eye that had seen death once more.
 
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  +
  +
Confusion and horror could be heard from everywhere. Upon arriving, the station employees started to disperse the crowd with aggressive-sounding roars.
  +
  +
I dived into the crowd.
  +
  +
It was an express train that was never scheduled to stop at this station, thus only the last wagon was still more or less by the platform as the train had come to a halt. Something sticky could be found on the rails the train had passed.
  +
  +
"Don't push! Step back!"
  +
  +
The moment I heard an employee yell so, I felt my body leaning forward.
  +
  +
"Huh?"
  +
  +
Pushed by a wave of onlookers, a few people and I fell together from the platform. The pain of the impact ran through my body. Because I had fell on another person, however, there was no serious injury.
  +
  +
The clamor welled up again, and the station employees pushed the onlookers away from the rails. "Are you all right?" someone yelled from above, upon which some people stood up and others stayed on the ground.
  +
  +
I shook my head slightly. Not to the level of a cerebral concussion, but my head was aching a little.
  +
  +
I pressed my hand lightly against my forehead, but the moment I did so, I noticed a sticky touch on my face.
  +
  +
I automatically looked at my hands.
  +
  +
They were blood-red. ''Did I injure my forehead?'' I calmly tried to explain it to myself, but I immediately realized the truth.
  +
  +
There was not only blood around me, but also all kinds of repulsive things somewhere between liquids and solids that I had never seen before in my life.
  +
  +
Exactly. The victim had been run over about where I was sitting.
  +
  +
I shrunk back in terror and put my hand behind me.<!-- meh -->
  +
  +
However, that hand touched something.
  +
  +
"!"
  +
  +
My brain instinctively tried to picture what it was.
  +
  +
I was already familiar with that sticky touch. I imagined the thing twining around my fingers as black and longish. There were a few possibilities I could think of to explain the substance that was entering the gaps between my fingernails, but I was unable to determine it exactly.
  +
  +
I turned my head around and cautiously looked at my hand.
  +
  +
Its form was far from what I was used to see. It looked so grotesque that I would classify it as ugly anytime if asked to decide between nice and ugly.
  +
  +
My hand was touching something that would usually be called a "head."
  +
  +
That head was lacking an important part that made it look most awkward to me. It was ''not'' the parts below the neck.
  +
  +
There were no eyes.
  +
  +
"Are you all right?" a station employee yelled from above. I removed my gaze from the head and nodded. "We're bringing a ladder right now, please hold on for a second!"
  +
  +
The employee ordered his colleagues to bring a ladder and started to get in contact with every person that had fallen onto the rails. Fortunately, nobody seemed to be seriously injured.
  +
  +
I could see a bunch of men rushing toward us with a ladder from afar.
  +
  +
I looked again at my hand.
  +
  +
Not because curiosity had gotten the better of fear; I just wanted to take a proper look to make sure what had happened to the eyes.
  +
  +
A thread of sorts was sticking out from the eye sockets. The nerves? Or a thread of sticky blood, perhaps?
  +
  +
But there was nothing ahead of them. What should have been there was...
  +
  +
—in sight.
  +
  +
The eyeballs were lying right behind the head.
  +
  +
"Are you all right? Can you stand up?" asked a station employee as he climbed the ladder down. He was almost here!
  +
  +
I became nervous.
  +
  +
Why would I become nervous?
  +
  +
I only had to wait for help and climb back onto the platform. There was nothing to worry about. Despite that, I didn't want the employee to come yet.
  +
  +
I hadn't come to decision yet.
  +
  +
I was in need of more time.
  +
  +
But he was almost here. Now that he wasn't looking was my only chance.
  +
  +
Once he was here, there would be no chance anymore.
  +
  +
But common sense and my conscience slowed made me waver.
  +
  +
Only a few steps until he would get off the ladder and come to me.
  +
  +
(I won't be getting such a chance anymore.
  +
  +
If I let that chance slip, I will regret it for the rest of my life.)
  +
  +
Nobody had noticed my intent.
  +
  +
Nobody was taking heed of me.
  +
  +
And certainly nobody would care if ''that'' went missing.
  +
  +
I reached out my hand and picked ''it'' up.
  +
  +
And then I stuffed the eyeball into my pocket—
  +
  +
  +
Confusion and horror could be heard from everywhere. Upon arriving, the station employees started to disperse the crowd with aggressive-sounding roars.
  +
  +
I dived into the crowd.
  +
  +
It was an express train that was never scheduled to stop at this station, thus only the last wagon was still more or less by the platform as the train had come to a halt. Something sticky could be found on the rails the train had passed.
  +
  +
"Don't push! Step back!"
  +
  +
The moment I heard an employee yell so, I felt my body leaning forward.
  +
  +
"Huh?"
  +
  +
Pushed by a wave of onlookers, a few people and I fell together from the platform. The pain of the impact ran through my body. Because I had fell on another person, however, there was no serious injury.
  +
  +
The clamor welled up again, and the station employees pushed the onlookers away from the rails. "Are you all right?" someone yelled from above, upon which some people stood up and others stayed on the ground.
  +
  +
I shook my head slightly. Not to the level of a cerebral concussion, but my head was aching a little.
  +
  +
I pressed my hand lightly against my forehead, but the moment I did so, I noticed a sticky touch on my face.
  +
  +
I automatically looked at my hands.
  +
  +
They were blood-red. ''Did I injure my forehead?'' I calmly tried to explain it to myself, but I immediately realized the truth.
  +
  +
There was not only blood around me, but also all kinds of repulsive things somewhere between liquids and solids that I had never seen before in my life.
  +
  +
Exactly. The victim had been run over about where I was sitting.
  +
  +
I shrunk back in terror and put my hand behind me.<!-- meh -->
  +
  +
However, that hand touched something.
  +
  +
"!"
  +
  +
My brain instinctively tried to picture what it was.
  +
  +
I was already familiar with that sticky touch. I imagined the thing twining around my fingers as black and longish. There were a few possibilities I could think of to explain the substance that was entering the gaps between my fingernails, but I was unable to determine it exactly.
  +
  +
I turned my head around and cautiously looked at my hand.
  +
  +
Its form was far from what I was used to see. It looked so grotesque that I would classify it as ugly anytime if asked to decide between nice and ugly.
  +
  +
My hand was touching something that would usually be called a "head."
  +
  +
That head was lacking an important part that made it look most awkward to me. It was ''not'' the parts below the neck.
  +
  +
There were no eyes.
  +
  +
"Are you all right?" a station employee yelled from above. I removed my gaze from the head and nodded. "We're bringing a ladder right now, please hold on for a second!"
  +
  +
The employee ordered his colleagues to bring a ladder and started to get in contact with every person that had fallen onto the rails. Fortunately, nobody seemed to be seriously injured.
  +
  +
I could see a bunch of men rushing toward us with a ladder from afar.
  +
  +
I looked again at my hand.
  +
  +
Not because curiosity had gotten the better of fear; I just wanted to take a proper look to make sure what had happened to the eyes.
  +
  +
A thread of sorts was sticking out from the eye sockets. The nerves? Or a thread of sticky blood, perhaps?
  +
  +
But there was nothing ahead of them. What should have been there was...
  +
  +
—in sight.
  +
  +
The eyeballs were lying right behind the head.
  +
  +
"Are you all right? Can you stand up?" asked a station employee as he climbed the ladder down. He was almost here!
  +
  +
I became nervous.
  +
  +
Why would I become nervous?
  +
  +
I only had to wait for help and climb back onto the platform. There was nothing to worry about. Despite that, I didn't want the employee to come yet.
  +
  +
I hadn't come to decision yet.
  +
  +
I was in need of more time.
  +
  +
But he was almost here. Now that he wasn't looking was my only chance.
  +
  +
Once he was here, there would be no chance anymore.
  +
  +
But common sense and my conscience slowed made me waver.
  +
  +
Only a few steps until he would get off the ladder and come to me.
  +
  +
(I won't be getting such a chance anymore.
  +
  +
If I let that chance slip, I will regret it for the rest of my life.)
  +
  +
Nobody had noticed my intent.
  +
  +
Nobody was taking heed of me.
  +
  +
And certainly nobody would care if ''that'' went missing.
  +
  +
I reached out my hand and picked ''it'' up.
  +
  +
And then I stuffed the eyeball into my pocket—
   
   

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