Ficool

Chapter 3 - Third Dive

The late afternoon sun slanted across the streets as Sora walked home, her backpack heavy against her shoulders. The gym had been closed for maintenance after school, cutting off the one place she could usually bury herself in laps until the world felt quiet again. Without it, the walk home felt longer, noisier, her thoughts refusing to stay silent.

Her words to David replayed in her mind, sharp and final.

"People like you only slow others down."

At the time, they'd felt necessary, a way to make him stop. But now, as her shoes tapped against the pavement, she wondered, had she gone too far? The weight of the words she spoke had lingered with her, no matter how much she tried to shrug it off.

Sora: It doesn't matter. I had to say it. I don't have time to think about other people's feelings. Not when my own future depends on focus.

She kept repeating that thought until her house came into view.

Only, something was off.

Two cardboard boxes sat by the front steps, taped shut but worn at the corners, as though they'd been dragged there in a hurry.

Her stomach tightened.

When she opened the door, the sound of zippers and the rustle of folded clothes filled the air. Her mother was in the living room, crouched over an open suitcase, carefully arranging stacks of shirts inside. Another suitcase sat by the couch, half-filled.

For a moment, Sora just stood in the doorway, her hand frozen on the knob.

Sora: (hesitant) …Mom?

Her mother paused, glancing up with a calm face that didn't reach her eyes.

Mrs Fujimoto: Oh, you're home. Good. I was hoping to tell you before you found out this way.

Sora's heart lurched, her throat suddenly dry.

Sora: (voice low) …Tell me what?

Mrs Fujimoto stood up as she zipped up the bag she held in her hands and then looked at Sora's puzzled face.

Mrs. Fujimoto: (quietly) I'm leaving this house.

The words hit Sora like a slap. She blinked, her body refusing to move, her throat tightening around the hundreds of questions crashing through her head.

Her mother didn't wait for her to speak. She zipped the suitcase shut and lifted it, walking past Sora toward the door.

Sora: (snapping out of it) Wait... what do you mean you're leaving? Why?

Her voice cracked on the last word.

Mrs. Fujimoto froze for a moment, her shoulders trembling. When she turned, the calm face from earlier was gone, replaced with a look of raw, burning anger.

Mrs. Fujimoto: (voice rising) Because of you, Sora!

Sora's eyes widened.

Mrs. Fujimoto: Do you have any idea what it's like to live under the same roof as you? The way you shut everyone out, the way you treat people as if they're beneath you... it's suffocating. Even your school called!! Do you know what it feels like to hear that your own daughter isolates herself so much that people don't even want to be near her?!

Sora's heart pounded, but her mother wasn't finished.

Mrs. Fujimoto: (voice breaking) And Naomi…

At the sound of her sister's name, Sora flinched.

Mrs. Fujimoto: She's dead... because of you.

The words tore through her like glass.

Sora: (staggered) …What? You can't just... (voice shaking, rising) you can't just pin her death on me!

Mrs. Fujimoto: (steps forward, finger pointed) Don't you dare pretend your hands are clean! Your actions… your attitude… they affect everyone around you. Whether you realize it or not, this is what happens. Naomi's gone, and now this house feels like a coffin because of you!!!

Sora's breath hitched, her body trembling. She opened her mouth to speak, but nothing came out.

Mrs. Fujimoto: (coldly) Until you realize the damage you cause, don't you ever think about contacting me.

She dragged the suitcase to the door, her footsteps sharp against the floor. Without looking back, she opened it, stepped outside, and pulled it shut behind her.

The click of the lock echoed in the silence.

Sora stood frozen in the middle of the living room, her chest rising and falling in shallow breaths, the empty space where her mother had been only moments ago pressing down on her until it felt like the whole house was collapsing in.

Sora didn't move. Her eyes stayed fixed on the empty doorway, her mother's words still ringing, stabbing deeper with every echo.

"Because of you."

"Naomi's dead because of you."

Her hands trembled at her sides, curling into fists until her nails dug into her palms. Her throat burned, hot with the urge to scream, to cry, to demand her mother take it back.

But she didn't.

She swallowed hard, forcing her face into stillness, her jaw tightening until it ached as she wouldn't give her that satisfaction.

Sora climbed the stairs to her room with the same even pace, her back straight, her face unreadable. Each step echoed faintly, the silence of the house pressing down harder than ever before.

She pushed her bedroom door open and slipped inside, closing it with quiet care. Her hand stayed on the knob a second longer than necessary.

It was only when she let go that the tremor in her fingers became obvious. She clenched her hand into a fist, forcing it still.

Crossing the room, she sat down on the edge of her bed, her backpack sliding off her shoulders and landing on the floor with a soft thud. She stared at the blank wall in front of her, unblinking, as if she could keep her thoughts from unraveling by sheer will alone.

Minutes ticked by. Her jaw stayed tight, her expression stoic, but her grip on the bedsheets betrayed her; the faintest quiver, white knuckles against the fabric.

Finally, she whispered under her breath, so quiet even she could barely hear it.

Sora: If that's how it is… fine. I don't need anyone. I'll keep moving forward. Alone, if I have to.

The words were steady, but the way her eyes lingered, glossy in the dim light, told another story entirely.

*******

Elsewhere...

The neighborhood was quiet, the hum of cicadas filling the air as moving boxes cluttered the front porch. Inside, a young girl with long brown hair darted from room to room, her light brown hair bouncing with every step as she peeked into corners and pressed her palms against freshly painted walls.

After walking around the house, Chloe stood by the window, her hair tied up neatly, watching the sunlight bounce off the nearby rooftops. Her parents were still busy with the last of the unpacking, but when her mother noticed her standing there quietly, she called out.

Mrs. Tanaka: Chloe, sweetie, are you… okay with all this? The move, the new school, everything?

Chloe turned around, her expression calm but her eyes sparkling with determination.

Chloe: (smiles) It's fine, Mom. Really. I'll be going to a school that actually has the kind of swimming program I've been dreaming of. If this helps me get closer to becoming a professional swimmer… then moving is worth it.

Her father chuckled, dropping a box on the floor with a grunt.

Mr. Tanaka: That's our girl. Always chasing the water.

Mrs Tanaka laughed while Chloe smiled and continued to walk around their new home.

Later that night, Chloe sat at her desk in her freshly arranged bedroom, already laying out her new uniform, her swim gear folded neatly beside it. She touched the edge of her goggles with care, almost like a good-luck charm, before sliding them into her bag.

With all her things arranged and ready for tomorrow, she tucked herself into bed to try and sleep early so she could get up early for her new day at her new school.

But then she began to think about how the school swimming pool would look and the idea of swimming in it filled her with excitement and made it difficult for her to fall asleep.

Chloe: (whispering to herself) First day in a new school. I can't wait!!!

Finally, she was able to fall asleep.

The next morning, sunlight streamed through her curtains. She dressed quickly, tied her hair back, and slung her bag over her shoulder.

As she stepped through the school gates, surrounded by chatter and laughter of students rushing past, Chloe's chest swelled with quiet excitement and eager hope.

For her, this was the beginning of something.

Something big.

More Chapters