Waiting at the train station for Ayu, you're not exactly sure what to expect. After all, it's been almost fifteen years since you last saw her, back when the two of you were in elementary school. She used to live next door to you and the two of you were close friends, in the way that only little kids who live next door to each other can be.
When your mother suddenly asked you last week if you remembered her, all those memories came flooding back. The little tomboyish girl with the pigtails who always seemed to have skinned knees and a smudge of dirt somewhere on her face - she was always dragging you into some adventure or other, whether it was climbing onto the roof of that old abandoned house down the street or throwing rocks at a hornet's nest. They usually turned out badly, but she always made life interesting. And so, when her family moved away, you quickly found yourself missing her. The two of you promised to keep in touch by email, and you did for a while, but eventually that came to an end. You can't remember if it was you or her who stopped replying, but whoever it was, you never heard from her again.
Until your mother's question, you hadn't thought of her for years. You asked her why she was asking all of a sudden, and she told you that Ayu will be staying at your house for about a few days.
"She plays volleyball for her college," your mother explained. "Her team is playing against Kanazawa University next week, so they've been looking for people to billet the players. Ayu's mother asked if she could stay with us, and of course I said we'd be delighted to have her. I thought you two would be able to catch up on old times."
And so now you're outside the station waiting for her train to arrive. You'd hoped for a relaxing summer holiday back home doing much not at all, but the thought of seeing Ayu again is kind of exciting. Volleyball? You knew she'd end up doing something sporty. That girl could climb any of the trees in the street in ten seconds flat, even if she did sometimes fall out of them.
You wonder how you're supposed to recognise her. All you remember about her is her long black hair and her wide eyes that always had a mischievous gleam in them, but that's not really enough to go on, is it? If she was with her team-mates, it would have been easier, but since she's travelling here alone you'll just have to hope she hasn't changed much.
The train arrives and a bunch of people get off. You wait around, feeling a bit awkward looking at each of the young women coming out through the turnstiles. You see one girl about the right age, with long black hair, and she turns and smiles at you. You raise your hand, a smile flashing onto your face, when a guy come past you from behind and hugs her.
Not her, then. You feel a bit disappointed - she was really pretty.
The crowd thins out. Maybe she caught the wrong train or missed this one? You get your phone out and check it. No missed calls or messages.
When you look back up you see some consternation at the turnstiles. Someone is trying to wrestle a number of bags over them.
You walk up, curious about what's happening. Who the hell travels with that much luggage on a train?
One bag comes flying over the turnstile and lands near your feet. It's a sport bag.
No.
There's some soft feminine swearing and another two bags join the first. You're still staring at them when their owner, having struggled through the turnstiles themselves, walks up to collect them.
You look up... and then up a bit more.
The girl standing near you is easily over six foot. She's wearing a tracksuit, but even so you can tell that's she's really built underneath it; not muscly so much as that firm, powerful body of an athlete. She's sweating as she runs a hand back through her short, black hair.
"Sorry," she says. "Give me a sec and I'll get all this crap out of your way."
She bends down to pick up the sports bag nearest to you and when she looks up she finally sees you for the first time.
Her eyes are large and dark and she has a scattering of freckles across her nose. But it's when she smiles, a wide, mischievous grin like a naughty little kid's, that you realise it's her.
"Ayu?" you ask, scarcely able to believe that this is the little girl you used to play with.
Her grin, impossibly, widens some more and she nods.
"Hey! Long time no see, huh?" She looks you up and down as she hefts the bag nearest to her onto her shoulder and scoops up a second. You realise you're just standing there staring like an idiot, so you grab up the third bag - with difficulty. It feels like it's full of rocks. Luckily you've parked not too far away otherwise you probably would have crippled yourself.
Despite your shock at her transformation, you realise you should be making conversation, so you ask her how the trip was.
Ayu chuckles. "I forgot how small the seats on the train are. I mean, I'm used to having no leg room on a plane, but..." She sighs. "I ended up walking up and down the aisle the whole trip. I think everyone in the carriage thought I was obsessive compulsive or something."
As you help her put her luggage into the car, you feel her eyes on you again, looking you up and down again.
"You know, you haven't changed a bit," she says.
You laugh. "I'm a bit taller."
Ayu laughs as well. "Well, yeah. Just a bit. I think I must have stolen some of your height, though."
It's a gentle dig, and not an unkind one. The look on her face is strangely shy, though, as if she's worried she might have taken things too far.
You smile at her to reassure her and she smiles back, relieved. It's like nothing has changed. She used to tease you all the time when you were kids, too.
When she gets in the car she fumbles around under the seat trying to push it back to accommodate her legs. You watch her do it with some amusement. The frustration on her face is surprisingly childish, and you realise you can see a lot of the little girl you knew in her: the way she's biting her lip and muttering under her breath, she could be that little pigtailed girl again, trying to break the chained door to that old, abandoned house open.
She catches you staring. "Hey, you know how bad I am with this stuff. Are you going to sit there and laugh at me or are you going to help me?"
Red-faced, you lean across and do a bit of fumbling yourself. But you soon find the catch and Ayu slides the seat back as far as it will go. Your car isn't exactly small, but there's not a huge amount of space left for her. Those legs are pretty long.
You find yourself staring at them as well, and so you quickly turn away and start the car.