The Girl I Saved on the Train Turned Out to Be My Childhood Friend, Vol. 2 by Kennoji and Fly

The Girl I Saved on the Train Turned Out to Be My Childhood Friend, Vol. 2 by Kennoji and Fly

Author:Kennoji and Fly [FLY, KENNOJI]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Yen On
Published: 2022-05-18T00:00:00+00:00


Everyone in class was calling me Prez by the time midterms approached. I’d told them many times before I was only class representative, but no one seemed to care about technicalities. They just liked how Prez sounded.

“Class reps, you two round up the papers and bring them over to me later!” Waka, our homeroom teacher, waved at us as she left the classroom.

She’d given us career path survey papers first thing in the morning and said, “It’s fine if you don’t have any concrete plans, but it’s best to think about them now.”

“Make sure to think through what you want to be in the future! Will you go on to humanities? Sciences? Public? Private?” Fushimi said. It was a perfect imitation of Waka.

“What’re you gonna do, Fushimi?”

“I’ll go to college. That’s the plan for now.”

“Not going to do, you know, that?” I had to know.

“That’s another story. We’re talking about the bigger picture here, and I can handle both the big and little pics.”

I snorted.

I guess she still wants to keep that promise about attending college together. Not that I recall ever making it.

“But what if everything goes too well and you…start starring in TV dramas or movies?”

Fushimi thought for a bit, then grinned. “I’ll quit at the height of my popularity. Like at twenty-five or something. I’ll announce that I’m going back to my hometown to marry a regular person, then flee Tokyo.”

It sounded like she was genuinely dreaming of doing that.

“What a waste.”

“It’s not a waste!” Still beaming, she stared right at me. “I wonder what kind of person you’ll be when you grow up.”

“That’s what I want to know. Not like I have any big dreams like you,” I grumbled and sighed.

She suddenly pinched my cheek. “You’ve been making this face too much lately.”

“You think?”

“Yeah.”

I brushed her hand away and prepared for class. “We ordinary people have ordinary problems to think about.”

“…I think that’s true for anyone.”

“I guess.” I shrugged.

So she said, but I couldn’t even imagine her having any worries of the sort.



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