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All six of them gathered for study evenings, which really wasn't all that different from club activities. 'But walking talking sure is a lot more fun.'
At the moment Ryu was spending time with his sister. In their kitchen. Any other time he would have refused but this time they were standing here preparing food for ten. The club core, which meant even more time with Kuri, was coming.
Also expected were Sango-chan with Jirou-sempai and did they make a cute couple, or what?
More unexpected was that the motor mouth had announced his arrival together with Sakurchan. 'Talk about a mismatched couple. But whatever floats their boat I guess.'
"You're strangely happy idiot bro," Noriko said.
He had been silent for a while.
Behind them two large stashes of vegetables and meat threatened to merge into one. This was the main reason they were both so busy cleaning and chopping vegetables.
"Last time gang's getting together like this before exams," Ryu answered. "I like the club a lot more than I had thought."
Noriko cleaned out some s.h.i.+take and put them in a plastic bowl. When she put the bowl on the second table she looked at her brother. "You like the club or like Kuri?"
Ryu didn't even take the bait. He just continued cutting up salad. "Both," he smiled.
After another quarter of an hour they were ready to fire up two hot-pots, and shortly after that the doorbell rang. He saw them through the window. All eight at the same time. They must have taken the train together.
Noriko was busy making the tables so he went for the door.
"Welcome to our imperial residence," he greeted them to take some edge from the impact of the oversized house.
Urufu and Kuri failed that test badly. As in it was clear they hadn't even noticed how large the building was. 'What kind of places did you two call home?'
After that Ryu's home turned into a friendly chaos of hungry teenagers planning to spend the evening studying.
Soon the ingredients lay simmering in the two pots and hunger set the pace for the conversations. From the occasional word or grunt while they still gorged themselves to fragments of statements and then full sentences as gluttony gave way to satisfaction.
"That was," Sakurchan beamed, "exactly what I needed."
The motor mouth was still busy eating but even he stopped chewing as he watched her in amazement.
"You know I am able to talk. I just don't overdo it."
She had spoken a second consecutive sentence without letting anyone in.
"Did he do anything to you?"
"Should we beat him up?"
"Nori-kun what have you done to her?"
"Whoa, whoa, whoa! I in' o any'ing!" he said and looked for some sympathy. Talking with his mouth full of food did little for his cause. "'aguran, 'elp me!"
"Nori-kun, silence becomes you better," was Sakurchan's merciless reply to his plea.
That bought her a round of laughter from both tables.
'Well that's a good way to finish dinner.' "Books everyone. One table English and the other j.a.panese."
It was as Kuri would have said, time to get down to business. But not the way Urufu wanted to. They couldn't afford to do it right. At least not according to his standards. If they did they'd all fail their exams.
'Guys it's good to see you here. One last race before finals and then we break up for summer.'
***
And another failed exam. Summer break promised to be just as tedious as last year. With both an M SC and an MA, with a major in English literature for the preceding BA to boot, in his pocket the subjects themselves didn't present any problems. The j.a.panese language however was a major obstacle.
'English, I failed English. I could b.l.o.o.d.y teach the half trained monkey who poses as an English teacher here.' Ulf sighed again. Another week, another twenty kanji to master. At this rate it would take him a year before he would receive grades that at least remotely resembled his real knowledge.
But still, English. That hurt. According to the local tests his vocabulary ranged in the low one thousand, which was a far cry from the stiff sixteen thousand words every decently designed international test indicated.
What was worse. They weren't taught functionally useful English at all here. That would have to be rectified in the club. 'Another piece of evidence as to why dubbing television is bad for your mental health, and they're even worse off here than the Germans.'
Well, he could whine as much as he wanted. Complaining wouldn't yield any results. 'Next week, another twenty kanji. Two years, two thousand kanji. Ought to suffice.'