Chapter Eighteen: Building Contact:
-July 1st, 2011-
6:00 p.m.
Tai and Lenard
eyed each other across the table. Tai lowered his chopsticks.
“How are your
counselling sessions going?” he asked.
“Good,” Lenard
said. “Dr. Nakajima wants you to come in with me for the next session.”
“What time?” Tai
asked.
Lenard looked
down at his bowl. “Ten.”
“Alright, I can
take the day off.”
“Thank you.”
“How are you
doing in Japan?”
“Huh?”
“How have you
been since we moved to Japan?”
“Oh. Fine. I’m
doing fine. Why do you ask?”
“Just asking.
You seem kind of lonely.”
Lenard raised
his eyebrow. “Lonely?”
Tai set down his
bowl and chopsticks. “I enjoy being around you, don’t get me wrong. It’s just
that we keep hanging around each other all the time.”
“What are you
saying?” Lenard took a sip of his Pepsi.
“You need other
friends too.”
“But I don’t
know that many people in this country,” Lenard said.
“That’s the
point,” Tai said. “You meet new people and connect with them. You’ll need all of
the support you can get if you are going to go through this transition.”
“But I have you
and your granddad.”
“You still need
more.”
“I don’t want
too many people surrounding me.”
“And that’s
fine. But it doesn’t hurt to have more people to talk to.”
“Easy for you to
say,” Lenard muttered. “You make friends easily.”
“And you can too
if your tried,” Tai pointed out. His roommate looked up with a grim expression
on his face.
“I mean it,” the
Japanese man said. He took a sip of his tea.
“In fact,” Tai
added. “I propose a little challenge towards you.” His roommate eyed him.
“A challenge?”
he asked.
“Yes.”
“Go on…”
Tai set his
empty cup next to his bowl. “Meet and talk to five people before you begin your
transition.”
Lenard narrowed
his eyes. “And what would I get out of this if I complete the challenge?”
“Name your
prize.”
The American man
took a moment to think about it. He looked the other man in the eye.
“Take me out on
a date,” he said. Tai blinked at first.
“You sure?” he
asked.
“Yes,” Lenard
said. “After my transition, of course.” His roommate nodded.
“Alright,” Tai
said. “A date it is. But you have to keep your end of the bargain and make
friends.”
“Yeah, yeah,”
Lenard said. Both men shook hands.
After dinner, Tai cleaned up around the table and Lenard did the dishes.