Chapter 1
by NovelFicsChapter 1 — 001: Who Says Youth Cannot Return?
Tokyo, October 1980 — Showa Year 55.
There was not the slightest hint of autumn. The lingering heat of the “autumn tiger” still raged, and the nine-o’clock morning sun was no weaker than noon.
A young nurse, beads of sweat forming on her forehead, hurried to a hospital room. Through the small window in the door, she saw a thin young man inside packing his belongings.
She pushed the door open.
“Naoki-san, already packing? Have you finished the discharge procedures?”
“Yes, everything is completed. Thank you very much for taking care of me.”
The reply came in perfectly fluent Japanese. Turning around, Nagayama Naoki, pale-faced and carrying a small bag, gave the nurse a slight bow.
“There are only a few things left to take home. I’ve finished packing.”
The entire process unfolded naturally, like a program engraved into his body.
“Please take good care of yourself. Don’t give up, Naoki-san,” the nurse reminded him.
“Yes. I’m sorry for causing you trouble.”
Walking out of the hospital, Nagayama Naoki stood still for a moment, staring at the street bathed in brilliant sunlight. Japanese signboards, direction markers, and traditional architecture filled his vision, weaving together the atmosphere of a foreign land.
He had been hospitalized for three days, yet he still could not fully accept the fact that he was now living in Tokyo during the Showa era.
In his previous life, he had been born in the 1990s. Orphaned, he managed to complete a university degree with the help of kind sponsors. After graduation, he became a programmer at a factory and began a brutal “007” work life—working from midnight to midnight, seven days a week—burning his life away with a single goal: earn enough money before being laid off at thirty-five to secure financial freedom for the rest of his life.
After that, he planned to settle beside Erhai Lake in Dali and live a peaceful life of poetry and distant horizons.
Unfortunately, just as he was about to achieve that goal, a sudden episode of heart palpitations struck one early morning. When he opened his eyes again, he had become Nagayama Naoki and arrived in the Showa era.
He walked along the street to the train station. After several unsteady stops, he returned to Nakano Ward. Following the route preserved in his memory, weaving through turns and narrow streets, he arrived at a small alley in an old neighborhood. At the very end stood an aging two-story Western-style house.
This was where Nagayama Naoki lived.
The Makino residence.
The building had two floors. The first floor served as the landlord’s living space and kitchen. The owner was a widowed elderly woman whose children seemed to be studying abroad. To ease financial pressure, she rented out the four rooms on the second floor. For an additional fee, tenants could also use the downstairs kitchen.
When Naoki entered, Mrs. Makino was busy in the kitchen. She looked up.
“Ah, Nagayama-san, you’re back.”
“Yes, Mrs. Makino, I’m home.”
In memory, conversations between the taciturn original Nagayama Naoki and his landlady were always this brief. This time, however, she continued.
“Nagayama-san, are you feeling better now?”
“Yes. The doctor said I’m fine. I just need to eat lightly. Thank you for your concern.”
“Take care of your health. You mustn’t give up on life just because your idol got married. Momoe Yamaguchi certainly wouldn’t want her fans abandoning their lives.”
Her tone carried rare seriousness.
It wasn’t me who tried to die over an idol’s marriage, Naoki complained silently.
“Yes, from now on I’ll live properly. I’m sorry for troubling you.”
He answered sincerely while bowing halfway in apology. The motions flowed effortlessly; bowing had clearly become bodily memory.
After apologizing, he went upstairs, took out his key, and opened the door. A sour smell of stale beer rushed toward him.
The room was small. The entryway was cramped; immediately to the right stood a kitchenette. A frying pan lay tilted in the sink, and a kettle rested on the gas stove beside it. To the left was a tiny bathroom.
After changing his shoes and stepping further inside, he entered a single open space serving as dining room, living room, and bedroom combined. The bed was stored inside a closet, making the room feel slightly less crowded. In one corner sat an old television and an electric fan. Several empty beer cans were scattered around the low table, along with remnants of vomit.
So that was the source of the smell.
Naoki immediately opened the window to air out the room. Sunlight streamed in, stirring faint dust in the air. He tidied up briefly—bagging trash, sweeping and mopping the floor. Despite his body not yet fully recovered, cold sweat soon broke out.
Only then did he realize he had not bathed for three days. An itch spread across his skin. Grabbing clean clothes, he headed straight into the bathroom.
After showering, he looked at the figure in the mirror.
Not a young man—more like a teenager.
Beneath fluffy hair was a pale, youthful face. A broad forehead, defined yet moderate brow ridge, sword-like eyebrows framing unexpectedly gentle peach-blossom eyes, a straight nose bridge, and a well-shaped jawline.
Quite handsome—aside from a slightly timid expression.
About 175 centimeters tall, thin, with little muscle. Wearing a loose shirt, he looked like a clothes hanger. Clearly malnourished and long unaccustomed to exercise.
Yet feeling the vitality inside this young body, Nagayama Naoki could not help but smile.
The lumbar strain of his thirties, bulging sciatic nerve, nearsighted eyes, growing belly, cervical spine problems—everyone, thank you for taking care of me. Goodbye.
Do not waste the daylight; youth does not return.
So this counts as returning to youth.
He laughed.
After washing his clothes, he filled the kettle with water and set it to boil on the gas stove.
Then he sat down, suddenly unsure what he should do next.
Looking around, he saw posters of Momoe Yamaguchi on the wall, her records beside the television, and newspapers on the table reporting her retirement announcement. This had been one of the triggers for the original owner of this body swallowing sleeping pills with beer a few days earlier: on October 5, at a concert held at the Nippon Budokan in Tokyo, Momoe Yamaguchi had announced her marriage and retirement from show business.
The original owner had truly been an extreme fan.
But the current Nagayama Naoki felt little toward her. All of the former owner’s memories were like movies he had once watched—familiar scenes stirred recognition, yet a spectator’s distance always separated his inner self from reality.
The Showa era.
China should now be in the early 1980s—early Reform and Opening-Up, Journey to the West, Hong Kong pop culture, Leslie Cheung, Anita Mui, Teresa Teng…
What else? Generational gap—someone born in the ’90s didn’t know much.
Could he ever return?
The original owner was a genuine Japanese citizen, apparently with some connection to the yakuza. A poor working-class laborer who had only graduated high school. Even going abroad would be difficult.
What existed in Showa-era Japan?
The coming bubble economy? The dominance of the Yamaguchi-gumi? The legendary Showa-era beauties often seen online—Seiko Matsuda, Akina Nakamori, Shizuka Kudo…
No matter how one summarized it, this era seemed full of opportunity. An age where working a little harder might lead to sudden wealth.
In his previous life, he had worked tirelessly in a 007 schedule, still unable to guarantee buying a home in a major city, planning to retreat to Dali after being laid off.
Given a second life, the decision was clear.
First, become rich.
Then live the life of poetry and distant horizons.

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