I seemed to be lying directly on the floor in the tatami room. Above my head was the low dining table, and right in front of me I could see Sensei’s legs. “Oh,” I said as I sat up.
“You’re awake?” Sensei said. The rain shutters as well as the doors were open. The night air was streaming into the room. It was a little cold. I could faintly make out the moon in the sky, swathed in a thick halo.
“Was I sleeping?” I asked.
“You were sleeping,” Sensei laughed. “You had quite a good rest there.”
I looked at the clock. It was just past twelve midnight.
“I didn’t sleep that much, did I? It was about an hour.”
“To sleep for an hour at someone else’s house is plenty,” Sensei laughed again. His face was redder than usual. I wondered if he had been drinking the whole time I was asleep.
What am I doing here? I asked.
Sensei opened his eyes wide. You don’t remember? The way you carried on, I want to go to your house, I want to go!?
Did I really? I said, lying back down on the tatami. I could feel the straw weave on my cheek. My tangled hair fanned out over the mat. I lay there, watching the night clouds roll by. I didn’t want to go on a trip with Kojima. The thought came clearly to mind. With the distinct feeling of the tatami weave on my cheek, I thought about the vague sense of discomfort I experienced when I was with Kojima—it was faint yet inconsolable.
“I’ll have tatami marks here,” I said, still sprawled on the floor.
“Where?” Sensei asked. He had come around the table to my side.
“Ah, I see. You’re really pressed up against it, aren’t you?” Sensei said, lightly touching my cheek. His fingers were cold. Sensei seemed bigger to me. Probably because I was looking up at him from below.
“Your cheek is warm, Tsukiko.”
He was still touching my cheek. The clouds were moving fast. At times the moon would be completely hidden behind the clouds, then the next moment part of it would appear again.
I’m drunk, that’s why I’m hot, I replied. Sensei was trembling slightly. I wondered if he was drunk too.
“Sensei, what if we went somewhere together?” I asked.
“Where would we go?”
“Maybe a delicious inn where they have ayu fish?”
“I can get all the ayu I need at Satoru’s place.” Sensei pulled his fingers away from my cheek.
“Then what about a remote mountainside hot-spring spa?”
“There’s no need to go all the way into the mountains when the public bath around the corner is just fine.” Sensei was next to me, sitting on his heels with his legs folded under him. He was no longer trembling. His posture was perfectly straight, as always.
I sat up. “Let’s go somewhere, just the two of us,” I said, looking Sensei in the eye.
“I’m not going anywhere,” he replied, staring straight back at me.
“No! I want us to go!”
I must have been drunk. I myself could only half follow what I was babbling on about. Although the truth was that I fully understood, my head seemed to be pretending I was only half-aware of my own words.
“Tsukiko, where on earth would we go?”
“We could go anywhere at all, as long as I’m with you,” I cried.
The night clouds were moving fast. The wind had picked up strength. The air was heavy with humidity.
“You’d better settle down, Tsukiko,” Sensei said lightly.
“I’m settled down enough.”
“It’s time to go home, you should go to bed.”
“I will not go home.”
“Don’t you think you’re being unreasonable?”
“I’m not the least bit unreasonable! What I mean is, Sensei, I love you!”
The moment I said this, my belly blazed with warmth.
I had screwed up. Grown-ups didn’t go around blurting out troublesome things to people. You couldn’t just blithely disclose something that would then make it impossible to greet them with a smile the next day.
But I had gone and said it. Because I wasn’t a grown-up. I never would be, not like Kojima. Sensei, I love you, I repeated one more time, as if to be doubly sure. Sensei just stared at me with astonishment.
• • •
Thunder rumbled off in the distance. After a little while, there was a flash among the clouds. It must have been lightning. A few seconds later, thunder could be heard again.
“This strange weather must be a result of the strange thing you said, Tsukiko,” Sensei murmured, leaning forward from the veranda.
It wasn’t strange, I retorted. Sensei gave a wry smile.
“It looks like we’ll have a bit of a storm.” Sensei put up the rain shutters with a loud clatter. They didn’t slide very well. He also closed the doors. The lightning was flashing wildly, and the thunder was growing near.
Sensei, I’m scared, I said, going to his side.
“There’s nothing to be scared of. It’s merely an electrical discharge phenomenon,” Sensei replied quite calmly while trying to avoid my encroachment. I scooted closer to him.
The truth is, I’m very frightened of thunder. I’m not trying to make something happen between us, really, this is just about being scared, I said through clenched teeth. The thunderstorm was already quite intense, lightning flashes followed the next moment by rumbling thunder. And it had started to rain—the sound of it driving against the rain shutters was loud.
“Tsukiko?” Sensei peered at me. I was sitting beside him, stiff as a board, with both hands over my ears.
“You really are terrified, aren’t you?”
I nodded silently. Sensei stared at me solemnly, and then he began to laugh.
“My dear, you are a strange young lady,” he said, laughing gleefully.
Come over here, let me hold you. Sensei drew me close. He smelled like alcohol. The sweet smell of saké wafted from Sensei’s chest. Still sitting on his heels, he laid my torso across his knees and embraced me tightly.
Sensei, I said, in a voice that sounded like a sigh.
Tsukiko, he replied. His voice was extremely clear; he sounded very much like himself. Children think the strangest things, don’t they? Because anyone who is afraid of thunder is nothing more than a child.
Sensei laughed loudly. His laughter reverberated with the rumbling thunder.
Sensei, I meant it when I said I love you. I spoke these words as I lay atop Sensei’s knees, but he didn’t hear me at all—my words were lost amid the thunder and Sensei’s booming laughter.
The thunderstorm grew more and more intense. The rain beat down in torrents. Sensei was laughing. And here I was, bewildered, lying across Sensei’s knees. What would Kojima say, if he could see us now?
It was all somehow absurd. Me declaring my love for Sensei to his face, Sensei taking it rather completely in stride yet without responding to my declaration, the sudden outbreak of the thunderstorm, the increasingly oppressive humidity in the room now that the rain shutters were closed—everything seemed like it was part of a dream.
Sensei, am I dreaming? I asked.
It certainly seems like it, doesn’t it? he replied merrily.
If this is a dream, when will I wake up?
Hmm, I can’t say.
I wish I didn’t have to wake up.
But if this is a dream, then we must wake up sometime.
A huge crack of resounding thunder immediately followed a bolt of lightning, and my body stiffened. Sensei rubbed my back.
I don’t want to wake up, I said again.
That’s fine, Sensei replied.
The rain beat down hard on the roof. I kept my body rigid atop Sensei’s knees as he calmly rubbed my back.
The Island, Part 1
And so it was that, after all, I found myself h
ere.
Sensei’s briefcase sat in a corner of the room. The same briefcase he always carried.
“All of your things fit into that briefcase?” I had asked him while we were en route on the train. Sensei nodded.
“This briefcase is more than big enough for two days’ change of clothes.”
I see, I said. Sensei’s hands lightly held the briefcase on his knees as he gave himself over to the rocking of the train. Both Sensei and the briefcase swayed back and forth in short, quick motions.
We rode the train together, we took the ferry together, we climbed the hill on the island together, and we came to this small guesthouse together.
Had Sensei given in and decided to go on a trip because of all my pleading that night—the night of the thunderstorm that heralded the rainy season? Or had he made up his mind about it, had a sudden change of heart, sometime after the storm had passed, while he lay quietly in the room next to where I too lay quietly alone on the extra bedding that Sensei had carefully spread out for me? Or was it that, for no particular reason and without any motivation, Sensei was seized with an urge to travel all of a sudden?
“Tsukiko, would you like to go to an island with me next Saturday and Sunday?” Sensei had said out of the blue. We were on our way home from Satoru’s place. The street was wet from the ongoing rain. Several puddles of water caught the reflection of the streetlights and they seemed to glow white in the night. Sensei didn’t bother trying to avoid walking in the puddles; he just kept going steadily ahead. I tried to sidestep them one by one, and so I weaved randomly this way and that, as opposed to Sensei’s swift progress.
“What?” I responded.
“Didn’t you suggest that we go on an excursion the other night?”
“An excursion?” I repeated Sensei’s words like an idiot.
“There’s an island that I’ve visited from time to time in the past.”
Sensei mentioned that he had often traveled to this island. For some kind of reason, he muttered.
What was the reason? I asked, but Sensei did not reply. Instead he quickened his step.
“If you’re busy, Tsukiko, I will go on my own.”
“I’ll come, I’ll come,” I replied hurriedly.
And so it was that I found myself here.
On the island where Sensei had traveled “for a certain reason.” At a small guesthouse. Sensei carried his same briefcase, and I carried a brand-new suitcase I had bought for the occasion. The two of us. Together. To be sure, we had separate rooms. Sensei had strongly suggested that I take a room with a view of the sea, while he took a room facing the island’s interior hillside.
No sooner had I deposited my luggage in the alcove of my seaside room than I was knocking on Sensei’s door. Knock-knock. It’s your mother. Open the door, dear little goats. I am not the wolf. Look how white my paw is.
Sensei simply opened the door, without bothering to look at my paw first.
“Would you like some tea?” Sensei grinned as he invited me in. I smiled back.
Sensei’s room seemed slightly smaller than mine, even though it was the same six-mat size. Perhaps because the window looked out on the mountain.
“Why don’t we go to my room? The view of the sea is lovely,” I said, but Sensei shook his head.
“A man mustn’t barge into a lady’s room.”
I see, I replied. You may barge in, if you like, I was about to add, but I didn’t think that Sensei would find that amusing, so I stopped myself.
I could not imagine what Sensei had in mind when he invited me on this trip. His face had betrayed nothing when I agreed to go along with him, and on the train he had been exactly the same Sensei as always. Even here, now, sipping tea, his manner was no different from at Satoru’s place when the counter was full and we ended up sitting across from each other at a small table.
Yet still, here we were, the two of us.
“Would you like another cup of tea?” I asked cheerfully.
“I would indeed, please,” Sensei replied. Even more jauntily, I refilled the teapot with hot water. I could hear seagulls crying out from the mountainside. The seagulls’ calls sounded rambunctious and rowdy. They seemed to be flying back and forth and all around the island during this hour of evening calm.
“We’ll do a circuit,” Sensei said as he stood in the guesthouse’s foyer putting on his shoes. When I went to put on a pair of sandals that had the name of the guesthouse written in marker, Sensei paused.
“This island is surprisingly hilly, with rough terrain,” he said, pointing to my shoes that were placed neatly in the shoe cupboard. They had just the slightest heel. When I wore them, the top of my head reached Sensei’s eyes.
“But my shoes aren’t fit for walking hills,” I replied, and Sensei frowned faintly. So faintly that no one else would have noticed. However, now even the subtlest changes in Sensei’s facial expressions did not escape me.
“Sensei, please don’t make that face.”
“What face?”
“Like you’ve seen something that bothers you.”
“There’s nothing in particular bothering me, Tsukiko.”
“Something’s bothering you.”
“That’s not the case.”
“No, no matter what anyone else says, I think there’s something bothering you!”
It had devolved into a silly argument. I slipped on a pair of the guesthouse sandals and followed after Sensei. Empty-handed, Sensei wore a vest, his posture stick-straight as he walked along slowly.
The evening calm had passed and a light breeze had begun to blow. There were cumulonimbus clouds along the horizon on the beach. The sun, about to set into the sea, bathed all of the clouds in a pink light.
“How long does it take to circle the island?” I asked, out of breath from the hill. Just like that time we went mushroom hunting with Satoru and Toru, Sensei was not the least bit winded. He climbed the island’s steep slopes without any difficulty.
“At a quick pace, about an hour.”
“At a quick pace?”
“At Tsukiko’s pace, it would probably take about three hours.”
“Three hours?”
“You ought to exercise more, Tsukiko.”
Sensei just kept steadily walking along. I gave up trying to keep in step with him, stopping midway up the hill to look at the sea. The setting sun was getting closer to the water. The cumulonimbus clouds were deepening to a flaming vermilion. I wondered where we were. What the hell was I doing here, on a hillside in some strange fishing town, surrounded by the sea? Sensei’s figure up ahead of me grew more distant. His back seemed somehow cold and remote. Despite the fact that we had come on this trip together—even if it was only a two-day trip—I felt as if the person moving steadily away from me, Sensei, was a stranger.
“Don’t worry, Tsukiko,” Sensei turned around to face me.
What? I said from down below on the slope. Sensei gave a little wave of his hand.
“It’s only a little bit farther from the top of this hill.”
Is the island really that small? Climbing this hill puts us all the way around the island? I asked. Sensei waved his hand again.
“Tsukiko, don’t be absurd. How could that possibly be?”
“But you said . . . ”
“We couldn’t make it all the way around with someone as out-of-shape as you along, and wearing those sandals, no less.”
He was still stuck on the sandals. Hurry up! Don’t just stand there! Sensei hastened me along as I held my head high.
“Where the hell are we going anyway?”
“Stop grumbling now, and come up here.”
Sensei had swiftly climbed the slope. The last part of it was even steeper, as it circled around the hill. I could no longer see Sensei. Hastily I slid my feet farther into the sandals and followed after h
im. Sensei, please wait for me. I’m on my way. I’m coming now, I said as I followed him.
When I reached the top of the slope, I found myself at the summit. It was spacious and wide open. There were tall, dense trees along the path that continued up from the slope. Several houses were nestled among the trees, forming a hamlet. Each home was bordered by small plots in which cucumbers and tomatoes were being grown. Beside the fields were chicken coops, and I could hear the serene sound of clucking from beyond the rough chicken wire.
Past the hamlet, there was a small marsh. Perhaps because it was getting dark around us, the marsh was immersed in a deep green. Sensei was standing there, waiting for me.
“Tsukiko, this way.” Backlit by the setting sun, his face and figure looked pitch-black. I couldn’t see Sensei’s expression at all. I walked over by his side, dragging my feet in the sandals.
The marsh was covered with duckweed and water hyacinths and the like. Dozens of water striders were skimming lightly along its surface. Now that I was standing next to Sensei, I could make out his face. His mien was placid, like the surface of the marsh.
“Shall we go on?” Sensei said as he stepped forward. It was a little marsh. The road circled all the way around it, now with a slight descent. Instead of tall trees, it was bordered with more shrubs. The road narrowed, the paving patchy in places.
“We’re here.” It was now virtually unpaved, just bare ground. Sensei went along the dirt road slowly. I followed him, my sandals making a pitter-patter.
A small cemetery appeared before us.
The gravestones near the entrance were tidily maintained but, further inside, the spindle-shaped tombstones and mossy ancient-looking graves were overgrown with weeds. Trampling the knee-high grasses, Sensei proceeded farther into the graveyard.
“Sensei, how far are you going?” I called after him. Sensei turned back and smiled. An extremely kind smile.
“It’s not far. Look, here it is,” Sensei said, as he crouched before a small gravestone. This one was not quite as moss-covered as the other old graves near it, but still, the small marker was swathed in a damp green. There was a chipped bowl in front of it, about half-full of what must have been rainwater. A horsefly buzzed about, flitting around Sensei’s and my head.
Strange Weather in Tokyo Page 11