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Somewhere Among

Page 14

by Annie Donwerth-Chikamatsu


  the day after

  New Year’s decorations go up

  along the way

  to the station

  outside shops

  at gates

  branches of pine

  welcome good fortune.

  The peace doll sits on top of

  postal cards stacked

  ready for addressing

  New Year’s wishing.

  I have my NASA pen!

  OLD ROUTINE WITH CHANGES

  I know the routine of this time of year

  with Obaachan and Jiichan

  cleaning from rafters to tatami

  from soles to pedals

  from garden stones to gate.

  This year Jiichan will rest.

  This year Obaachan lets Mom

  and me

  help prepare food

  to last the first three days of the new year.

  Papa arrives in a taxi

  with our electric carpet rolled and

  hanging out the window.

  He vacuums the tatami in Great-Grandfather’s room,

  rolls out the carpet, and plugs it in.

  Our futons will be warmer at night.

  Obaachan places my favorite New Year’s food,

  candied chestnuts with sweet potatoes,

  along with other not-so-favorite food (dried sardines)

  in lacquer boxes decorated with golden

  plum blossom, bamboo, and pine,

  the luckiest combination.

  Looks like

  sounds like

  feels like

  a happy home.

  NEW YEAR’S EVE 2001

  Three days of

  watching TV (screened for Jiichan)

  feasting

  receiving greeting cards

  begins with

  the Red and White Song Battle on TV,

  noodles at midnight,

  the shrine bell gong on TV,

  money envelopes (small change this year),

  and

  the first dream of the new year.

  A dream hopefully of

  an eggplant, a hawk, or Mount Fuji.

  All three is the luckiest dream.

  Jiichan and I are lucky already;

  our favorite singers, the white team,

  won the song battle.

  BROKEN HEARTS

  TV and the newspaper

  show us

  the fallen towers

  the hollow field

  the gaping war department—

  the rubble

  the scars

  on millions of hearts.

  It’s difficult to screen everything for Jiichan

  until his heart is strong again.

  LOOKING BACK

  I show Mom and Papa the grade paper.

  and they congratulate me on Teacher’s comments:

  Ema worked hard

  and improved.

  After hearing the Masa story

  Papa says he agrees with Mom,

  we must talk to Teacher,

  Masa, and his mother

  after the holiday

  and says,

  “Bullies need to know they are seen.”

  I agree.

  But I am not looking forward to it.

  AND AHEAD

  The new year is already here

  when Nana calls with spring visit plans.

  I tell Grandpa Bob I don’t remember

  my new year’s first dream.

  He tells me

  no matter what

  New Year’s is a time to think about

  possibilities,

  beginning again,

  or starting something new.

  “Think with ‘future hope’ in mind,” he says.

  I can hear him smiling

  and later, feasting,

  Jiichan raises a slice of lotus root to his eye

  squints through one of the holes

  and says,

  “I see a better year ahead.”

  He does this every new year, but this year

  he is looking at Miki sleeping on a cushion.

  TRADITIONAL SECOND-DAY TASK

  Papa watches over me

  while I prepare

  paper

  brush

  inkstone

  ink stick, and

  water pot

  poto poto

  su su su

  against the stone

  I rub stick into water into ink.

  With the school practice paper as a guide

  stroke by stroke

  BRIGHT HEART

  appears on the paper.

  I hang it to dry

  next to a scroll of painted sparrows.

  The first day back at school,

  we will hang this message

  in the hallway

  to remind us

  to polish our hearts

  with kindness toward one another.

  BRIGHTER HEARTS

  I put the peace doll

  on top of the TV

  to remind us

  a new year

  a new beginning

  a new chance has come

  to try better

  to do better

  to be better.

  While listening to the story of the doll,

  Jiichan’s eyes sparkle.

  JANUARY 2, 2002

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  Gratitude to Daddy, Carol Baker, Mrs. Eldridge and Mr. Richard Jenkins, Nancy Kirwan Rinehart, and Jan Oppie for early writing encouragement; SCBWI-Japan, Kent Brown and The Highlights Foundation, Virginia Euwer Wolff, Sonya Sones, and Linda Oatman High for guidance; the Highlights Novel in Verse Sisterhood, especially Debra Rook, Carol Coven Grannick, Liz Heywood, Kathy Mirkin, and Sandra Armistead Havriluk for encouragement and guidance; Yoko Yoshizawa, Naomi Kojima, Gerri Sorrells, Chiyo Hayashi, and the Chikamatsu family for clarity.

  Thank you Holly McGhee for giving this story a chance, nuturing it, and finding it a home. Thank you, Courtney Stevenson. And to Caitlyn Dlouhy, who gave this story a place in the world along with Sonia Chaghatzbanian, Clare McGlade, and Elizabeth Blake-Linn at Caitlyn Dlouhy Books, Atheneum, my deepest gratitude and admiration.

  ANNIE DONWERTH-CHIKAMATSU greets Mt. Fuji each day despite the obstructed view from her roof garden. Her work has been published in Hunger Mountain, Highlights, Skipping Stones, YARN, and other magazines. She received a grant from the Highlights Foundation to attend the Chautauqua workshop in 2009. Somewhere Among won the 2013 Writers’ League of Texas manuscript contest in the middle-grade category and is her debut novel.

  A CAITLYN DLOUHY BOOK

  Atheneum Books for Young Readers

  Simon & Schuster • New York

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  This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real places are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and events are products of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or places or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  Text copyright © 2016 by Annie Donwerth-Chikamatsu

  Jacket illustration copyright © 2016 by Alessandro Gottardo

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  The text for this book is set in Adobe Caslon Pro.

  CIP data for this book is available from the Library of Congress.

  ISBN 978-1-4814-3786-8

  ISBN 978-1-4814-3788-2 (eBook)

 

 

 


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