In the evening, after Taro had voted for the next governor of Tokyo, we went to a yakitori restaurant near the station. It turned out, though, that a lot of food supplies hadn’t been delivered because of the bad weather, and almost everything I wanted to order was unavailable. Taro surprised me by eating the leeks in the negima skewers, rather than picking them out from between the pieces of chicken as he’d used to do.
When we got back to the Pig Flat, I suggested that since the place was so cramped, I should take the green armchair off him. I knew that Taro wouldn’t bother to put up a struggle about this, and, as I thought, he replied, “Yeah, fine, if you want.” As I made the arrangements with the delivery service to have it transported to Nagoya, I had the thought that the next time I saw Taro, not only would he not be living here, but this room, along with the rest of the flat, would no longer exist.
The day after I went back home, Taro began searching for a new flat on estate sites. He knew he had to hurry and find somewhere to live, but he had no idea of the sort of place he wanted to move to, or where. Clicking on the SIMILAR RESULTS images and adverts that popped up in his search results, he found himself looking at a whole house in a town called Teppomachi in Yamagata Prefecture, way out in the countryside in the north of Japan. The picture showed a smallish, two-storey house, surrounded by banks of snow.
Taro realized that, if he wanted to, he could live somewhere like this. That was to say, he could choose a place he’d never been, that he knew nothing about whatsoever. He didn’t know if he’d be able to keep living there or not, but for what it was worth, he could at least move in. Move into a house like this listing with a bedroom that looked perfect for lying around in. He clicked on the various images of the house, one by one, and saw last of all a photo of the bathroom. Seeing the walls with their chequered black and white tiles, Taro decided that he’d put off searching for a flat.
A month later, I was back in Nagoya. I finished work for the day and came back to my fifth-floor flat. Sitting in my green armchair, one half of a matching pair that had once belonged to the Morios and was now shared by Nishi and me, I drank a can of beer. I wasn’t concerned about my alcohol intake like Taro was, but I had noticed recently that my handwriting was beginning to resemble my father’s. The older I got, the more my writing looked like a row of little drunk people walking. When I caught sight of a note I’d scribbled a while back, I would sometimes be sure that my father had written it. My father hadn’t taught me to write, so why my writing should gradually grow to look like his was puzzling. When I’d visited Taro’s flat and caught sight of his handwriting, I’d seen that it didn’t look like either of our parents’.
I opened up my laptop, and after doing the usual survey of my Twitter feed and the blogs I always looked at, checking up on how my friends who lived nearby and a cat that belonged to someone in Toronto I’d never met were doing that day, I put on a DVD that I’d rented. It was a drama based on events of the Second World War. After I’d been watching it for thirty minutes, it dawned on me that I’d seen it before, some time ago.
Stuffing my hand down between the arm and the seat of the chair, I brushed against something hard. I dug it out, and a small white object like a pebble fell onto the floor. It was a tooth—a baby tooth, with no roots. It looked like a front tooth, but whether it was top or bottom, and what number it was, I had no idea.
I remembered something people used to say when I was a kid: throw your bottom teeth into the sky, and bury your top ones in the ground. It definitely could have been a top tooth, and even if it was a bottom one, I figured that if I threw it into the sky it would come tumbling down anyway, so I decided to bury it, and stepped outside to find a good place. The daytime had been freezing cold and the wind strong enough to knock over the bicycles parked in the street, but the evening air was very mild.
When I’d looked at the weather forecast earlier that evening, it had showed that the temperature in Tokyo was almost ten degrees different from that in Osaka. The line dividing the cold of a few hours ago from this warm air must have moved over the place where I was now, midway between those two cities.
I left my apartment and walked down the hill. For a long time, I’d fantasized about living in a place with a hill. I liked the sound of it, and that was in fact why I’d chosen my current flat. The hill even had a flight of steps in the middle. When the person from the estate agency had first brought me here, I’d thought that flight of steps strangely touching. It had seemed to me like something right out of a comic book.
Going down the hill, I remembered Nishi’s latest comic strip, which Taro had turned me on to. The frames had popped up one by one on the screen of my laptop. The strip recounted a Chinese folk tale about a heavy-drinking fisherman who shared his saké with the river and had his kindness repaid by the ghost of someone who had drowned there, updated and set in modern-day Tokyo. Nishi’s illustrations were cute. Her people were often a bit snake-like.
Walking beside a bus lane, I passed someone going the other way with their dog. It was a kind of dog I’d never seen before. Its face looked like that of a collie, but its body was small, and it had short legs.
Its owner was talking to it the whole way. “Are you tired? Can you keep going? Do you want to go home? No, you want to keep walking, do you?”
Six hours after I went out to find a place to bury the tooth, Taro climbed over the railing of his balcony and entered the courtyard with the no entry sign. It seemed as though the wind had finally died down. He’d turned off the lights in his flat before coming out, so he had to squint in order to see in the darkness. He piled up the concrete blocks that were placed in the corner of the courtyard and used them to get a leg up onto the wall. On his back, he carried a cloth bag with the things he needed, a strap over each of his shoulders. With a foot against the wall, he turned around and saw that there was one flat with its lights on—the second from the left on the first floor. Taro had seen Mrs Snake at lunchtime that day, for the first time in two weeks. She had been to the exhibition Taro had given her the ticket for, and had been given a special prize for being the 10,000th visitor. She seemed really pleased about this, which also made Taro pleased. Would she be awake at a time like this? Maybe she was the opposite of Taro, and couldn’t sleep unless the lights were on.
Taro climbed over the wall, and came down on the side of the sky-blue house. The palms of his hands stung slightly where he’d scraped them on the dried vines that were now all that remained of the ivy. He walked slowly along the gap between the wall and the house. The gravel crunched beneath his feet.
When he came out into the garden, the sky yawned wide above him. Several stars were twinkling. Lit up from below by the lights of the city, the clouds that had come blowing in from the west were a hazy white.
Clouds at night didn’t invite Taro’s vision of climbing on top of the clouds, either. Rather, they made him think of a photograph that an astronaut living on a space station had posted on Twitter. The surface of the earth at night, seen from the darkness of space, was like a map rendered in particles of light. This city where Taro was now would have been a great big cluster of those particles. Taro found it impossible to believe that the lights of this place where he now was could be seen from so far away. He remembered being stunned when he’d read in a book as a kid that if you made a model of the globe with a diameter of two metres, and accurately represented the contours of its surface, even Everest would only be as high as a thick coating of paint. The idea, then, that you could see the lights of this city from space, this city that was really no more than a blip on the earth’s surface, seemed unthinkable.
A view he’d once seen from a plane window floated into his mind: floating in a sea of darkness, little clusters of lights. The lights marked the towns where people lived.
The moon had already sunk from view, but there was a streetlight just beyond the wall of the house, so the garden was bright enough for his digging. It felt big. The twisted branches of the crepe myrtle, which
had not yet come into leaf, cast shadows on the ground. Taro crouched in front of the plum tree. He had slipped the garden trowel he’d bought in the DIY shop into the back pocket of his jeans. He stuck the trowel into the ground that was littered with plum petals, and began digging the soil. It was faintly warm. When he had been digging for about ten minutes, the end of his trowel hit something hard. Taro brushed away the earth with his hand, and dug around the thing carefully.
It was a stone. A round stone, about the size of an egg. There were lots of them. He kept unearthing stone after stone of almost the same shape. By the time there were none left for him to dig, there was a heap of them on the edge of his hole.
Where the stones had been, Taro laid the mortar and pestle and the potter wasp’s nest he’d brought from his flat. With his bare hands he scooped up the soft soil he’d dug up and let it fall onto the objects in the hole. Once the mortar and pestle and the wasp nest were no longer visible, he returned the rest of the soil with the trowel.
Taro wished he’d asked his father if he’d ever been to Tokyo, but he couldn’t think of a time when there would have been a chance to ask him that kind of thing. He definitely remembered his dad saying that he liked plum trees, though. He’d said that he much preferred plum blossoms to the cherry blossoms that everyone in Japan made such a big fuss about. Taro had agreed with him, and his father had said that was “unlike him”. At the time, Taro had thought that his father meant that it was unlike Taro to agree with him, but maybe that hadn’t been what he’d been trying to say. Perhaps he was saying that it was unlike Taro to own up to liking flowers, or unlike him to give an opinion at all. From now on, Taro thought, he wouldn’t have the sight of the mortar and pestle to remind him of his father. He’d have to remember him at other times. That probably made sense. After all, his father had never even laid eyes on that mortar and pestle.
When Taro brought his face up close to the slightly smaller tree alongside the plum, he saw that buds were beginning to form on its branches. It was the Hall crabapple Nishi had spoken of. At first he’d found its name a bit cumbersome, but now he could remember it, along with an image of its deep pink-coloured blossoms as they appeared in the illustrated guide to plants Mrs Snake had given him.
Nishi wouldn’t be able to see it in bloom this year, but he would. He could take a photo of it and send it to her.
The window facing the balcony on the first floor was reflecting the dawn sky.
Taro climbed back up the concrete wall and, holding onto the gutter for support, found his way onto the second-floor balcony. The old ground-floor windows leading to the sunroom had been replaced with new ones, but not those on the first floor. When Taro had gone into the bedroom with the balcony to collect the reclining sofa, Mr Morio had told him that the lock on the door was broken, and you could open the door with a good thump. Now Taro did just that, hitting the place near the lock several times. He rattled the door and saw that the lock, shaped like an ear, had come undone. He opened the glass door, took off his shoes and put them in the cloth bag on his back, then stepped onto the tatami.
If Nishi’s favourite room in the house was the bathroom, then Taro’s was this bedroom. Because of his habit of sprawling out on the floor in whatever room he happened to be in, he liked rooms with tatami floors, which were softer and nicer for lying on. There were five photos of this room in the book, including one of Kaiko Umamura doing a bridge right in the middle of the room. Her head was touching the floor, and her arms were folded across her chest. She was smiling. In another shot, she was mid-cartwheel, moving so fast that the photo was blurred, and yet, even amid the blur, you could see the gleam in her eyes.
The room was spacious. It still smelt a little of the rushes that were used to make the tatami. Taro sat down on the tatami, pulled out a fleece blanket from his bag, and rolled himself up in it. Facing towards the window, he could see the sky. It occurred to him that he had never once seen a shooting star. He could hear crows cawing.
He was woken by the sun, now high up in the sky. When he checked his phone, he saw it was past ten.
He could hear noises from downstairs, and several different voices. Still lying on the floor, he listened carefully, but couldn’t make out what was being said. Figuring that potential residents had probably come for a viewing, he felt anxious, and got up. He went down a few steps on the staircase, trying to gauge the situation, and peeped down through the handrail from a spot where he would not be visible from the floor below.
There was a man in a blue uniform with yellow letters on his back that read METROPOLITAN POLICE DEPARTMENT. He wore his baseball cap of the same blue backwards.
“We’ve found a woman’s body in the garden,” a man’s voice was saying. The voice had a strange clarity to it, and Taro felt as though he’d heard it somewhere before.
“Did you hear any noises at all last night?”
“No, nothing at all,” said a young woman’s voice.
Trying not to make any noise, Taro went down another step, and then another. When he reached the midway landing, he saw a man in a suit standing next to the criminal investigator and, opposite them, a woman.
The woman had her eyes cast down. She kept putting a hand up to touch her long hair. From the side, she looked a lot like Kaiko Umamura in the photo of her reading in a wicker chair in the sunroom.
“What time did you get home yesterday?”
“What are you trying to say, sir?”
“Okay, and cut!” said a voice, and the floor suddenly filled with commotion. The lights dropped, and three men dressed in blue uniforms moved up and down the corridor. Someone, either the director or another member of the crew, was giving directions for the next scene to be shot.
Only the woman stayed in the same place, her head now raised. From the front, she didn’t look like Kaiko Umamura after all. In fact, she looked more like Nishi. But that thought only stayed in Taro’s mind for a second, and then he remembered the actress’s name.
She looked Taro straight in the eye, and made a gesture with her hand, as though lifting something up. Taro eventually realized she was telling him to go back upstairs. He nodded at her. He saw her mouth move, but failed to catch what she said.
Taro went up the stairs and back into the bedroom, shouldered his bag, then stepped out onto the balcony. Looking down from there, he saw two vans filling the parking spaces, and members of the crew carrying lights and microphones up and down the street. When would it be screened? he wondered. He knew it usually took a long time after filming before programmes actually made it onto the TV.
He climbed over the balcony railing, and holding on to the gutter for support, managed to get a footing on the concrete wall. With his hands on the side of the sky-blue house, he walked carefully along the top of the wall. It was a clear, sunny day and the temperature was rising. He felt sweat on his back.
When he reached the border with the Saeki house, the concrete vault, and View Palace Saeki III, Taro stopped. With his hands still touching the blue wooden boards of the house, he looked over towards his block of flats. On her first-floor balcony, Mrs Snake was hanging out her washing. There was one piece of fabric in navy and one in dark green, although what shape those clothes would take when Mrs Snake put them on, he had no idea. Other than the Snake Flat, and the Pig Flat in the right corner of the ground floor, all the flats were now empty.
Their windows and the balconies were arranged in two neat lines. The sunlight shone into the windows, all shaped exactly the same. He could see the lines dividing light from shade falling on the walls of the first-floor flats, and on the tatami of those on the ground-floor flats. Nothing changed. Nothing made a sound. Only the boundary lines between the light and the shade shifted, like a sundial.
Taro’s flat was full of sofas and chairs. The whole place was buried in ivory-coloured fabric. Sitting on top of the wall and looking into his room, he could see the enormous refrigerator gleaming silver. He remembered that there was tofu in there he had to eat
today, before it went bad.
PUSHKIN PRESS
Pushkin Press was founded in 1997, and publishes novels, essays, memoirs, children’s books—everything from timeless classics to the urgent and contemporary.
Our books represent exciting, high-quality writing from around the world: we publish some of the twentieth century’s most widely acclaimed, brilliant authors such as Stefan Zweig, Marcel Aymé, Antal Szerb, Paul Morand and Yasushi Inoue, as well as compelling and award-winning contemporary writers, including Andrés Neuman, Edith Pearlman and Ryu Murakami.
Pushkin Press publishes the world’s best stories, to be read and read again. Here are just some of the titles from our long and varied list. For more amazing stories, visit www.pushkinpress.com.
THE SPECTRE OF ALEXANDER WOLF
GAITO GAZDANOV
‘A mesmerising work of literature’ Antony Beevor
BINOCULAR VISION
EDITH PEARLMAN
‘A genius of the short story’ Mark Lawson, Guardian
TRAVELLER OF THE CENTURY
ANDRÉS NEUMAN
‘A beautiful, accomplished novel: as ambitious as it is generous, as moving as it is smart’ Juan Gabriel Vásquez, Guardian
BEWARE OF PITY
STEFAN ZWEIG
‘Zweig’s fictional masterpiece’ Guardian
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