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For my mother, for Lela. Hasta el cielo de la calle.
At the foot of the lighthouse, darkness reigns.
—Proverb
1996
THE CABLE CAR PULLED AWAY, carrying one last load of tourists up into the warm dusk. It climbed higher and higher over the bay, the seaboard unfurling below. To the east, Hideo Akashi saw the grimy docks—microchips, fish, and bleach were being loaded onto trucks, bound for the city. Japan’s cities were always hungry.
Akashi turned to his wife. Yumi’s eyes were closed, her lips hiding. He took her hand and squeezed gently.
“I don’t like heights,” she whispered.
“I know. It’ll be over soon.”
Around them, elderly tourists cooed at the panorama. Honeymooners posed for photographs. The cable car attendant reeled off cheery facts about their altitude and the city below. Akashi kissed Yumi’s freckled shoulder and, as he did so, he saw the woman. She was sitting at the back of the cable car, alone and silent. Her filthy clothes were too heavy for this weather. She did not take in the view, nor did she snap any pictures. She just stared at the floor. A little girl stood near her, possibly her child, but there was nothing maternal about this woman. There was a listlessness about her gaunt face that unnerved and excited Akashi. Beneath her youthful exterior there was something he couldn’t look away from.
“Hideo?” Yumi whispered.
“Yes?”
“You’re hurting my hand.”
“Oh. Sorry.”
Akashi forced himself to look away from the woman and reached for his camera instead. He took a step back and framed his wife’s face. Yumi smiled, squinting in the setting sun.
Click.
He was about to take another but something stopped him. At the back of the cable car, something was happening, something was wrong. The attendant was pleading, his white gloves outstretched.
“Madam, please. Step away from the door.”
The woman in the heavy clothes stood before the attendant.
Thud.
There came a spluttering noise and now the woman held a knife aloft, her thin hand glistening with blood up to the wrist. At her feet, the attendant writhed, gurgling like a baby. Trembling, the woman pointed the knife at the crowd. Her eyes locked on to Akashi’s.
“You stay away from me.”
The crowd lurched backward in the car, clumping together in bovine fear. The woman wiped her bloody hand on her coat, painting red faces, forehand and back. With the butt of her knife, she smashed the glass panel and hit the emergency stop button. Cables groaned, then squealed, until the car finally shuddered to a halt. To the west, the sun was setting, this day being swallowed forever.
An automated message played over the PA system.
Ladies and gentlemen, we are experiencing minor technical difficulties. Please remain calm. Our engineers have been notified and you are perfectly safe in the cable car.
There was a shaky hush in the car. The attendant had fallen silent, his face now pale. The woman stepped over his body and stood before the doors. Closing her eyes, she gripped the lever and took a breath. Hideo Akashi’s instincts finally kicked in. Yumi reached for him but he was already gone, fighting through the torsos.
“Police! Move!”
The woman pulled the lever; the doors jolted open and a deafening wind raged in. Akashi’s legs felt weak as he staggered toward her. There was too much saliva in his mouth, no space in his head for thoughts. The woman kicked off her shoes, threw off her jacket, and said something Akashi couldn’t hear in the wind. He pushed the little girl out of the way and threw out a hand.
Then the woman was gone.
A moment of silence.
No lifetimes flashing by, only silence.
Akashi had already reached out of the car and caught her by the wrist. He felt an overwhelming agony as her weight wrenched him to the floor. The pain arrived long before the realization. By one blood-soaked wrist, he held the woman over the abyss. Her hair cartwheeled in the wind. The void beneath them yawned, infinite and blue.
She lifted her head and blinked. Her mouth opened and fragile words fell out, the last droplets from a closing tap.
“I see elephant clouds…”
Akashi bellowed but his muscles were ripping. Bile was rising in his throat. His arm was breaking. And then he saw it—the tattoo on her bloodied wrist. In deepest ink, a large, black sun.
He looked at it. It looked back at him. Hideo Akashi let go.
FIFTEEN YEARS LATER
CHAPTER 1: BOXES
IWATA WOKE FROM A FALLING dream again. Drenched in sweat, struggling for breath, he went to the window. The Tokyo cityscape stretched out below him, cities within cities, angles incalculable. Thirty-five million existences crammed into circadian rhythms of concrete and cables. Immense infrastructure, never-ending networks—all of it delicate as hummingbird heartbeats.
The lights of the city are so pretty.
Iwata crossed his sparse apartment to the kitchenette and poured himself a glass of water. He saw the large cardboard boxes stacked in the corner and looked away. Wrapping himself in a blanket, he sat down by his stereo system and put on headphones. He closed his eyes as the opening notes of Schubert’s Impromptu in G flat major, op.90, no.3 filled his disquiet and the nightmare dissolved in the music.
Gray morning haze had seeped through the blinds by the time Iwata had made up his mind to leave. He drank coffee in silence, showered rigorously, and dressed in jeans and a thick, gray, cashmere pullover. Picking up the newspaper, he took the elevator down to the car park and unlocked his 1979 Isuzu 117 Coupé. He plucked a handwritten note from the windshield offering cash, scrunched it up, and put it in his pocket. The leather had cracks and she’d hardly ever seen a garage, but Iwata found notes like these every other week. Clearly, he had a covetous neighbor.
He started the car and left the radio off, enjoying the rare quiet of the Tokyo roads. At the southern entrance of Shibuya Station, the first few street vendors had assembled, sharing bags of hot nuts and flasks of tea as they conspired. Payday loan shops and cell phone dealerships were opening their shutters. On the roof of a department store, the news played on a giant LED screen. Mina Fong, a famous actress, had been found dead in her apartment. A well-known heiress had broken up with a promising Yomiuri Giants pitcher. A popular cookery show had been canceled. And there was a new number-one single in the pop charts. The broadcast ended with an insurance company’s slogan:
THIS IS WHAT JAPAN SHOULD BE.
Iwata turned off the main roads and found parking in an overlooked lot behind an arcade. He stuffed his hands in his pockets and made his way along the chilly backstreets. Spring was not just late this year; it had seemingly given up on itself.
Iwata went into a large department store and spent an hour buying highlighters, workbooks, and plastic dividers. In the café, he ordered a gum-syrup coffee and a fruit
salad. There was no Wi-Fi here but Iwata liked the view. He sat among exhausted night-shift workers and sipped his coffee, looking down at the high street. Shibuya was now throbbing with flustered commuters and bleary-eyed students. Traffic cops frantically waved at inching traffic and pedestrians bristled at the red lights.
Iwata opened the newspaper and turned directly to the classifieds. He ignored oblique offers for discreet massage, dining company from middle-aged women, and French tuition. He stopped at the storage-space section and scanned through carefully. After a few minutes, he circled an ad, then folded the newspaper under his arm and left.
Outside, the fog had momentarily lifted and the sky was a cold, exquisite blue. Iwata got back into his car and called the number from the ad. A drowsy voice answered.
“This is Matsumoto here.” The man coughed then lit a cigarette. “Your storage problems are my passion.”
Iwata stated his interest and Matsumoto reeled off an address, agreeing to meet in an hour.
Driving north, past Harajuku, Iwata parked up near the subway station. He walked along Takeshita Street with its knockoff T-shirts, Hello Kitty, and plastic fads. Tourists gawked at the chichi neon and manufactured cheer. Posters of the latest idol groups clung to all available wall space. Cheap speakers played happy pop and teenage girls cutting class weighed up prices. Iwata hated this place but there was a nearby noodle bar he favored for its breakfast tamagoyaki. Usually it was half-empty but today, for some reason, it had attracted a large line of smoking salarymen. Iwata swore and returned to his car.
He drove southeast, along the grand, tree-lined avenue of Omotesandō, where wealthy housewives browsed designer Italian labels. Iwata turned on to Aoyama-Dori, and fifteen minutes later, he turned off Meguro-Dori. He found space in an empty lot between houses. As Iwata got out, he looked up at the sky. It would rain tonight.
From a hole-in-the-wall, he bought a paper plate of vegetable and shrimp dumplings. The old cook complained about the game last night and Iwata nodded along while he ate. When he was done, he promised the cook he would come back again.
At the end of the street, a short, fat man with a ponytail stood outside a shabby shop, its windows covered in faded newspaper. The man was smoking anxiously as he glanced up and down the street. Seeing Iwata, he pinched his cigarette between his lips and stuck out a hand.
“Are you my guy?” The cigarette bobbled as he spoke.
Iwata nodded and they shook hands.
“Let’s open her up for you, then.”
Matsumoto stepped over a mound of junk mail. The room was narrow but Iwata liked the gloom. The walls were lined with lockers of varying sizes. At the back, there were also several safe boxes.
“What you thinking, mister? You like it?”
“I like it fine.”
“What you using it for?”
“I just have some boxes. I’ve got about sixteen of them, eighteen by eighteen by twenty.”
Matsumoto whistled.
“I can give you the whole back room but it’ll cost you.”
“How much?”
He looked at Iwata sidelong.
“Mister, if you don’t mind me asking, why not just keep them at your place?”
“I do mind you asking. How much?”
“All right. You’re looking at thirty-five thousand a month.”
Iwata shook his head.
“I’m going to make you an offer instead: eighty thousand for three months. But, for your flexibility, I’ll pay you up front.”
“Eighty.” Matsumoto puffed out smoke and squinted one eye. “Up front?”
“That’s right.”
“What are you, some kinda loan shark?”
“I just need a space for my boxes.”
“So why me, why not just store them at one of the big places for less?”
“I don’t like forms.”
Matsumoto shrugged. “Fuck it. You got yourself a deal.”
At the bank, the cashier politely reminded Iwata how little insurance money would remain but he ignored him. Outside, Matsumoto slipped the fat envelope into his pocket and tossed over a set of keys in return.
“Guess I’ll see you in three months.” Matsumoto winked.
He turned away, his ponytail swishing down the street. Iwata returned to his car, and in the distance, he heard thunder.
* * *
Iwata reached the airport-sized maze of Shinjuku Station a little after 1 P.M. He bought a ticket for the bullet train to Nagano and boarded Asama 573. The seats were clean and the temperature was optimal for human comfort. Staff bowed as they entered and left the carriage. The silent car was absolutely silent.
As the train pulled away, Iwata watched Tokyo recede. He flew past commuter towns of new-build complexes and man-made lakes. Young professionals lived here, eating the right food, getting enough exercise. Iwata had been like them once. Before there was any need to make this journey. He couldn’t remember the last time he had taken this train. Nor did he want to.
The lights of the city are so pretty.
When the concrete of Tokyo’s sleeper cities finally ended, there were only dead fields and pylons. In the distance, green hills swelled like lovesick sighs.
* * *
Arriving at Nagano Station, Iwata bought an evening newspaper and a tasteless lunchbox. He had appetite for neither. He boarded an old train, too ugly for vintage, bound for the mountains. At its own pace, the limited local express passed through green flatlands, then up forest ridges.
Through the window, Iwata observed mundane details of mundane towns. A woman at a red light scratched her elbow. Schoolchildren painted over a graffitied wall. An old lady on a bench watched cellophane wrapping rolling past her in the breeze. A mistaken bee butted against the window of a closed pharmacy. A car alone in a rice paddy, its security alarm blinking needlessly.
A little before 5 P.M., Iwata arrived at his destination—a nothing town near Lake Nojiri. He got into the only taxi outside the station and asked for the Nakamura Institute. He passed derelict factories and long-failed businesses scheduled for demolition; the last remaining blots of the old way. The driver was listening to a radio report regarding a deep-water drilling conglomerate that had defrauded a midsized bank. His white-gloved hands hardly moved on the wheel.
Iwata looked up through the sunroof at the deepening dusk. In the distance, cranes were motionless, a profitable future waiting to be built. He made out a slogan.
CREATING TOMORROW TOGETHER.
Iwata stopped at the only shop near the institute to buy fresh fruit and several pairs of thick socks. The old lady at the till smiled at him.
“Visiting?”
Iwata nodded and left. The path up to the institute was steep and long. Despite the chill, he was sweating by the time he reached the main entrance. The receptionist recognized Iwata and bowed. As she led him through the secured corridor, she looked down at the disinfected floor.
“I’m sorry to mention it but it appears that you’re seven weeks behind on your payments…”
“Forgive me, I must have made an awful miscalculation. I’ll rectify this as soon as I get back to Tokyo.”
The nurse nodded apologetically.
“She’s outside for sunset. Please go through.”
Iwata thanked her and stepped into a large, well-kept garden. Patients were planting flowers at the far end. Papier-mâché flamingos and elephants swayed in the breeze. Colorful pinwheels spun. From an open window, he heard a woman practicing her vocal scales. At the other end of the garden, near the tree line, Iwata saw her. Cleo was lying on a sun bed, covered in a blanket.
The lights of the city are so pretty.
His stomach lurched as it always did when he saw her. It had always been this way, but it was a different kind of lurch these days.
I’m happy with you. Please let me hear.
He took a white plastic chair and sat down next to her. Cleo was Iwata’s age, midthirties, her blond hair recently cut into a rough,
short bob. Her skin was paler than he remembered. Her dark blue eyes were fixed on the distance.
“Hello.” He spoke in English.
Birdsong fluttered through the dusky branches above them.
I walk and I walk, swaying like a small boat in your arms.
He reached out for her hand and gripped it sheepishly, his lips trembling. It was small, its warmth faded like a pebble plucked from the beach.
I’m happy with you. Please let me hear.
Realizing he must be hurting her, Iwata let it go.
“I bought you some fruit. Some socks, too. They always lose yours.”
She said nothing as he placed the bag beside her.
“I’ll ask them to stitch your name in. They won’t get mixed up that way.”
She still considered the horizon, as though she had decided to do only this for the rest of her life.
“You look strong, Cleo. You look … well.”
I’m happy with you. Please let me hear. Those words of love from you.
Iwata began to sob into his hands.
“You fucking bitch. You fucking bitch. You fucking bitch.”
* * *
It was after 1 A.M. when Iwata reached his apartment in Motoyoyogicho. In the corridor, he stepped over tricycles, bundles of newspapers, and fallen mops. The microwave’s clock bathed his apartment in weak green. Seeing his boxes heaped in the corner, he looked away. He would have to move them soon. But not tomorrow.
Iwata did his crunches while he watched an English language TV show. The impossibly cheerful host congratulated her guests on their terrible pronunciations. The word of the day appeared on-screen in jaunty yellow letters:
UNEXPECTED
Iwata switched off the TV and laid out his cheap futon. He got in and opened the curtain a crack. Below him, Tokyo’s neon aurora. Infinite function and enterprise, every square meter scheduled for expansion and redevelopment. The clouds were heavy and low, though he could not tell their color. Trying not to think of Cleo, he closed his eyes. Iwata hoped for dreamlessness.
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