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Under the Broken Sky

Page 11

by Mariko Nagai


  the same. Time doesn’t stand

  still. But there is always

  Miss Tanaka, when she is not

  teaching, by my bedside.

  SPRING BURIALS

  Men go down the hole

  in the yard and throw

  the bodies, one after another,

  out of their wintry graves.

  Before the bodies thaw

  fully, they pull them out

  like they would

  potatoes, and throw

  them into the back

  of the truck to cremate.

  I watch a bundle of white sheet

  being pulled up from the hole.

  I know that’s Auntie.

  I put my hands together

  and pray that she is happier

  where she is.

  Families watch

  with their hands pressed

  together in the form

  of prayer, praying

  that their loved ones

  can go to the other world

  finally now that

  spring is here.

  THE RED DOOR

  I sit on the steps in front

  of the red door, the address

  that the Russian woman gave

  me when I sold my sister.

  Maybe Asa is happier.

  Maybe Asa has forgotten

  about me already.

  Maybe she’s angry.

  Maybe she’s dead.

  That’s when the red door bursts open

  and I see the old Russian woman coming

  out of the house. I hear the pattering

  of footsteps from the interior

  of the house, and then Asa

  —her face rounder and with pink cheeks

  just like back home so many months ago—

  pokes her head out. I hold my breath.

  It is Asa, just as she was.

  And looking healthy.

  Then the door closes

  before I have a chance to speak.

  But my heart bursts.

  My steps feel light. I walk

  on clouds, as if I’ve been

  pulled to the sky.

  Asa’s safe, my heart sings.

  Asa’s safe. She’s all right.

  My heart sings and sings.

  THE OFFICIAL NEWS

  It is official.

  We are to begin

  moving out

  of the school

  and there will be

  a boat to take us

  to Japan,

  our “repatriation”

  back to Japan soon.

  But I’m not leaving.

  I’m not leaving

  until I have Asa,

  until it’s me and Asa

  going back to Japan,

  just like I promised Tochan.

  UNTIL THE DAY I DIE

  I wake up in the morning.

  I know what I have to do.

  I leave without telling Miss Tanaka

  where I am going.

  I walk through the busy boulevard

  with trees already dark

  green and summery,

  but I don’t stop. I keep walking

  until I get to the house

  with the red door and I knock.

  The servant opens the door.

  I tell him I want to talk

  to the Russian lady here,

  and he tries to stop me,

  but I walk in, not bothering

  to take off my shoes,

  not bothering to be polite.

  I walk straight through

  the hallway and into the living

  room, or so I think,

  where I find an old Russian woman

  sitting on a velvet couch

  with Asa next to her.

  “Natsu-chan!” Asa yells,

  running toward me, but the woman

  pulls her back. “Natsu-chan, I knew it,

  I knew you’d be alive! I knew

  you’d come get me!” Asa wriggles

  in the woman’s arms, she bites,

  kicks, but the woman ignores it all.

  “I came to get my sister back,”

  I demand, my heart beating

  fast, faster, bravely,

  though my mouth is as dry

  as the ground in drought.

  “She’s my child now,”

  the Russian woman says

  in broken Chinese,

  enough for me to understand,

  and puts her arm

  around Asa.

  Asa wriggles away.

  “I paid you already.

  She’s my daughter now,” she says.

  She looks up and down, at me,

  and adds, “You can’t provide

  the life she deserves.”

  “She’s my sister,” I yell,

  my hand curling into a tight

  fist. “I have your money, take it,”

  and I throw the money at her.

  “You have to leave now,” she says,

  dismissing me, and the old servant looks

  at me as if to say, “Go, please go.”

  I lunge at Asa, try to pull her to me,

  and the servant lifts me under his arm

  and carries me down the hall.

  “Asa! Asa!” I yell out her name,

  trying to hold on to anything,

  everything, but my hands slip.

  “I’m coming back every day

  until you return Asa to me,”

  I yell as I am thrown out of the house

  and lie on the dirty stone-

  paved street. I promise. I will

  make their life a living hell

  until I can get Asa back.

  TENTH DAY

  It’s been ten days,

  and I’ve come to the red door

  and sat at their steps

  every day.

  Whenever somebody

  walked by, I would chant,

  “They stole my sister.

  They stole my sister

  and I am here to reclaim her.”

  People gave me funny looks

  the first week but now

  they smile or give me food.

  The old servant comes out once

  in a while and brings

  a cup of tea or some food.

  “I’m not supposed to talk to you,

  but you looked hungry

  so I brought you some leftovers.

  She’s a good woman.

  She really took care

  of your little sister when she first

  came here. Your sister was so

  difficult, demanding that we take

  her back to you, and we had to tell

  her that you were dead. Why did you

  show up when she finally settled? Just forget

  about your sister,” he tells me kindly,

  and goes back inside.

  She may be stubborn

  but I am more stubborn.

  “They stole my sister.

  They stole my sister

  and I am here to reclaim her,”

  I chant, my throat drying up.

  But I keep chanting, chanting,

  to get Asa out of the house

  and back to where she belongs: with me.

  A man walks by and I chant,

  “They stole my sister,”

  pointing at the red door.

  The man smiles and pats my head.

  A Chinese servant walks

  by with a basket full

  of tofu and green leaves.

  “They stole my sister,”

  I say and she looks away.

  The Russian woman pokes

  her head out of the door.

  “I’m not giving her back,”

  she yells, and I yell back,

  “You stole my sister.

  You’re a thief, old lady!”

  She slams the door shut.

&nbs
p; I’ll wear down her stubbornness

  with my own stubbornness

  like a stone losing its edges

  in the strong river current

  over many years.

  DISAPPEARING CHINESE

  The gate of a mansion burst

  open, and a man in a long silk robe

  came out, his hands tied

  in the back. The Communist

  soldiers yelled something

  about how he was a capitalist

  and a collaborator of Imperialist

  Japan. The last I saw, he was

  being led away from the mansion

  with his family huddling

  in the corner, crying out his name.

  Like the Japanese men

  disappearing when the Russians

  came to the city.

  I close my eyes and keep walking.

  THREE MORE WEEKS

  Miss Tanaka says that

  we will leave

  the schoolroom

  in mid-July,

  three weeks

  from now.

  I only have

  three weeks

  to get Asa back.

  RAIN

  Raining today. People walk by

  with umbrellas, not paying attention

  to me sitting on the steps. My clothes

  are heavy, but this is my job.

  Like begging back in winter,

  like working on the farm,

  this is my job now: getting Asa back.

  Suddenly, the door opens,

  the Russian woman pokes

  her head out and yells,

  “You’re going to catch your death!”

  And I yell back, “You stole my sister.

  You’re a wicked old lady!”

  “I paid for her,” she yells and slams

  the door shut. I stick out my tongue.

  The door opens again, and she throws

  a yellow umbrella with a pearl handle

  at me and slams the door again.

  WHAT WE CAN TAKE, WHAT WE CAN’T TAKE

  The Japanese Community tells us

  that we cannot take any photos,

  letters, or notebooks with us;

  that we are to take only the necessities:

  money up to 1,000 yen,

  and whatever clothes still cling

  to our shrunken bodies.

  Nobody told us why we can’t take

  these other things.

  Maybe they are trying to erase

  the history of Manchuria

  from our memory,

  or from the memory of history itself,

  leaving the dead behind in a country

  that no longer exists on the map.

  A PRAYER

  Dear Tochan, I know you are not dead

  but I hope you can hear me. I got sick.

  I got really sick and I thought I was going

  to die. And I gave up Asa because I didn’t

  know what to do if I were to die and she was

  left on her own. But I got better. Tochan,

  I promise you, I’ll get Asa back

  and I’ll never let her go. So help me this

  one time, do something so that the awful

  Russian woman will return Asa to me.

  Tochan, if you can’t hear me,

  what about you, Auntie. Can you hear me?

  Can you help me get Asa back?

  And oh, one more thing, Auntie,

  can you tell Tochan to hurry up and come find us?

  I AM AS STUBBORN AS HORSE

  I sit on the steps.

  It’s a beautiful day,

  the temperature not too hot,

  not too cold. And if I close

  my eyes in these pockets

  of moments when no one is on

  the street, I can almost imagine

  myself back in the settlement,

  standing by the gate and looking out

  on the never-ending field.

  I can almost imagine watching

  Tochan leading Horse back

  from the field, I can almost hear

  other settlers settling in for dinner,

  the hamlet busy with a clutter of pots

  and plates and of cooked vegetables

  with burning soy sauce.

  I open my eyes and find myself back

  in Harbin, back in front of the red-door

  house, and I curse out loud,

  “You are a thief, old woman!”

  just to remind her I am still here,

  that I am not going away until

  she returns Asa to me.

  SUNDAY

  My stomach growls.

  There is nothing

  to do except to sit

  on the steps, waiting

  for someone to walk by

  so I can chant,

  “They stole my sister.

  They stole my sister,”

  but it’s a lazy day.

  Maybe it’s a day when

  the Russians go

  to the onion-shaped

  dome on the square.

  The door opens.

  The old servant pokes

  his head out, looks around,

  and sits next to me, pulling out

  a bag of fried doughnuts

  sprinkled with sugar.

  “I haven’t had sugar

  in such a long time,”

  I wrinkle my nose

  in joy and take a bite.

  The sweetness spreads

  inside of my mouth

  and my tongue can’t get

  enough of it.

  “The madam asked about you,”

  the old servant says.

  “What does she want?”

  I ask, then take another big

  bite. “She thinks that you are

  stubborn, but in a good way.”

  I am about to take another

  bite but I stop. I open my mouth.

  “The train leaves

  on the third Monday at six a.m.

  That’s when all the Japanese

  have to leave,”

  I tell him. He looks down.

  The silence between us

  heavy but loud

  with things I can’t hear.

  He gets up without a sound.

  He closes the door without a word.

  WHAT I WILL TAKE WITH ME

  I take the photos,

  family registry,

  birth certificates,

  and postal saving books

  from my backpack,

  and photos and papers

  from Auntie’s bag,

  and sew them into

  the lining of my coat,

  threading the corners

  into the fabric so that they

  will not be dislodged.

  Auntie’s sewing kit

  is what I keep because

  it’s how I remember her: always sewing.

  And I will take Auntie’s bag

  and I will take Asa’s hand

  and we will both be on the boat.

  I’ve traveled 1,000 li

  just like the senninbari tiger

  I gave Tochan,

  and I will travel 1,000 li

  more with Asa until Tochan

  will find us wherever we end up.

  I sew the pieces

  back together to sew

  back my past into the present.

  THE STUBBORN OLD WOMAN

  The red door opens with a bang.

  “You, girl, get out of here!”

  the Russian woman yells out,

  her green eyes turning dark, almost

  black, with anger. “You’re a thief,

  old woman! Give me back my sister!”

  I yell at her, shaking my fist.

  She waves her cane at me.

  We keep waving at each other—

  my arm, her cane, until she laughs weakly.

 
; “Here, you must be hungry,” and

  a bag lands on my lap, a bag full of fried doughnuts.

  THE DAY BEFORE

  I bang a rock against the door.

  “Give me back my sister.

  Give me back my sister,”

  I yell with each bang,

  and the Russian woman pokes

  out her head. “You can do that

  all you want, but she’s not going

  anywhere!” she yells out,

  her white hair in its bun

  shaking in rhythm with her

  raised cane. Then she slams

  the door shut and I keep banging

  on the door, shouting,

  “Give me back my sister.

  Give me back my sister,”

  even after my voice disappears,

  even after the sun sets and the night

  has surrounded the neighborhood

  and the door doesn’t open.

  THEN IT DOES

  And the Russian woman

  comes out holding Asa’s hand.

  “You won, you stubborn girl.

  You take care of your little sister,

  you hear? She is a good girl,

  and you are a good sister.”

  And with that, she hugs Asa,

  “Don’t forget me, little girl,”

  and Asa and I are once again one,

  our arms around each other,

  and I am never letting her go.

  My promise to Tochan is fulfilled.

  THE END

  The train keeps moving,

  halting, moving, almost

  like it’s hiccuping through

  the landscape so like

  the one we walked

  to get to Harbin a year ago.

  Asa didn’t talk to me

  for the first hour as we walked

  from the Russian woman’s house

  to the port, but after five thousand

  sorrys, she said, “You gave me

  away and I was scared.

  But Madam Borisovna was nice,

  she said that you were really sick

  and that you had to send me away

  to her until you got better.

  She told me later that you might

  have died, and she felt bad

  that she didn’t take you with her.

  But I knew you couldn’t have died.

  I knew you’d come get me.

  Here, she gave us a bag of doughnuts.”

  My arms tighten around Asa

  in the crowded cattle train.

  Miss Tanaka sits with us,

  her bag so small it seems

  to fit in her hands.

  The train keeps moving,

  halting, moving,

  southbound, always moving,

 

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