JAPANESE DREAMS
Fantasies, Fictions & Fairytales
Edited by Sean Wallace
Lethe Press
Maple Shade, NJ
Copyright ©2009 Sean Wallace. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in retrieval system, or transmitted in any form, by any means, including mechanical, electronic, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior written permission of the author.
This trade paperback edition published by
Lethe Press,
118 Heritage Ave,
Maple Shade, NJ 08052.
lethepressbooks.com [email protected]
Cover by Steven Segal
Book design by Toby Johnson
ISBN 1-59021-224-X / 978-1-59021-224-0
__________________________________
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Japanese dreams : fantasies, fictions & fairytales / edited by Sean Wallace.
p. cm.
ISBN-10: 1-59021-224-X (alk. paper)
ISBN-13: 978-1-59021-224-0
1. Fantasy fiction, American. 2. Japan--Fiction. 3. Short stories, American--21st century. I. Wallace, Sean.
PS648.J29J37 2009
813’.0108952--dc22
2009030251
Table of Contents
Introduction
Catherynne Valente
And the Bones Would Keep Speaking
K. Bird Lincoln
Ebb and Flow
Ekaterina Sedia
The Green Dragon
Erzebet YellowBoy
The Rental Sister
Robert Joseph Levy
The White Bone Fan
Richard Park
The Tears of My Mother, The Shell of My Father
Eugie Foster
Tales of the Poet and the Dog
Jay Lake
Hibakusha Dreaming in the Shadowy Land of Death
Ken Scholes
Lady Blade
Jenn Reese
In Fortune’s Marketplace
Lisa Mantchev
A Troll on a Mountain with a Girl
Steve Berman
Dragon Logic
Yoon Ha Lee
Introduction
Japan is not a single place. It is at least four: Japan as itself, as it truly is, stripped of all artifice and all lenses through which it is seen. This place is no longer accessible by public transportation—sorry, folks. There is Japan as it sees itself, the mythologies created to explain its history, the elaborate and impenetrable social structures, the divine and immutable hierarchies. Then there is Japan as it is seen by the rest of Asia, often a conqueror, an outlier, an outsider, unique in its relationship with the non-Asian world.
And there is Japan as a dream of the West. A lurid fever-dream, a sensationalistic mash-up of technology and sexuality, a performance enacted for the winners of a war.
I lived in Japan for a little over two years—I went to it as untouched as one may be in the current cultural climate of America, in which the hatred and fear of the Japanese economy of the 1980s has been replaced by a mania for all the many and fascinating products of the same. I did not watch anime, I did not obsess over the history of the Pacific War, I did not long to dress up like a geisha. I knew little about it at all except that I was going there, vaguely uneasy about stepping off of a plane with my imperialistic Navy husband, about what it meant to be an American woman in that country, to stand with so many sailors on Japanese soil.
And so I did what I could do: before I went, I read as many stories as I could. Not tourist guides, not travelogues. Folktales. Fairy tales. I thought that if I could understand them the way I understood Greek myth or the Brothers Grimm, then there could be a kind of home for me there in the terraced hills and pale train stations. There could be a grace, a shared language, a currency between the soul of Japan and the soul of myself. I could say: I bring to you the story of a young writer facing a country of total strangeness, and falling in love with it. I bring to you the story of a young woman not yet ready to be a wife. I bring to you the story of a California girl. And it would give me all these foxes and snow-women and dresses made out of moonlight, samurai hidden inside a peach and eight-headed dragons.
Perhaps this seems silly, naïve. Perhaps it is a child’s magical thinking. But you cannot know a place until you know the stories it tells about itself. When you meet a person for the first time, you ask their name, their occupation, how many brothers and sisters they have, what their favorite things to eat are, if they enjoy movies, if they are married. To learn a nation’s stories is to enact this same process, to ask it: why are there seasons, where you are from? What does a dog say? Why does the moon change shape? How was the world born? Why must humans die?
If we have more modern ways of answering these questions, that does not mean that the old ways of knowing are not present, in every fox-statue and stick of incense at the base of an obsidian grave. And if you do not know those first things a people answered, you cannot really know anything.
For two years, I listened to stories. I read them in books and on subway walls that pictured tanuki alongside salarymen, I asked housewives to teach me to pray. I learned how to give service to the dead. I marked the calendar in a new way, and set out sacrifices of corn and rice and coins in the shrine below my house. I sat with old women in hot springs while they asked me in halting English if I had found my face in the Fushimi-Inari temple, where there are 33,000 statues of Inari, the Kami of Swordsmiths, Rice, Writers, and Small, Mischievous Animals (surely these last two are redundant), for all the legends say that if you look hard enough, you may find your own face among the thousands of foxes.
To know those things meant worlds more than knowing how to get to Tokyo in less than ninety minutes.
This book can never be a portrait of Japan. There are no Japanese writers in it, for one thing. You shouldn’t be surprised. The title gave the game away, really. This is a book of dreams. These are the things we have dreamed of Japan, the radiant hybrids of Japanese myth and Western experience. The beautiful gaijin tales of English-speaking writers reaching out their hands towards a country that was born when a jeweled spear pierced the sea, letting fall eight sparkling drops of water when it rose again. These are 33,000 faces of the trickster-god, turning and turning, so that every bristle of fur can be seen, but never all at once. This is the book you must read if you would travel to the secret lands that are half-siblings to the real world, the lands travelers keep in their memories, half-fact, half-dream. This is the Japan of the mind. Its entry fee is so very little, and its treasures vast.
I hope you find your face here.
Catherynne Valente
And the Bones Would Keep Speaking
K. Bird Lincoln
Clouds float into my piece of sky. They are gray and shifting. One almost looks like a fighter plane. Even if the Japanese fighter pilots flew this far inland, they are no connection to my family or the Kiyokawas or the Ugajins, or to any family in Hood River.
Mr. Feldstar made the announcement yesterday morning in math class about Pearl Harbor. I was angry, like everyone else. During the emergency assembly in the gym I took my usual place in the back of the boys’ section. I remember the smell of sweat and old socks. I saw Missy and Kara giving me sidelong glances from the girls’ section. Then I was ashamed.
I can’t imagine living anywhere else than the farm. The New Year’s cards that come from Tochigi could be from outer space. I feel closer to the grass I am laying on than to blood-cousins I have never met.
The fighter plane cloud drifts away. I can no longer feel my toes. The bones in my legs ache. I sink into the grass, as if the soil were helping the hakujin boys from field worker
row by covering their crime.
My head doesn’t hurt anymore. I still feel a sticky trickle down the side of my face, but I am pretty sure the bleeding has stopped. I am dying. When I say that to myself it sounds obviously false, like one of Uncle Nobuo’s tall tales from Japan.
The sky is bright and blue like it never is in rainy September, and the tops of Otoo-san’s apple trees are moving in a wind I can’t feel or hear. It is quiet now. Bobby Kent and all the hakujin boys ran away into the silent sunshine. I hate them. I hate every one of them with a ferocity I discover for the first time today. I hate them for the rocks and the pain and the blood. I hate them for making me feel alien and freakish on my own father’s land.
I wish I could run away and disappear, too.
My eyes are wide open, my face to the sky. Okaa-san, is that you I’m hearing in the big rocks nearby? Okaa-san, come find me before…
1951
Bella heard the bones on the eve of her first day of high school. The moon was a sliver of light in the dark sky outside her window on the second floor of the old farmhouse. She pushed aside grandma’s crazy quilt and went to the window. She knew it was bones, even though it sounded more like a dry rasping than the Halloween rattle of a skeleton.
They newly leveled land spotted with ruts and a few stumps to the west of the house still shocked her. When they first moved here from Michigan, daddy was so excited to finally own his own orchards. Bella wished that the same excited daddy were asleep in the room next to her, instead of the man becoming a stranger to her ever since mama left.
The bones spoke again. She could see nothing but the field outside the window. She would have to go downstairs. Pulling on a loose sweater, she tiptoed down the stairs, careful to put pressure only on the outside parts of the steps so they wouldn’t creak. She flicked on the outside light as she went out the door, then changed her mind and turned it off. Whatever bones were talking outside, they were less scary than dealing with daddy in the dark after one of his binges. It was chilly. Wisps of fog from the river clung to the brush.
It was only eleven-thirty, but the dark was as quiet and thick as the dead of night. Bella followed the bones’ rasping down the path that used to cut through the Gravenstein and Macintoshes, ending in a small clearing against Mr. Kiyokawa’s strawberry fields on one side and the small strip of forest bordering the bungalows where the field workers lived.
The rasping changed, became more agitated. The sound filled her ears, seeping behind her eyes and forming an ache in her jaw. Her curiosity became irritation. Like she didn’t have enough to deal with starting high school tomorrow and daddy still moping around the house waiting for the golf course developers to call, and mama still with her friend in Portland.
Bella didn’t notice the figure standing next to a pile of rocks at the edge of the brush until the flare of a match and the steady glow of a cigarette caught her eye.
She stopped, her heart as heavy as a wooden cider press against her lungs. The fog parted, and Bella saw a young man in a leather jacket and hair slicked back with pomade. It was one of the middle Kent boys.
“Little late for you, isn’t it?” he said, voice low and husky. He drew deeply on the cigarette and Bella watched ash crumble from the tip into the brown grass.
“I’m starting high school tomorrow,” she said. Great. She was such a spaz.
“You’re in fat city,” he said. Was this Bobby? She couldn’t keep them all straight. There were at least five or six of the brothers, all crammed together in one of those tiny cookie cutter houses.
“So what’s a chick like you doing out here instead of piling up some z’s?” He threw the cigarette on the ground and twisted it under a booted heel.
“I… I thought I heard something,” she said. Bobby made a show of looking into the trees and around the field. Then he sat on the largest of the boulders.
“Nothing here but us, doll.”
Bella shivered. She was cold. Her heart was still thudding and she couldn’t decide if Bobby was making conversation or laughing at her expense. She turned back to the house.
“Holy mother of Jesus!” he said. Bobby leaned down and pulled something long and knotted like a thin tree branch out of the dirt between two of the rocks. “Do you see this?”
Bella stepped close enough to smell pomade and leather. His breath was a bitter white cloud. She looked down at the thing in his hands. It looked like a bone. She reached out to touch it and it made a rasping, sliding noise. Bobby dropped it with a yelp.
“What the… what was that noise?”
Bella started to answer him, but closed her mouth before any words could escape.
1975
Hanako turned the handle to raise the car’s window. Her daughter, Kiri-chan, sitting beside her on the worn plastic seat leaned over and pulled her hand away.
“Aren’t you hot, mother?” she said. “Let’s leave the window open.”
Hanako hated that tone of voice. Sometime in the past few years the role of mother and daughter reversed. Now Kiri-chan ordered Hanako’s life. It still grated on her. Hanako was a well-used sixty-five, true, but she could still wipe her own ass after using the benjo, thank you very much. And she could decide on her own whether to put up a window. The dust from the road was getting in her eyes and making them tear up.
Her son-in-law, the hakujin, gave Kiri-chan a look in the rearview mirror. He had kind eyes. Hanako liked him, despite his slightly rancid butter scent and how her grandchildren were doomed to be only half-Japanese. His romantic notions made Hanako worry about the long term, however. The way he held open doors for Kiri-chan, and waited to order at the restaurant near Crater Lake where they stopped for lunch until Kiriko and Hanako ordered first. She hoped he wasn’t too soft.
“We’re almost there,” he said. “Mr. Roberts said he’d meet us at the front gate.” Then to Kiri-chan, “I told him we’d only be an hour.”
Hanako stared at the seat in front of her. An hour. Just one hour to walk through the field her family had owned, a field full of Hideki’s sweat and dreams. One hour to put Mat’s ghost to rest. Why had she left this so long?
She should have come back when she was fifty and still spry. But the war, Hideki’s arrest, the long months at the interment center in Utah, they were all wounds that never quite healed. Coming back to Hood River would have ripped everything apart.
And now she had just one hour to find her son’s bones.
At the turn-off from the highway, Mr. Robertson, the man who bought the farm after they were all sent to the camp at Tule Lake, stood leaning against the gate. He was blonde and sparse, his face lined with something more than just sun and wind. Hanako couldn’t resent a face like that.
Wartime was a long time ago, a shameful dream remembered only unwillingly in the thirty years she spent rebuilding their lives in San Francisco. She wondered what her son-in-law told this Robertson. Surely he didn’t tell him the truth about her errand. How undignified.
The car rolled to a stop. Hanako allowed Kiri-chan to help her form the car. She presented a furoshiki-wrapped box of red bean-paste cakes to Robertson.
“My thanks for your kindness today,” she said. Robertson blushed and averted his eyes when he accepted the package.
Hanako smiled, pleased that Robertson was uncomfortable.
“Okaa-san,” said Kiri-chan. “it’s getting really hot out here.”
Hanako knew what her daughter really meant. Kiri-chan wanted to leave. She thought Hanako was losing her mind. Even the hakujin, who had originally been supportive of this trip, was clearing his throat and rolling his eyes when he thought Hanako wasn’t looking.
Hanako stooped down, but what she thought might be a finger-bone was only a twig. She threw it away in disgust. Maybe she was crazy. Back in San Francisco she’d had the idea her body would act like a dowsing rod. That somehow, her eldest son’s bones would vibrate on a frequency discernible to her own flesh and blood, guiding her steps to where his bones had lain hidden
for thirty-five years.
But Hanako felt nothing. She had felt more back at Tule Lake, sitting in the tent watching Ben Kiyohara’s breath turn to mist in the cold air. His tale of Mat and the hakujin boys from field worker row seemed as insubstantial and fading as the mist. Hanako had tried not to hate Ben for living, or old man Kiyohara for keeping his farm when they lost their own land.
“Konnichiwa,” said a clear voice from the gate between the razed field and the Kiyohara land. It was a girl with blonde hair pulled back in a ponytail. She carried a baby with a head of hair like a dark brush on one hip. She came through the gate and carefully shut it behind her. Without hesitation the girl came to stand before Hanako, searching her face in a way that made Hanako blush.
“I’m Bella,” said the girl. Hanako’s eyes slid from the girl’s pale blue, eyes, clear as a ghost’s, to the dark brown eyes of her baby. The baby was half. Hanako felt a repulsive fascination as she scanned those features. Would this be her feeling looking at Kiri-chan’s baby? She tried to imagine eating a half grandchild’s leftover rice such as she did with her grandnieces when they didn’t finish their breakfast.
“Konnichiwa,” said Hanako.
“My father-in-law, Mr. Kiyohara, told me you were here today,” said the girl. The Hakujin came over, hand extended. Bella looked at his hand. The baby gurgled and the girl took the Hakujin’s hand in a clumsy grip.
“We won’t be bothering Mr. Kiyohara,” said the Hakujin. Hanako wished he’d shut up. Like he knew anything. The girl was here to talk to Hanako, she was sure of it.
“I heard…” said the girl, then turned to look at Hanako again with those startling eyes. “When I started high school there was one night I found something strange out here,” she said. Hanako wondered at the emotion in her voice. “And then today, Ben and I were visiting from Gresham and Otoo-san told us what you were doing here.”
Hanako nodded. Her breath was coming short and quick. This girl knew something about Matsuo. She looked down so the girl would keep talking, but at the same time her ears filled with a white noise like the sound of waves hitting the Oregon coast. The noise grew louder until Hanako could barely make out the girl’s words.
Japanese Dreams Page 1