Lexington Ghosts
The Seventh Man
The Seventh Man
by Haruki Murakami
Translated by Christopher Allison
"It was a September afternoon during my tenth year when that wave
nearly brought me to my end," the Seventh Man began in a quiet
voice.
He was the last person to speak that night. The hour hand on the
clock had already past ten. The sound of the wind blowing to the
west outside in the black darkness could be heard by everyone
sitting there together in a circle in the room. Leaves rustled in
the garden, the panes of the window rattled slightly, and the wind
rose up in a shrill whistle before blowing away into the night.
"That was a special type of wave, a colossus, the like of which I've
never again seen," the man continued.
"That wave only missed finishing me off by hair's breadth. But
instead it drank up the most essential part of me, and transported
it to another world. It took such a long time before I was finally
completely recovered. So much precious time."
The Seventh Man looked to be in his mid-fifties. Tall and gaunt, he
had a profusion of whiskers around his mouth, and there was a small
but deep wound by his right eye, that appeared to have been made by
a knife stroke. His hair was short, and had bristly touches of white
here and there. His face seemed to bear the expression of a man who
suddenly doesn't know quite what to say, except that he seemed to
have worn this expression consistently for a long time, and there
was something quite familiar about it. He wore a cheerless blue
shirt under a grey tweed jacket. He occasionally took the collar of
his shirt into his hand. No one knew his name. There was probably
nobody who knew anything about him.
The Seventh Man coughed quietly. All other words dropped away into
silence. Without saying anything, everyone waited for him to go on.
"In my case, it was a wave. Of course, I can't say anything about
how it is with other people. But in my case it just happened to be a
wave. I had no advance warning. Suddenly it was just there in front
of me one day: that fatal force presenting itself in the shape of an
enormous wave.
"I grew up in S Prefecture, in this town by the sea. It was such a
nowhere town that even if I told you the name, it probably wouldn't
make an impression on you. My father was engaged as a medical
practitioner there, and at first I had a relatively untroubled
childhood. I had one very close friend for as long as I could
remember. His name was K. He lived in the house next door to ours,
and was a year behind me in school. We walked to school together
everyday, and when we returned home in the afternoon the two of us
always played together. We might as well have been brothers. Though
we were friends for a very long time, never once did any kind of
trouble arise between us. I actually had a real brother, but because
he was six years older than me we didn't have much in common, and to
speak frankly, there wasn't much love lost between us. It was
because of this that I felt more fraternal love for my friend than I
did for my real brother.
"K was pale and slight, and had the delicate features of a girl. He
also had a speech impediment, and couldn't talk well. When strangers
met him for the first time, I imagine they got the impression that
he was retarded. And since he wasn't very strong, I frequently found
myself acting as his protector both at school and after school when
we were playing. Anybody can see right away that I'm a pretty big
guy, and fairly athletic. The thing that I liked most about being
with K was his kindness and the beauty of his soul. There was
absolutely nothing wrong with his mind, but his impediment led him
to have academic problems, and going to class was troublesome for
him. He was exceptionally gifted at drawing pictures, though, and
whenever he took up a pencil or his paints, he created such
exquisite pictures exuding such vitality that even his teacher was
blown away. He frequently won prizes in competitions and received
commendations. If he had grown up unpreturbed, I think that he
probably would have made a name for himself as an artist. He was
particularly fond of painting landscapes, and went to the shore
incessantly to draw the sea. I spent countless days sitting next to
him, watching his nimble hand guide the pencil over the paper. The
way he could bring such life-like shapes and colors out of the pure
white of the paper in an instant impressed me deeply, and was truly
amazing. When I think about it now, it was really nothing short of
genius.
"One year in September, the region where I lived was beset by a
fierce typhoon. According to the report on the radio, this was going
to be the biggest typhoon the area had seen in ten years. School was
quickly dismissed, and all the shops in town were closed and
shuttered tight. My father and brother got out the tool box and
began putting up storm doors around the house, while my mother
busied herself in the kitchen preparing onigiri as emergency
rations. Bottles and canteens were filled with water, and we all
packed backpacks with necessaries, in case we had to be evacuated
somewhere quickly. To the adults, who had to face the hardship of
typhoons nearly every year, it was just a noisome and dangerous fact
of life, but to us children, removed as we were from the hard
reality of the situation, it was nothing less than a great and
exciting event of considerable moment.
"The color of the sky began to change dramatically just after noon.
There seemed to be an unnatural hue mixed into it. The wind rose to
a howl, making a strange dry, crackling sound like beaten sand, and
I went out onto the veranda to watch the sky until the rain began to
beat fiercely against the side of the house. In the darkness of the
house sealed off by storm shutters, the family gathered in one room
and listened to the news reports on the radio. The volume of the
rain wasn't that great, but there was a lot of danger from strong
winds, and many houses had had their roofs blown off, and numerous
ships had been overturned. Heavy objects flying through the air had
killed or injured several people. The announcer repeated his warning
not to go outdoors under any circumstances. Occasionally, the strong
winds would cause a creaking sound in the house, as if some giant
hand were shaking it. Once in a while, we would hear a great wham as
some heavy object crashed into the storm shutters. Father said that
they were probably roofing tiles from a house somewhere. We had a
lunch of the onigiri my mother had made, along with some fried eggs,
and listened to the news on the radio, waiting for the typhoon to
leave us and go somewhere else.
"But the typhoon wouldn't leave. According to the news, from the
time the typhoon had reached the eastern part of S Prefecture it had
lost speed, and was now moving to the northeast no faster than a
person walking briskly. The wind didn't slacken at all, and made a
brutal sound as if it was trying to rip up the very surface of the
earth and blow it away.
"That fierce wind probably lasted about an hour from the time it
first began to blow. But then I noticed that it had grown very
quiet. You couldn't hear a single sound; not even the crow of
distant birds. Father opened one of the rain shutters a little and
peered out from the crack to see what was happening. The wind had
died down and the rain was slackening. The thick grey clouds were
slowly rolling away. Here and there, patches of blue sky appeared
between breaks in the clouds. The trees in the garden were dripping
with rain water and droplets hung off the tips of the braches.
" ‘We're in the eye of the typhoon right now,' my father told me.
‘For a little while, maybe fifteen or twenty minutes, we'll get a
short break from the storm. Then it will pick up again, as fierce as
before.'
"I asked father if it was ok for me to go outside. It's ok to take a
walk around, father told me, as long as you don't go far.
" ‘But as soon as the wind begins to pick up even a little bit,
hurry back home right away.' I went outside and looked around. I
couldn't believe that just a few minutes before everything was being
buffeted by fierce winds. I looked up at the sky. I had the
impression that the typhoon's huge eye floated up there above us,
glaring down malevolently. But of course that was just my childish
imagination. We were merely in the midst of a temporary lull at the
center of an air pressure vortex.
"While the adults walked around the outside of the house checking
for damage, I decided to wander down to the sea shore. A lot of
limbs from trees in the neighborhood had been ripped off by the wind
and dropped on the roadway. Some of them were fat pine branches so
big that an adult couldn't possibly lift them alone. Shattered roof
tiles were scattered all over the ground. A rock had hit a car
windshield, and caused a large crack. There was even a doghouse that
had been blown onto the road from somewhere. The sight looked like a
giant hand had reached down from the sky and calmly wiped across the
surface of the earth. K spotted me as I was walking along the road,
and came out of his house. Where are you going?, K asked. When I
replied that I was going down to take a look at the sea, K fell in
behind me without saying a word. There was a small white dog that
lived at K's house, and this dog trailed the both of us as well. ‘We
have to go home right away when the wind picks up even a little
bit,' I told K, and he nodded silently in reply.
"The sea was no more than a 200 meter walk from my house. There was
a breakwater there that was about as tall as I was at the time, and
climbing a short set of stairs, we arrived at the seashore. We came
to the shore nearly every day to play, and we knew this stretch of
beach like the backs of our hands. But in the eye of the typhoon,
things seemed different from normal. The color of the sky, the color
of the sea, the crashing of the waves, the smell of salt, the
breadth of the scene, everything about that stretch of sea coast had
changed. We sat on top of the breakwater for a moment and just
stared out at the sea wordlessly. Even though we were in the middle
of a typhoon, the waves were dreadfully still. When the waves
struck, they retreated farther than normal. The white sand beach was
getting wider as we watched. Even at ebb tide, the water didn't
recede so far. It was like a large room after all the furniture has
been moved out, when it looks unbearably empty. Assorted pieces of
flotsam washed up into a line on shore, almost as usual.
"I got down off the sea wall, and keeping my eye on the sky as I
walked along the newly expanded beach, I looked more closely at the
junk that had been deposited there. Plastic toys and sandals and
chunks of wood that seemed to have once been pieces of furniture and
loose clothing and rare bottles and boxes made of wood with foreign
writing on them and other things of unknown character were scattered
as far as the eye could see. Most likely, the great waves of the
typhoon had transported it all here from some far away place.
Whenever we noticed anything particularly unique, we would pick it
up and examine it closely. K's dog stood beside the two of us
wagging his tail and sniffing each thing we picked up.
"We were there for at most 5 minutes or so. Suddenly, however, I
noticed that the waves had made their way up the beach. Without any
sound, without any indication at all, the silvery tongue of the sea
had silently crept to our very feet. There was no way that I could
have anticipated this. Having been raised close to the ocean, I knew
well the terrors of which it was capable. I knew that it could on
occasion produce brutality of a scale impossible to predict. We thus
moved away from the place where the waves were lapping, exercising
all due caution, to a place that seemed safe to me. But before I
knew it, the waves had reached up to within a 8 inches of where I
was standing, and then soundlessly receded again. And then finally
they didn't return. There was nothing particularly menacing about
these waves. They were quietly and discreetly washing the beach. But
there was something secretive and terribly ominous in them, like the
serpentine feel of reptile hide, that immediately sent chills up my
spine. It was fear without any obvious cause. But it was fear real
and true nonetheless. I realized intuitively that it was something
alive. There could be no mistake. Those waves were alive. The waves
would grab hold of me, and toy with me according to their whim. And
as I fantasized about that giant carnivore honing in on me and
devouring me with his sharp teeth, the wind lurked somewhere out
there in the fields. We've got to get out of here, I thought to
myself.
"I turned to K and said to him ‘Hey, let's go.' He was standing
about ten yards away with his back to me, and looking at something
as if it were his reflection. I had spoken in a plenty loud enough
voice, but it was as if K didn't even hear me. Or maybe he was so
absorbed in what he had discovered that my voice didn't reach his
ears. As if in a dream, the outside world was forgotten. Or perhaps
my voice wasn't as loud as I thought. I remember clearly that it
didn't sound like my voice. It sounded entirely like somebody else's
voice.
Then I heard a groan. It seemed loud enough to shake the earth. No,
but before the groan another sound could be heard. It was the
strange sound of a lot of water gushing through a hole. After this
gushing sound had continued for a while, there came an almost
insensible groaning sound, like the rumble of distant thunder. But
still K didn't look up. He just stood there distractedly staring at
something at his feet. All of his senses were concentrated on it. K
probably couldn't even hear that groaning sound. I don't know how he
could not have heard that tremendous sound, like the very earth
trembling. Maybe it was a sound that I alone could hear. It may
sound strange, but I wonder whether that sound was made only to
reach my ears. That is to say, the dog which stood at his side
didn't seem to notice the sound either. And dogs do have especially
acute hearing, after all.
"I had to go over there and get him and drag him away, I thought to
myself. There was no other way about it. I knew that the wave was
coming, and K did not. My feet, though, which knew what was about to
happen, turned away from my willin exactly the opposite direction. I
ran away to the breakwater alone. I guess it was the overwhelming
fear that made me do it. It robbed me of my voice, but it got my
feet moving well enough. I fled stumbling across the soft sand beach
and, arriving there, turned to shout at K.
" ‘Watch out! There's a wave coming!' I yelled in a loud voice. Then
I noticed that the rumbling sound had stopped. K finally noticed my
shouting and raised his head. But it was too late. At that very
moment, a great wave rose up, like a viper preparing to strike, and
pounded the coast. I had never seen anything like it in my entire
life. It was taller than a three-story building. It hardly made any
noise at all (or, at least, my memory of it contains no sound. It
came soundlessly in my memory), and rose so high as to block out the
sky behind K. He looked at me for a moment with an expression of
incomprehension. But then he seemed to realize something and turned
around. He was trying to get away. But there was no escape. In the
next instant, the wave swallowed him up. It was like a collision
with an unfeeling locomotive running at full speed.
"The rumbling sound rose and the wave broke, smashing down violently
on the beach and, like an explosion, threw off fragments which came
flying through the air to attack me at the breakwater. But secreted
as I was behind the seawall, it passed by me. The tendrils of spray
that managed to surmount it only soaked my clothes. Then I climbed
up on top of the breakwater quickly and looked down the shoreline.
The wave was rolling back out to sea at full speed, raising its
savage shout all the while. It looked as if as someone had stretched
a giant wool carpet at the extreme edge of the land. I looked as
hard as I could, but there was no trace of K anywhere. In the space
of a breath, the wave had passed so far out to sea that it seemed as
if the ocean were drying out and the seafloor would be exposed. I
cowered alone on the seawall.
"The silence returned. It was a hopeless silence as if the world had
been violently stripped of every sound. With K still swallowed up
inside, the wave passed far away. I couldn't begin to guess what I
ought to do next. I thought that maybe I should go down to the
beach. Maybe, by some chance, K had been buried in the sand
somewhere nearby... But then I changed my mind and didn't move from
atop the breakwater. I had learned from experience that these big
waves could come two or three times together.
"I can't remember now how much time passed. I think it probably
wasn't very long. 10 or 20 seconds, something like that, anyway. At
any rate, after that impenetrable interval, the wave returned again
to pound the shore, just as I had anticipated. That rumbling sound
shook the earth violently just as before, the noise ceased, and at
last the wave raised its head like a viper. All exactly like before.
It blocked out the sky, and hemmed me in in front like a mortal
cliff face. But this time there was nowhere to run to. As if
bewitched, I stood there petrified on top of the breakwater,
watching my impending demise. I had this feeling that, K having
already been abducted, there was no use in trying to escape. Or then
again, maybe in the face of that overwhelming fear, I could do
nothing but cower. I don't clearly remember now which way it was.
"The second wave was every bit as big as the first. No, it was even
bigger. The shape distorted slowly at first, like a brick rampart
collapsing, as the wave toppled down from above. It was far too big,
and didn't look like a real wave. It looked like something
completely different that had the shape of a wave. Something come
from some distant world in the shape of a wave, but altogether
different. I steeled my resolve and waited for the instant when
darkness would seize me. I didn't even close my eyes. I remember
hearing the sound of my own pulse. When the wave was immediately
before me, however, it stopped and floated in the air, as if it had
suddenly lost power. It only lasted for a second, but in that moment
the wave hung there, midway through breaking, and stopped. And in
the foam at the crest of the wave, in the middle of that vicious,
transparent tongue, I clearly recognized the shape of K.
"Perhaps not all of you can believe such a thing. That's probably
inevitable. To speak frankly, even I still can't comprehend how
something like this could happen. Of course there is no explanation.
But it wasn't a vision and it wasn't an illusion. That's exactly how
it happened without the slightest fabrication. As if enclosed in a
transparent capsule, K floated on his side in the crest of that
wave. And that wasn't all. K was laughing at me. There, right before
my eyes, so close I could reach out and touch him, I could make out
my best friend's face, who only moments before had been swallowed by
the wave. There was no mistake. He started laughing at me. And it
was no ordinary laugh either. His grin literally stretched from ear
to ear. Then his look grew cold and dire, and he fixed his gaze on
me. He stretched out his right hand in my direction. As if he wanted
to take my hand and drag me into that world. His hand was unable to
grasp me, however. Then K opened his mouth even wider and laughed
once again.
"I guess I lost consciousness after that. The next thing I knew, I
was on a bed in my father's hospital. When I opened my eyes, a nurse
went to call my father and he came running in right away. He took my
hand and measured my pulse, looked in my pupils, and put a hand to
my forehead to check my temperature. I tried to move my hand, but it
was impossible for me to lift it. I had a fever like my whole body
was on fire, and I was dazed and couldn't hold a thought. It seems
that I'd had a high fever for quite a while. You slept for three
days straight, my father said. A neighbor who had been watching the
whole time from some distance away picked me up after he saw me fall
and carried me home. K was carried of by the wave and we still don't
know where he is, my father said. I knew there was something I
wanted to tell my father. There was something I had to tell my
father. But my tongue was swollen and numb. I couldn't get any words
out. It felt like some completely different type of creature had
taken up residence in my mouth. Father asked me my name. I tried to
remember my name, but before it came to mind I lost consciousness
again and plunged back into the darkness.
"In the end, I was in bed for a week, hooked up to an I.V. I threw
up many times and had nightmares. The whole time, Father was deeply
concerned that the severe shock and the high fever might cause
permanent brain damage. My situation was so grave that it wouldn't
have been unusual if that had happened. But my body slowly recovered
somehow. Over the course of many weeks I gradually returned to my
former life. I ate the usual foods, and I went back to school. But
of course not everything was back to the way it was.
"K's corpse was never recovered. The dog that the wave had swallowed
up with him wasn't ever seen again either. Usually, people who drown
off that part of the coast get carried by the tide to this small
inlet to the east, and after a few days wash up on the beach, but
what became of K's body was never known. Maybe the overwhelming size
of the waves during that typhoon carried him so far out to sea that
his body never made it back to shore. He probably sank to the bottom
of the ocean somewhere and became food for fish. The search for K's
body continued for quite a long time with the assistance of the
local fishermen, but at some point tapered off and eventually
stopped. Since the all-important corpse was missing, in the end no
funeral was held. From then on, K's parents were half-mad with
grief, spending every day wandering aimlessly up and down the beach,
or else shut up in their house chanting sutras.
"And despite the fact that they took the blow so hard, K's parents
never once blamed me for having brought him to the beach in the
middle of the typhoon. They knew well that until then I loved him as
my own brother and valued him tremedously. My parents also seemed to
avoid touching on the incident in my presence. But I knew it. If I
think about it a little, I know I could have saved K. I'm pretty
sure I could have gone to the place where he was standing and
brought him safely to some place where the wave that carried him off
wouldn't have been able to reach him. It would have been close, but
when I go over my memory of it and the amount of time I had, I think
I could have made it. But, as I said previously, I was overcome with
blinding fear, and abandoned K to save myself. Since K's parents
didn't blame me, and everybody else avoided talking about the
incident as if it were cancerous, I suffered abundantly. For a long
time, I was unable to recover from that psychological shock. I
didn't go to school, I didn't eat much, I just lay on my back and
stared up at the ceiling.
"No matter how hard I tried, I couldn't forget the sight of K
reclining in the foam of the crest of that wave, with a merry grin
on his face. Nor could I drive from my mind the individual fingers
of his hand, each reaching out to me invitingly. When I went to
sleep, that face, those eyes would appear in my dreams as well, as
if he were waiting impatiently for me. In these dreams, K would leap
out from his capsule in the foam, grab me by the wrist, and pull me
into the wave.
"And I also had this other kind of dream. In it, I was swimming in
the ocean. It's a beautiful summer afternoon, and I swim across the
flat water far out to sea. The sun beats down on my back, and the
water wraps around my body luxuriantly. But then something in the
water grabs my right foot. I feel an ice-cold grip around my ankle.
It is very strong and I can't shake it off. And just like that I'm
pulled down into the deep. I see K's face there. Just like that
time, he's looking dead at me, his face nearly split by that immense
grin. I try to scream, but no sound comes out. I just gulp water in.
My lungs fill up with water.
"I wake up in the dark, screaming, covered in sweat, and breathless.
"At the end of that year, I begged my parents to let me leave town
immediately and move away somewhere else. I couldn't continue to
live by that beach where K had been carried off by the wave, and I
was having nightmares nearly every night, as you know. Some place
fairly far removed from here. If I couldn't, I'd probably end up
going mad. When he heard my request, my father made arrangements for
me to relocate. In January, I moved to Nagano Prefecture and started
going to a public elementary school there. My father's family home
was nearby, and I was allowed to stay there. I advanced to junior
high and then to high school in that same place. When vacations
came, I didn't ever go back home. Every once in a while, my parents
would come up for a visit.
"And to this very day, I still live in Nagano. I graduated from a
technical college in Nagano City, found a job with a precision
machinery company, and that brings us up to the present. I have had
the life and career of a completely ordinary person. As you can see,
there is nothing particularly different about me. I'm not a very
social person, but I enjoy mountaineering, and I have a number of
close friends through that. As soon as I moved away from that town,
the nightmares decreased in frequency, almost to how it was before.
But they didn't depart from my life completely either. They would
come back to me periodically, like a bill collector knocking at the
door. Just as soon as I would start to forget, there they would be.
The dreams were always exactly the same, down to the minutest
detail. Whenever that happened, I'd wake up screaming. My sheets
would be drenched with sweat.
"That's probably why I never married. I didn't want to be
continually waking up whoever was sleeping next to me at two or
three o'clock in the morning with my yelling. There have been a
number of women thus far that I've been quite fond of. But I've
never spent the night with any of them. The fear is suffused into
the very marrow of my bones, and is not something that it is
possible to share with anyone.
"At this point, I'm over 40 years old and I'd never been back to my
hometown, nor had I gotten near that stretch of coastline. It's not
just that stretch of shore either, but the sea itself that I could
not bear to be near. I was afraid that if I actually went to the sea
there, the things that happened in my dreams would come to pass in
reality. At one time, I loved swimming more than anything, but since
then I hadn't even been able to swim in a pool. I couldn't get near
a deep river or the tide. I avoided riding in ships. I had never
been overseas on a plane either. I couldn't scrub from my mind the
image of me drowning in some unknown place. Like K's cold hand in my
dreams, I couldn't shake loose that dark presentiment from my
consciousness.
"In the spring of last year, I revisited the site of K's abduction
for the first time.
"Father had died the previous year, and my brother had sold the
family home in order to divide up the proceeds. As he'd been putting
the storage room in order, he came across a cardboard box full of my
childhood things, and had sent it to me. Most of the stuff was
worthless junk, but deep inside, a bundle of pictures that K had
painted for me caught my eye. I think K's parents had given them to
me as a rememberence of him. The fear was so strong it took my
breath away. I had the feeling that K's spirit was revivified before
my eyes in those pictures. I wrapped them back up in their flimsy
wrapping and, intending to destroy them right away, put them back in
the box. For whatever reason, though, I was unable to through away
K's paintings. Several days later, completely at the end of my rope,
I ripped the paper off K's watercolors, and boldly took them in
hand.
"They were nearly all landscapes, familiar ocean and beaches and
forests and store fronts, all done in K's distinctive shades. They
were unfaded to a peculiar degree, and marks that had been there
when I had seen the pictures years before still appeared as though
they were fresh. As soon as I took the pictures in my hand, before I
had even had a chance to really look at them, I was overwhelmed with
a feeling of longing and remorse. Those pictures were far more
skillfully executed and artistically superior than I had even
remembered them being. I could feel acutely the presence of K's deep
spirit in those pictures as if it were my own. I was able to
understand fully how K saw the world around him. As I gazed at those
pictures, the things that I did with K and the places that we went
together came rushing vividly back to me, one by one. Yes, that's
it: it was as if they were my own personalperceptions. I could see
the world distinctly and unclouded, exactly as it had been then, the
two of us side by side.
"Everyday when I returned home from work, I would take one of those
pictures in my hand and stare at it. I could look at them endlessly.
They contained the beautiful scenery of my youth that I had long
before forced out of my mind. When I looked at K's pictures, I had
the feeling that they permeated quietly into the center of my body.
"Then, after about a week had passed, I was taken aback by a new
thought. Hadn't I, perhaps, been completely mistaken in my thinking?
As K was lying in the foam of that wave, did he really hate and
resent me, or was he not, perhaps, trying to transport me to
somewhere else? That weird smile on his face--might it have just
looked like a smile? Was he not already unconscious by then? Or
could he not have just wanted to give me one last final,
affectionate smile before we parted forever? Could the color of
violent hatred that I saw in his face have been nothing more than
the projection of my own deep fear?... As I examined those ancient
watercolors of K's, my thoughts in this direction became stronger
and stronger. No matter how I looked at them, nothing but K's
unblemished, pacific spirit emerged from the pictures.
"For a long time after that, I just sat there. I was compledtely
unable to stand up. The day passed and dusky darkness slowly
enveloped the room. Finally, a deeply silent night came on. The
seemingly unending night continued on until the counterbalance of
the darkness could no longer sustain its weight, and then gradually
day broke. New sunlight dyed the sky a pale rose, and the birds woke
up and began their crowing.
"I realized then that I had to go back to that town. And right away.
"I packed a suitcase with the bare essentials, called the office to
tell them that something urgent had come up, and took a train in the
direction of my hometown..
"The town was not at all the quiet seaside town of my memory. Out of
the rapid growth period of the 1960's had emerged a manufacturing
city, and this had wrought a great transformation on the scenery.
The area around the station, where once only a few souvenir shops
stood, was now crowded with merchants, and the only movie theater in
town had become a supermarket. Even my own house was no more. It had
been demolished some months before and now was nothing more than
naked tilled earth. All the trees in the garden had been cut down,
and weeds sprouted here and there from the black earth. Needless to
say, the house that K had once lived in had vanished too. The land
had been paved over for monthly parking, and cars and vans were
lined up side by side. None of this really made me nostalgic at all,
though. It had been so long since this town had been my own.
I walked to the shore and climbed the stairs to the top of the
seawall. Facing the breakwater just as always, impeded by no one,
the sea spread out wide. It was a huge ocean. Far away I could see
the unbroken line of the horizon. The view from the beach was
exactly as it had been long before. The beach stretched out like
before, the waves lapped the shore like before, and people walked
along the surf like before. The weak light of early evening
enveloped the area and, as if the sun was considering something
carefully, sunk slowly into the west. I sat down on the beach there,
set my bag down next to me, and silently watched the sunset. It was
a truly soothing and peaceful sight. The sight gave no clue that
this was the same place where a great typhoon had once blown in,
where a wave had swallowed up my best friend. There was probably
hardly anyone left who even remembered that it had happened, forty
years before. I began to wonder whether it was just some private
phantom that I had conjured up entirely in my head.
"Suddenly I noticed that the deep darkness within me had been
extinguished. Just as suddenly as it had come on it was gone without
a trace. I slowly got up from the beach. I walked to the edge of the
surf and without rolling up my pants waded out into it. Waves lapped
at my feet, still covered by shoes. The waves hit the shore just as
they had when I was a child, and as if making a peace offering,
washed over my feet, dampening my shoes and my clothes. Waves
approached internittently and then retreated. Passersby stared at
the peculiar sight of me, but I didn't pay any attention to them.
After such a long time, I had finally made it back here.
"I looked up at the sky. Small grey clouds, like finely chopped
cotton, floated by. There being hardly any wind, the clouds seemed
to stay stopped in one place. I can't really explain it, but I had
the feeling that those clouds floated there for me alone. My
thoughts turned to the time when I was a boy that I had gone out
looking for the great eye of the typhoon, and how at that time I had
looked up to the sky in just the same way. The huge axle of time
gave a mighty screech within me. The past and present crashed
together, like my old desiccated house being demolished, and mixed
together in one vortex of time. All ambient sound ceased, and the
light wavered. I lost my balance and toppled into the approaching
wave. My heart made a loud noise in my throat, as sensation in my
hands and feet disipated. I lay prone like that, where I had fallen,
for a long time. I was unable to stand up. But I wasn't at all
afraid either. There was nothing to be afraid of. All of that was
past.
"Since then I haven't had a single bad dream. I haven't once woken
up screaming in the middle of the night. I wish I could start my
life over from the beginning now and live it right. But no, I guess
it's too late for that. From here on out, I probably don't have that
much time left. But in spite of having lost so much time, I'm so
grateful that I was redeemed before the end, and managed to recover.
That's right. The possibility was there for me to end my life
without receiving redemption, screaming into the fearful void."
The Seventh Man fell silent for a moment, and looked around him at
the people seated there. Nobody said a word. There wasn't a sound in
the room except for the faint whisper of breathing. Nobody so much
as twitched. The wind had died down completely, and no sounds could
be heard outside either. As if searching for a word, the man started
once again to fidget with the collar of shirt.
"The way I see it, the true fear for us as human being is not terror
as such," the man said after a little while. Terror certainly exists
there....It manifests itself in various forms, and from time to time
overwhelms our very existence as human beings. But the most fearful
thing of all is to turn your back on that fear, to close your eyes
to it. By doing that, we end up alienating the very most essential
part of our make-up. In my case--it was a wave."