村上春树短篇集(渡边搜集整理)
The New Yorker
"So Masakichi got his paws full of honey—way more honey than he
could eat by himself—and he put it in a pail, and do-o-own the
mountain he went, all the way to the town, to sell his honey.
Masakichi was the all-time No. 1 honey bear."
"Do bears have pails?" Sala asked.
"Masakichi just happened to have one," Junpei explained. "He found
it lying by the road, and he figured it would come in handy
sometime."
"And it did."
"It really did. So Masakichi went to the town and found a spot for
himself in the square. He put up a sign: 'Deeelicious Honey. All
Natural. One Cup ¥200.' "
"Can bears count money?"
"Absolutely. Masakichi lived with people when he was just a cub, and
they taught him how to talk and how to count money. Masakichi was a
very special bear. And so the other bears, who weren't so special,
tended to shun him."
"Shun him?"
"Yeah, they'd go, like, 'Hey, what's with this guy, acting so
special?' and keep away from him. Especially Tonkichi, the tough
guy. He really hated Masakichi."
"Poor Masakichi!"
"Yeah, really. Meanwhile, the people would say, 'O.K., he knows how
to count, and he can talk and all, but when you get right down to it
he's just a bear.' So Masakichi didn't really belong to either
world—the bear world or the people world."
"Didn't he have any friends?"
"Not a single friend. Bears don't go to school, you know, so there's
no place for them to make friends."
"Do you have friends, Jun?" "Uncle Junpei" was too long for her, so
Sala just called him Jun.
"Your daddy is my absolute bestest friend from a long, long time
ago. And so's your mommy."
"That's good, to have friends."
"It is good," Junpei said. "You're right about that."
Junpei often made up stories for Sala before she went to bed. And
whenever she didn't understand something she would ask him to
explain. Junpei gave a lot of thought to his answers. Sala's
questions were often sharp and interesting, and while he was
thinking about them he could also come up with new twists to the
story he was telling.
Sayoko brought a glass of warm milk.
"Junpei is telling me the story of Masakichi the bear," Sala said.
"He's the all-time No. 1 honey bear, but he doesn't have any
friends."
"Oh, really? Is he a big bear?" Sayoko asked.
Sala turned to Junpei with an uneasy stare. "Is Masakichi big?"
"Not so big," Junpei said. "In fact, he's kind of on the small side.
For a bear. He's just about your size, Sala. And he's a very
sweet-tempered little guy. When he listens to music, he doesn't
listen to rock or punk or that kind of stuff. He likes to listen to
Schubert, all by himself."
"He listens to music?" Sala asked. "Does he have a CD player or
something?"
"He found a boom box lying on the ground one day. He picked it up
and brought it home."
"How come all this stuff just happens to be lying around in the
mountains?" Sala asked with a note of suspicion.
"Well, it's a very, very steep mountain, and the hikers get all
faint and dizzy, and they throw away tons of stuff they don't need.
Right there by the road, like, 'Oh, man, this pack is so heavy, I
feel like I'm gonna die! I don't need this pail anymore. I don't
need this boom box anymore.' "
"I know just how they feel," Sayoko said. "Sometimes you want to
throw everything away."
"Not me," Sala said.
"That's because you're young and full of energy, Sala," Junpei said.
"Hurry and drink your milk so I can tell you the rest of the story."
"O.K.," she said, wrapping her hands around the glass and drinking
the warm milk with great care. Then she asked, "How come Masakichi
doesn't make honey pies and sell them? I think the people in the
town would like that better than just plain honey."
"An excellent point," Sayoko said with a smile. "His profits would
be much greater that way."
"Plowing up new markets through value added," Junpei said. "This
girl will be a real entrepreneur someday."
It was almost 2 A.M. by the time Sala went back to bed. Junpei and
Sayoko waited for her to fall asleep, then went to split a can of
beer at the kitchen table. Sayoko wasn't much of a drinker, and
Junpei had to drive home.
"Sorry for dragging you out in the middle of the night," Sayoko
said, "but I didn't know what else to do. I'm totally exhausted, and
you're the only one who can calm her down. There was no way I was
going to call Takatsuki."
Junpei nodded and took a swig of beer. "Don't worry about me," he
said. "I'm awake till the sun comes up, and the roads are empty at
this time of night. It's no big deal."
"You were working on a story?"
Junpei nodded.
"How's it going?"
"Like always. I write 'em. They print 'em. Nobody reads 'em."
"I read them. All of them."
"Thanks. You're a nice person," Junpei said. "But the short story is
on its way out. Like the slide rule. Let's talk about Sala. Has she
done this before?"
Sayoko nodded.
"A lot?"
"Almost every night. Sometime after midnight, she gets these
hysterical fits and jumps out of bed. And I can't get her to stop
crying. I've tried everything."
"Any idea what's wrong?"
Sayoko drank what was left of her beer and stared at the empty
glass.
"I think she saw too many news reports on the earthquake. It was too
much for a four-year-old. She wakes up at around the time of the
quake. She says a man woke her up, somebody she doesn't know. The
Earthquake Man. He tries to put her in a little box—too little for
anyone to fit into. She tells him she doesn't want to get inside,
and he starts pushing her—so hard her joints crack—and he tries to
stuff her inside. That's when she screams and wakes up."
"The Earthquake Man?"
"He's tall and skinny and old. After she's had the dream, she goes
around turning on every light in the house and looking for him: in
the closets, in the shoe cupboard in the front hall, under the beds,
in all the dresser drawers. I tell her it was just a dream, but she
won't listen to me. And she won't go to bed until she's looked
everywhere he could possibly hide. That takes at least an hour, by
which time I'm wide awake. I'm so sleep-deprived I can hardly stand
up, let alone work."
Sayoko almost never spilled out her feelings like this.
"Try not to watch the news," Junpei said. "The earthquake's all
they're showing these days."
"I almost never watch TV anymore. But it's too late now. The
Earthquake Man keeps coming."
Junpei thought for a while.
"What do you say we go to the zoo on Sunday? Sala says she wants to
see a real bear."
Sayoko narrowed her eyes and looked at him. "Not bad. It just might
change her mood. Let's do it—the four of us. It's been ages. You
call Takatsuki, O.K.?"
Junpei was thirty-six, born and bred in the city of Kobe, where his
father owned a pair of jewelry stores. He had a sister six years his
junior. After a year at a private cram school, he had enrolled at
Waseda University, in Tokyo. He had passed the entrance exams in
both the business and the literature departments. He chose the
literature department without the slightest hesitation and told his
parents that he had entered the business department. They would
never have paid for him to study literature, and Junpei had no
intention of wasting four precious years studying the workings of
the economy. All he wanted was to study literature, and then to
become a writer.
At the university, Junpei made two friends, Takatsuki and Sayoko.
Takatsuki came from the mountains of Nagano. Tall and
broad-shouldered, he had been the captain of his high-school soccer
team. It had taken him two years of studying to pass the entrance
exam, so he was a year older than Junpei. Practical and decisive, he
had the kind of looks that made people take to him right away, and
he naturally assumed a leadership role in any group. But he had
trouble reading books; he had entered the literature department
because its exam was the only one he could pass. "What the hell," he
said, in his positive way. "I'm going to be a newspaper reporter, so
I'll let them teach me how to write."
Junpei did not understand why Takatsuki had any interest in
befriending him. Junpei was the kind of person who liked to sit
alone in his room reading books or listening to music, and he was
terrible at sports. Awkward with strangers, he rarely made friends.
Still, for whatever reason, Takatsuki seemed to have decided the
first time he saw Junpei in class that he was going to make him a
friend. He tapped Junpei on the shoulder and said, "Hey, let's get
something to eat." And by the end of the day they had opened their
hearts to each other.
Takatsuki used the same approach with Sayoko. Junpei was with
Takatsuki when he tapped her on the shoulder and said, "Hey, what do
you say the three of us go get something to eat?" And so their tight
little group was born. Junpei, Takatsuki, and Sayoko did everything
together. They shared lecture notes, ate lunch in the campus dining
hall, talked about their future over coffee, took parttime jobs at
the same place, went to latenight movies and rock concerts, walked
all over Tokyo, and drank so much beer that they even got sick
together. In other words, they behaved like first-year college
students the world over.
Sayoko was a real Tokyo girl. She came from the old part of town,
where the merchant class had lived for centuries, and her father ran
a shop selling the exquisite little accessories that go with
traditional Japanese dress. The business had been in the family for
several generations, and it attracted an exclusive clientele that
included several famous Kabuki actors. Sayoko had plans to go on to
graduate school in English literature, and ultimately to an academic
career. She read a lot, and she and Junpei were constantly
exchanging novels and having intense conversations about them.
Sayoko had beautiful hair and intelligent eyes. She expressed
herself quietly and with simple honesty, but deep down she had great
strength. She was always casually dressed, without makeup, but she
had a unique sense of humor, and her face would crinkle up
mischievously whenever she made some funny remark. Junpei found that
look of hers incredible. He had never fallen in love until he met
Sayoko. He had attended a boys' high school and had had almost no
opportunities to meet girls.
But Junpei couldn't bring himself to express his feelings to Sayoko.
He knew that there would be no going back once the words were
spoken, and that Sayoko might take herself off somewhere far beyond
his reach. At the very least, the perfectly balanced, comfortable
relationship between Junpei, Takatsuki, and Sayoko would undergo a
shift. So Junpei told himself to leave things as they were for now
and watch and wait.
In the end, Takatsuki was the first to make a move. "I hate to throw
this at you out of the blue, but I'm in love with Sayoko," he told
Junpei. "I hope you don't mind." This was midway through September
of their second year. Takatsuki explained that he and Sayoko had
become involved, almost by accident, while Junpei was at home for
the summer vacation.
Junpei fixed his gaze on Takatsuki. It took him a few moments to
understand what had happened, but when he did it sank into him like
a lead weight. He no longer had any choice in the matter. "No," he
said, "I don't mind."
"I am so glad to hear that!" Takatsuki said with a huge smile. "You
were the only one I was worried about. I mean, the three of us had
such a great thing going, it was kind of like I beat you out. But,
anyway, Junpei, this had to happen sometime. If not now, it was
bound to happen sooner or later. The main thing is that I want the
three of us to go on being friends. O.K.?"
Junpei spent the next several days in a fog. He skipped classes and
work. He lay on the floor of his one-room apartment, eating nothing
but the scraps in the refrigerator and slugging down whiskey
whenever the impulse struck him. He thought about quitting
university and going to some distant town where he knew no one and
could spend the rest of his years doing manual labor. That would be
the best life style for him, he decided.
On the fifth day of this, Sayoko came to Junpei's apartment. She was
wearing a navy-blue sweatshirt and white cotton pants, and her hair
was pinned back.
"Where have you been?" she asked. "Everybody's worried that you're
dead in your room. Takatsuki asked me to check up on you. I guess he
wasn't too keen on seeing the corpse himself."
Junpei said he had been feeling sick.
"Yeah," she said, "you've lost some weight, I think." She stared at
him. "Want me to make you something to eat?"
Junpei shook his head. He didn't feel like eating, he said.
Sayoko opened the refrigerator and looked inside with a grimace. It
held only two cans of beer, an old cucumber, and some baking soda.
Sayoko sat down next to Junpei. "I don't know how to ask this,
Junpei, but are you feeling bad about Takatsuki and me?"
Junpei said that he was not. And it was no lie. He was not feeling
bad or angry. If, in fact, he was angry, it was at himself. For
Takatsuki and Sayoko to become lovers was the most natural thing in
the world. Takatsuki had all the qualifications. Junpei had none. It
was that simple.
"Go halves on a beer?" Sayoko asked.
"Sure."
She took a can of beer from the refrigerator and divided the
contents between two glasses, handing one to Junpei. They drank in
silence, separately.
"It's kind of embarrassing to put this into words," she said, "but I
want to stay friends with you, Junpei. Not just for now, but even
after we get older. A lot older. I love Takatsuki, but I need you,
too, in a whole different way. Does that make me selfish?"
Junpei was not sure how to answer that, but he shook his head.
Sayoko said, "To understand something and to put that something into
a form that you can see with your own eyes are two completely
different things. If you could manage to do both equally well,
living would be a lot simpler."
Junpei looked at Sayoko in profile. He had no idea what she was
trying to say. Why does my brain always work so slowly? he wondered.
He looked up, and for a long time his half-focussed eyes traced the
shape of a stain on the ceiling. How would the situation have
developed if he had confessed his love to Sayoko before Takatsuki
had confessed his? To this Junpei could find no answer. All he knew
for sure was that such a thing would never have happened.
He heard the sound of tears falling on the tatami, an oddly
magnified sound. For a moment, he wondered if he was crying without
being aware of it. But then he realized that Sayoko was the one who
was crying. She had hung her head between her knees, and now, though
she made no sound, her shoulders were trembling.
Almost unconsciously, he reached out and put a hand on her shoulder.
Then he drew her gently toward him. She did not resist. He wrapped
his arms around her and pressed his lips to hers. She closed her
eyes and let her lips part. Junpei caught the scent of tears and
drew breath from her mouth. He felt the softness of her breasts
against him. Inside, he felt some kind of switching of places. He
even heard the sound it made—like joints creaking. But that was all.
As if regaining consciousness, Sayoko moved her face back and down,
pushing Junpei away.
"No," she said quietly, shaking her head. "We can't do this. It's
wrong."
Junpei apologized. Sayoko said nothing. They remained that way, in
silence, for a long time. The sound of a radio came in through the
open window. It was a popular song. Junpei was sure that he would
remember it till the day he died. But, in fact, try as he might
after that, he was never able to recall the title or the melody.
"You don't have to apologize," Sayoko said. "It's not your fault."
"I think I'm confused," Junpei said honestly.
Sayoko reached out and laid her hand on Junpei's. "Come back to
school, O.K.? Tomorrow? I've never had a friend like you before. You
give me so much. I hope you realize that."
"So much, but not enough," he said.
"That's not true," she said. "That is so not true."
Junpei went to his classes the next day, and the tight-knit
threesome of Junpei, Takatsuki, and Sayoko continued through
graduation. Junpei's short-lived desire to disappear disappeared
itself. By holding her in his arms that day in his apartment and
pressing his lips to hers, Junpei had calmed something inside
himself. At least he no longer felt confused. The decision had been
made, even if he had not been the one to make it.
Sayoko sometimes introduced Junpei to a classmate of hers, and they
would double-date. He saw a lot of one of the girls, and it was with
her that he had sex for the first time, just before his twentieth
birthday. But his heart was always somewhere else. He was
respectful, kind, and tender to her, but never passionate or
devoted. She eventually went elsewhere in search of true warmth. The
same pattern repeated itself any number of times.
When he graduated, Junpei's parents discovered that he had been
majoring in literature, not economics, and things turned ugly. His
father wanted him to take over the family business, but Junpei had
no intention of doing that. He wanted to stay in Tokyo and keep
writing fiction. There was no room for compromise on either side,
and a violent argument ensued. Words were spoken that should not
have been. Junpei never saw his parents again, and he was convinced
that it had to be that way. Unlike his sister, who always managed to
compromise and get along with their parents, Junpei had done nothing
but clash with them from the time he was a child.
Junpei took a series of part-time jobs that helped him to scrape by
as he continued to write fiction. Whenever he finished a story, he
showed it to Sayoko and got her honest opinion, then revised it
according to her suggestions. Until she pronounced a piece good, he
would rewrite it again and again, carefully and patiently. He had no
other mentor, and he belonged to no writers' group.
When he was twenty-four, a story of his won an award from a literary
magazine, and over the next five years Junpei was nominated for the
coveted Akutagawa Prize four times, but he never actually won it. He
remained the eternally promising candidate. A typical opinion from a
judge on the prize committee would say, "For such a young author,
this is writing of very high quality, with remarkable examples of
both plot and psychological analysis. But the author has a tendency
to let sentiment take over from time to time, and the work lacks
both freshness and novelistic sweep."
Takatsuki would laugh when he read such opinions. "These guys are
out of their minds. What the hell is 'novelistic sweep'? Real people
don't use words like that. 'Today's sukiyaki was lacking in
beefistic sweep.' Ever hear anybody say anything like that?"
Junpei published two volumes of short stories before he turned
thirty: "Horse in the Rain" and "Grapes." "Horse in the Rain" sold
ten thousand copies, "Grapes" twelve thousand. These were not bad
figures for short-story collections, according to his editor. The
reviews were generally favorable, but none gave his work passionate
support. Most of Junpei's stories were about young people in
situations of unrequited love. His style was lyrical, the plots
rather old-fashioned. Readers of his generation were looking for a
more inventive style and grittier plots. This was the age of video
games and rap music, after all. Junpei's editor urged him to try a
novel. If he never wrote anything but short stories, he would just
keep dealing with the same material over and over again. Writing a
novel could open up whole new worlds for a writer. As a practical
matter, too, novels attracted far more attention than stories.
Writing only short stories was a hard way to make a living.
But Junpei was a born short-story writer. He would shut himself in
his room, let everything else go to hell, and turn out a first draft
in three days of concentrated effort. After four more days of
polishing, he would give the manuscript to Sayoko and his editor to
read. Basically, though, the battle was won or lost in that first
week. That was when everything that mattered in the story came
together. His personality was suited to this way of working: total
concentration of effort over a few short days. Junpei felt only
exhaustion when he thought about writing a novel. How could he
possibly maintain his concentration for months at a time? That kind
of pacing eluded him.
Given his austere bachelor's life style, Junpei did not need much
money. Once he had made what he needed for a given period, he would
stop accepting work. He had only one silent cat to feed. His
girlfriends were always the undemanding type, and when he grew bored
with them he would come up with some pretext for ending the
relationship. Sometimes, maybe once a month, he would wake at an odd
time in the night with a feeling that was close to panic. I'm not
going anywhere, he would tell himself. I can struggle all I want,
but I'm never going to go anywhere. Then he would either force
himself to go to his desk and write, or drink until he could no
longer stay awake.
Takatsuki had landed the job he'd always wanted—reporting for a top
newspaper. Since he never studied, his grades at the university were
nothing to brag about, but the impression he made at interviews was
overwhelmingly positive, and he had basically been hired on the
spot. Sayoko had entered graduate school, as planned. They married
six months after graduation, the ceremony as cheerful and busy as
Takatsuki himself. They honeymooned in France, and bought a two-room
condo a short commute from downtown. Junpei would come over for
dinner a couple of times a week, and the newlyweds always welcomed
him warmly. It was almost as if they were more comfortable with
Junpei around than when they were alone together.
Takatsuki enjoyed his work at the newspaper. He was assigned first
to the city desk, which kept him running from one scene of tragedy
to the next. "I can see a corpse now and not feel a thing," he said.
Bodies dismembered by trains, charred in fires, discolored with age,
the bloated cadavers of drowning victims, gunshot victims with their
brains splattered. "Whatever distinguished one lump of flesh from
another when they were alive, it's all the same once they're dead,"
he said. "Just used-up shells."
Takatsuki was sometimes too busy to make it home before morning.
Then Sayoko would call Junpei. She knew that he was often up all
night.
"Are you working? Can you talk?"
"Sure," he would say. "I'm not doing anything special."
They'd discuss the books they had read, or things that had come up
in their daily lives. Then they'd talk about the old days, when they
were still free and spontaneous. Conversations like that would
inevitably bring back memories of the time that Junpei had held
Sayoko in his arms: the smooth touch of her lips, the softness of
her breasts against him, the transparent early-autumn sunlight
streaming onto the tatami floor of his apartment—these were never
far from his thoughts.
Just after she turned thirty, Sayoko became pregnant. She was a
graduate assistant at the time, but she took a break from her job to
give birth to a baby girl. The three of them came up with all kinds
of names for the baby, but decided in the end on one of Junpei's
suggestions—Sala. "I love the sound of it," Sayoko told him. There
were no complications with the birth, and that night Junpei and
Takatsuki found themselves together without Sayoko for the first
time in a long while. Junpei had brought over a bottle of single
malt to celebrate, and they emptied it together at the kitchen
table.
"Why does time shoot by like this?" Takatsuki asked with a depth of
feeling that was rare for him. "It seems like only yesterday I was a
freshman, and then I met you, and then I met Sayoko, and the next
thing I know I'm a father. It's weird, like I'm watching a movie in
fast-forward. You probably wouldn't understand, Junpei. You're still
living the way you did in college. It's like you never stopped being
a student, you lucky bastard."
"Not so lucky," Junpei said, but he knew how Takatsuki felt. Sayoko
was a mother now. This was as big a shock for Junpei as it was for
Takatsuki. The gears of life had moved ahead a notch with a loud
ker-chunk, and Junpei knew that they would never turn back again.
The one thing that he was not yet sure of was how he was supposed to
feel about it.
"I couldn't tell you this before," Takatsuki said, "but I'm pretty
sure Sayoko was more attracted to you than she was to me." He was
drunk, but there was a more serious gleam in his eye than usual.
"That's crazy," Junpei said with a smile.
"Like hell it is. I know what I'm talking about. You know how to put
words on a page, but you don't know shit about a woman's feelings. A
drowned corpse does better than you. You had no idea how she felt
about you, and I figured, what the hell, I was in love with her, and
I had to have her. I still think she's the greatest woman in the
world. I still think it was my right to have her."
"Nobody's saying it wasn't," Junpei said.
Takatsuki nodded. "But you still don't get it. Not really. When it
comes to anything halfway important, you're so damn stupid. It's
amazing to me that you can put a piece of fiction together."
"Yeah, well, that's a different thing."
"Anyhow, now there are four of us," Takatsuki said with a sigh.
"Four of us. Four. Is that O.K.?"
Junpei learned just before Sala's second birthday that Takatsuki and
Sayoko were on the verge of breaking up. Sayoko seemed apologetic
when she broke the news to him. Takatsuki had had a lover since the
time of Sayoko's pregnancy, and he hardly ever came home anymore,
she explained.
Junpei couldn't seem to grasp what he was hearing, no matter how
many details Sayoko was able to give him. Why would Takatsuki have
wanted another woman? He had declared Sayoko to be the greatest
woman in the world the night that Sala was born, and he had meant
it. Besides, he was crazy about Sala. "I mean, I'm over at your
house all the time, eating dinner with you guys, right? But I never
sensed a thing. You were happiness itself—the perfect family."
"It's true," Sayoko said. "We weren't lying to you or putting on an
act. But quite separately from that he got himself a girlfriend, and
we can never go back to what we had. So we decided to split up.
Don't let it bother you too much. I'm sure things will work out
better now, in a lot of different ways."
Sayoko and Takatsuki were divorced some months later. They reached
an agreement without the slightest problem: no recriminations, no
disputed claims. Takatsuki went to live with his girlfriend; he came
to visit Sala once a week, and they all agreed that Junpei would try
to be present at those times. "It would make things easier for both
of us," Sayoko told Junpei. He felt as if he had suddenly grown much
older, though he had only just turned thirty-three.
Whenever they got together, Takatsuki was his usual talkative self,
and Sayoko's behavior was perfectly natural, as though nothing had
happened. If anything, she seemed even more natural than before, in
Junpei's eyes. Sala had no idea that her parents were divorced. And
Junpei played his assigned role perfectly. The three joked around as
always and talked about the old days.
"Hey, Junpei, tell me," Takatsuki said, one January night when the
two of them were walking home, their breath white in the chill air.
"Do you have somebody you're planning to marry?"
"Not at the moment," Junpei said.
"No girlfriend?"
"Nope."
"What do you say you and Sayoko get together?"
Junpei squinted at Takatsuki as if at some too bright object. "Why?"
he asked.
"What do you mean, 'why'? It's so obvious! If nothing else, you're
the only man I'd want to be a father to Sala."
"Is that the only reason you think I should marry Sayoko?"
Takatsuki sighed and draped his thick arm around Junpei's shoulders.
"What's the matter? Don't you like the idea of marrying Sayoko? Or
is it the thought of stepping in after me?"
"That doesn't bother me. I just wonder if you can make this like
some kind of deal. It's a question of decency."
"This is no deal," Takatsuki said. "And it's got nothing to do with
decency. You love Sayoko, right? You love Sala, too, don't you?
That's the most important thing. I know you've got your own hangups.
Fine. I grant you that. But to me it looks like you're trying to
pull off your shorts without taking off your pants."
Junpei said nothing, and Takatsuki went into an unusually long
silence. Shoulder to shoulder, they walked down the road to the
station, heaving white breath into the night.
"In any case," Junpei said, "you're an absolute idiot."
"I have to give you credit," Takatsuki said. "You're right on the
mark. I don't deny it. I'm ruining my own life. But I'm telling you,
Junpei, I couldn't help it. There was no way I could put a stop to
it. I don't know any better than you do why it had to happen. It
just happened. And, if not here and now, something like it would
have happened sooner or later."
Junpei felt as if he had heard the same speech before. "Do you
remember what you said to me the night that Sala was born? That
Sayoko was the greatest woman in the world, that you could never
find anyone to take her place."
"And it's still true. Nothing has changed where that's concerned.
But that very fact can sometimes make things go bad."
"I don't know what you mean by that," Junpei said.
"And you never will," Takatsuki said with a shake of the head. He
always had the last word.
Two years went by. Sayoko never went back to teaching. Junpei got an
editor friend of his to send her a story to translate, and she
carried the job off with a certain flair. The editor was impressed
enough to give her a substantial new piece the following month. The
pay was not very good, but it added to what Takatsuki was sending
and helped Sayoko and Sala to live comfortably.
They all went on meeting at least once a week, as they always had.
Whenever urgent business kept Takatsuki away, Sayoko, Junpei, and
Sala would eat together. The table was quiet without Takatsuki, and
the conversation turned to oddly mundane matters. A stranger would
have assumed that the three of them were just a typical family.
Junpei went on writing a steady stream of stories, bringing out his
fourth collection, "Silent Moon," when he was thirty-five. It
received one of the prizes reserved for established writers, and the
title story was made into a movie. Junpei also produced a volume of
music criticism, wrote a book on ornamental gardening, and
translated a collection of John Updike's short stories. All were
well received. Securing his position as a writer little by little,
he had developed a steady readership and a stable income.
He continued to think seriously about asking Sayoko to marry him. On
more than one occasion, he kept himself awake all night thinking
about it, and for a time he was unable to work. But still he could
not make up his mind. The more he thought about it, the more it
seemed to him that his relationship with Sayoko had been
consistently choreographed by others. His position was always
passive. Takatsuki was the one who had picked the two of them out of
his class and created the threesome. Then he had taken Sayoko,
married her, made a child with her, and divorced her. And now
Takatsuki was the one who was urging Junpei to marry her. Junpei
loved Sayoko, of course. About that there was no question. And now
was the perfect time for him to be united with her. She probably
wouldn't turn him down. But Junpei couldn't help thinking that
things were just a bit too easy. What was there left for him to
decide? And so he went on wondering. And not deciding. And then the
earthquake came.
Junpei was in Barcelona at the time, doing a story for an airline
magazine. He returned to his hotel in the evening to find the TV
news filled with images of collapsed buildings and black clouds of
smoke. It looked like the aftermath of an air raid. Because the
announcer was speaking in Spanish, it took Junpei a while to realize
what city he was looking at. "You're from Kobe, aren't you?" his
photographer asked.
But Junpei did not try to call his parents. The rift was too deep,
and had gone on too long for there to be any hope of reconciliation.
Junpei flew back to Tokyo and resumed his normal life there. He
never turned on the television, and hardly looked at a newspaper.
Whenever the subject of the earthquake came up, he would clamp his
mouth shut. It was an echo from a past that he had buried long ago.
He hadn't set foot on those streets since his graduation, but still
the catastrophe laid bare wounds that were hidden somewhere deep
inside him. It seemed to change certain aspects of his life—quietly,
but completely. Junpei felt an entirely new sense of isolation. I
have no roots, he thought. I'm not connected to anything.
Early on the Sunday morning that they had all planned to take Sala
to the zoo to see the bears, Takatsuki called to say that he had to
fly to Okinawa. He had managed at last to pry the promise of a
one-on-one interview out of the governor. "Sorry, but you'll have to
go to the zoo without me. I don't suppose Mr. Bear will be too upset
if I don't make it."
So Junpei and Sayoko took Sala to the Ueno Zoo. Junpei held Sala in
his arms and showed her the bears. She pointed to the biggest,
blackest bear and asked, "Is that one Masakichi?"
"No, no, that's not Masakichi," Junpei said. "Masakichi is smaller
than that, and he's smarter-looking, too. That's the tough guy,
Tonkichi."
"Tonkichi!" Sala yelled again and again, but the bear paid no
attention. Then she looked at Junpei and said, "Tell me a story
about Tonkichi."
"That's a hard one," Junpei said. "There aren't that many
interesting stories about Tonkichi. He's just an ordinary bear. He
can't talk or count money like Masakichi."
"But I bet you can tell me something good about him. One thing."
"You're absolutely right," Junpei said. "There's at least one good
thing to tell about even the most ordinary bear. Oh, yeah, I almost
forgot. Well, Tonchiki—"
"Tonkichi!" Sala corrected him with a touch of impatience.
"Ah, yes, sorry. Well, Tonkichi had one thing he could do really
well, and that was catching salmon. He'd go to the river and crouch
down behind a boulder and snap!—he would grab himself a salmon. You
have to be really fast to do something like that. Tonkichi was not
the brightest bear on the mountain, but he sure could catch more
salmon than any of the other bears. More than he could ever hope to
eat. But he couldn't go to town to sell his extra salmon, because he
didn't know how to talk."
"That's easy," Sala said. "All he had to do was trade his extra
salmon for Masakichi's extra honey."
"You're right," Junpei said. "And that's what Tonkichi decided to
do. So Tonkichi and Masakichi started trading salmon for honey, and
before long they got to know each other really well. Tonkichi
realized that Masakichi was not such a stuck-up bear after all, and
Masakichi realized that Tonkichi was not just a tough guy. Before
they knew it, they were best friends. Tonkichi worked hard at
catching salmon, and Masakichi worked hard at collecting honey. But
then one day, like a bolt from the blue, the salmon disappeared from
the river."
"A bolt from the blue?"
"Like a flash of lightning from a clear blue sky," Sayoko explained.
"All of a sudden, without warning."
"All of a sudden the salmon disappeared?" Sala asked, with a sombre
expression. "But why?"
"Well, all the salmon in the world got together and decided they
weren't going to swim up that river anymore, because a bear named
Tonkichi was there, and he was so good at catching salmon. Tonkichi
never caught another decent salmon after that. The best he could do
was catch an occasional skinny salmon and eat it, but the
worst-tasting thing you could ever want to eat is a skinny salmon."
"Poor Tonkichi!" Sala said.
"And that's how Tonkichi ended up being sent to the zoo?" Sayoko
asked.
"Well, that's a long, long story," Junpei said, clearing his throat.
"But, basically, yes, that's what happened."
"Didn't Masakichi help Tonkichi?" Sala asked.
"He tried. They were best friends, after all. That's what friends
are for. Masakichi shared his honey with Tonkichi—for free! But
Tonkichi said, 'I can't let you do that. It'd be like taking
advantage of you.' Masakichi said, 'You don't have to be such a
stranger with me, Tonkichi. If I were in your position, you'd do the
same thing for me, I'm sure. You would, wouldn't you?' "
"Sure he would," Sala said.
"But things didn't stay that way between them for long," Sayoko
interjected.
"Things didn't stay that way between them for long," Junpei said.
"Tonkichi told Masakichi, 'We're supposed to be friends. It's not
right for one friend to do all the giving and the other to do all
the taking: that's not real friendship. I'm leaving this mountain
now, Masakichi, and I'll try my luck somewhere else. And if you and
I meet up again somewhere, we will still be best friends.' So they
shook hands and parted. But after Tonkichi came down from the
mountain, he didn't know enough to be careful in the outside world,
so a hunter caught him in a trap. That was the end of Tonkichi's
freedom. They sent him to the zoo."
"Couldn't you have come up with a better ending? Like, everybody
lives happily ever after?" Sayoko asked Junpei later.
"I haven't thought of one yet."
The three of them had dinner together, as usual, in Sayoko's
apartment. Sayoko boiled a pot of spaghetti and defrosted some
tomato sauce while Junpei made a salad of green beans and onions.
They opened a bottle of red wine and poured Sala a glass of orange
juice. When they had finished eating, and cleaning the kitchen,
Junpei read to Sala from a picture book, but when bedtime came she
resisted.
"Please, Mama, do the bra trick," she begged.
Sayoko blushed. "Not now," she said. "We have a guest."
"No, we don't," Sala said. "Junpei's not a guest."
"What's this all about?" Junpei asked.
"It's just a silly game," Sayoko said.
"Mama takes her bra off under her clothes, puts it on the table, and
puts it back on again. She has to keep one hand on the table. And we
time her. She's great!"
"Sala!" Sayoko growled, shaking her head. "It's just a little game
we play at home. It's not meant for anybody else."
"Sounds like fun to me," Junpei said.
"Please, Mama, show Junpei! Just once. If you do it, I'll go to bed
right away."
"Oh, what's the use," Sayoko muttered. She took off her digital
watch and handed it to Sala. "Now, you're not going to give me any
more trouble about going to bed, right? O.K., get ready to time me
when I count to three."
Sayoko was wearing a baggy black crewneck sweater. She put both
hands on the table and counted, "One . . . two . . . three!" Like a
turtle's head retracting into its shell, her right hand disappeared
up her sleeve, and then there was a light back-scratching kind of
movement. Out came the right hand again, and the left hand went up
its sleeve. Sayoko turned her head just a bit, and the left hand
came out holding a white bra—a small one, with no wires. Without the
slightest wasted motion, the hand and bra went back up the sleeve,
and the hand came out again. Then the right hand pulled in, poked
around at the back, and came out again. The end. Sayoko rested her
right hand on her left on the table.
"Twenty-five seconds," Sala said. "That's great, Mama, a new record!
Your best time so far was thirty-six seconds."
Junpei applauded. "Wonderful! Like magic."
Sala clapped her hands, too. Sayoko stood up and announced, "All
right, show time is over. To bed, young lady. You promised."
Sala kissed Junpei on the cheek and went to bed.
Sayoko stayed with her until her breathing was deep and steady, then
joined Junpei on the sofa. "I have a confession to make," she said.
"I cheated."
"Cheated?"
"I didn't put the bra back on. I just pretended. I slipped it out
from under my sweater and dropped it on the floor."
Junpei laughed. "What a terrible mother!"
"I wanted to make a new record," she said, narrowing her eyes with a
smile. He hadn't seen her smile in that simple, mischievous way for
a long time. Time wobbled on its axis inside Junpei, like curtains
stirring in a breeze. He reached for Sayoko's shoulder, and her hand
took his. They came together on the sofa in a strong embrace. With
complete naturalness, they wrapped their arms around each other and
kissed. It was as if nothing had changed since the time they were
nineteen.
"We should have been like this to begin with," Sayoko whispered
after they had moved from the sofa to her bed. "But you didn't get
it. You just didn't get it. Not till the salmon disappeared from the
river."
They took their clothes off and held each other gently. Their hands
groped clumsily, as if they were both having sex for the first time.
They took their time, until they knew they were ready, and then at
last Junpei entered Sayoko and she drew him in.
None of this seemed real to Junpei. In the half-light, he felt as if
he were crossing a deserted bridge that went on and on forever. He
moved, and she moved with him. Again and again, he wanted to come,
but he held himself back, fearing that, once it happened, the dream
would end and everything would vanish.
Then, behind him, he heard a slight creaking sound. The bedroom door
was easing open. The light from the hallway took the shape of the
door and fell on the rumpled bedclothes. Junpei raised himself and
turned to see Sala standing against the light. Sayoko held her
breath and moved her hips away, pulling Junpei out. Gathering the
sheet to her breasts, she used one hand to straighten the hair on
her forehead.
Sala was not crying or screaming. Her right hand gripping the
doorknob, she just stood there, looking at the two of them but
seeing nothing. Her eyes were focussed on emptiness.
Sayoko called her name.
"The man said to come here," Sala said in a flat voice, like someone
who has just been ripped out of a dream.
"The man?" Sayoko asked.
"The Earthquake Man. He came and woke me up. He told me to tell you.
He said he has the box ready for everybody. He said he's waiting
with the lid open. He said I should tell you that, and you would
understand."
Sala slept in Sayoko's bed that night. Junpei stretched out on the
living-room sofa with a blanket, but he could not sleep. The TV
faced the sofa, and for a very long time he stared at the dead
screen. Junpei knew that they were inside there. They were waiting
with the box open. Junpei felt a chill run up his spine, and, no
matter how long he waited, it did not go away.
He gave up trying to sleep and went to the kitchen. He made himself
some coffee and sat at the kitchen table to drink it, but he felt
something bunched up under one foot. It was Sayoko's bra, still
lying there. He picked it up and hung it on the back of a chair. It
was a simple, white piece of underwear, devoid of decoration. It
hung on the kitchen chair in the predawn darkness like some
anonymous witness who had wandered in from a time long past.
Junpei thought about his early days in college. He could still hear
Takatsuki the first time they met, saying, "Hey, let's get something
to eat," in that warm way of his, and he could see Takatsuki's
friendly smile that seemed to say, "Relax. The world is just going
to keep getting better and better." Where did we eat that time,
Junpei wondered, and what did we have? He couldn't remember, though
he was sure it was nothing special.
"Why did you choose me to go to lunch with?" Junpei had asked him
that day. Takatsuki tapped his own temple with complete confidence.
"I have a talent for picking the right friends at the right times in
the right places."
And Takatsuki had not been wrong, Junpei thought, setting his coffee
mug on the kitchen table. He did have an intuitive knack for picking
the right friends. But that was not enough. Finding one person to
love over the long haul of life was quite a different matter from
finding friends. Junpei closed his eyes and thought about the
stretch of time he had passed through. He did not want to think of
it as something he had merely used up without any purpose.
As soon as Sayoko woke in the morning, he would ask her to marry
him, Junpei decided. He was sure now. He couldn't waste another
minute. Taking care not to make a sound, he opened the bedroom door
and looked at Sayoko and Sala sleeping bundled in a comforter. Sala
lay with her back to Sayoko, whose arm was draped on Sala's
shoulder. Junpei touched Sayoko's hair where it fell across the
pillow, and caressed Sala's small, pink cheek with the tip of his
finger. Neither of them stirred. He eased himself down to the
carpeted floor by the bed, his back against the wall, to watch over
them in their sleep.
Eyes fixed on the hands of the clock, Junpei thought about the rest
of the story for Sala. He had to find a way to end the tale of
Masakichi and Tonkichi. There had to be a way to save Tonkichi from
the zoo. Junpei retraced the story from the beginning. Before long,
an idea began to sprout in his head, and, little by little, it took
shape.
Tonkichi had the same thought as Sala: he would use the honey that
Masakichi had collected to bake honey pies. It didn't take him long
to realize that he had a real talent for making crisp, delicious
honey pies. Masakichi took the honey pies to town and sold them to
the people there. The people loved Tonkichi's honey pies and bought
them by the dozen. So Tonkichi and Masakichi never had to separate
again: they lived happily ever after in the mountains.
Sala would be sure to love the new ending. And so would Sayoko. I
want to write stories that are different from the ones I've written
so far, Junpei thought. I want to write about people who dream and
wait for the night to end, who long for the light so that they can
hold the ones they love. But right now I have to stay here and keep
watch over this woman and this girl. I will never let anyone—not
anyone—try to put them into that crazy box, not even if the sky
should fall or the earth crack open with a roar.
(Translated, from the Japanese, by Jay Rubin.)