Authors: Ben Byrne
“And I know exactly who's responsible, Takara-san!” she said, waving her finger at me in a menacing fashion. “And he'll be for it when I get out of here, you just mark my words!”
I clapped my hand over my mouth, trying desperately not to laugh. But Mrs. Ishino just took a long swallow from her bottle, and burst into loud peals of laughter herself.
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The patients wore padded kimonos of faded grey-green as they slouched on the floor. Some got on with piecework they'd been given to pay for their treatment, stitching trousers and dresses from strips of old uniform, or painting dolls as souvenirs for the hospital shop. It was shivering cold on the ward, yet they insisted on opening the tall, cracked windows in the late afternoon, when they would clamber up onto the sills to look out over the road below. It was like the cinema for them, as they hung there, screeching like vultures at anyone who passed. They saved their loudest chorus for any American soldiers, who waved up even as the girls made vulgar gestures.
Those first nights, after my diagnosis, I lay there, parched and desperate for one of my pills. I thrashed and shivered with feverish nightmares, my blanket soaking wet. But finally, after several weeks, I began to feel calm once again. My terrible dreams began to fade. One morning, when I awoke, I felt fresh, as if snow had fallen while I had slept. I realised that the suffocating spirits that had haunted me for so long had finally left my side.
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There was a glint in Mrs. Ishino's eye as she sat down on her mattress that morning. A frayed towel hung over her shoulder and her hair was wet from the bathhouse.
“Good news, Satsuko-san,” she said, as she tugged a comb through her hair. “I'm finally escaping at the end of this week. I've been given the all-clear.”
Her news took me aback. I realised I'd become quite used to her comforting, matronly presence at my bedside each day as I woke.
“Well. I'm certainly very pleased for you, Mrs. Ishino.”
She gave a sly smile. “And that's not all,” she said.
“Oh?”
“I've heard a message on the wind that you'll be getting out of here too, Satsuko-san!”
I glanced at her in alarm. Despite the stink of the bedpans, the vulgarity of the patients and the backbreaking work, the gloomy ward had become something of a refuge, a place where I could hide away from the world and all its horrors.
Mrs. Ishino twisted her hair into a knot and knelt down beside me. “Satsuko-san, I wonder if I could ask you something.”
“Anything you like, Mrs. Ishino!”
“I hoped that you perhaps you might consider coming to work for me. When you get out of here, I mean. The shop could always do with another pretty girl. Someone who's worked in the trade before, you know.”
For a moment, my heart leapt, as I pictured myself in the old days, working at my father's restaurantâgoing back and forth amongst the tables with a big bottle of sake on my back, my skirts hitched up, serving dishes and joining in all the banter . . .
Mrs. Ishino was studying me. It dawned on me that this wasn't the trade she meant. She'd mentioned that her bar was popular with “a certain kind of American.”
The picture faded as she took my hands in hers. “Why not come and join us, Satsuko-san? It's not such a bad place. You're sure to get on with the other girls. You could do much worse, you know.”
I knew that she was right. The comfort stations had all been shut down, in any case. There'd been too many Americans going back home to their wives with unfortunate conditions. The only other place to go now would be the streets.
The thought of the broken-down mansion in Tsukiji, the drugged girls in their livid dresses, made me shudder. I took a deep breath, pulled together my kimono and knelt down on the floor in formal thanks. After all, it didn't seem that I could stay here any longer.
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Mrs. Ishino herself came to collect me in a taxi on the day of my discharge. She made comforting noises as the doctors stamped my forms and wrote my name in the ledger.
As I walked out into the bright spring sunshine, I blinked.
“Look,” I said, pointing.
Opposite the hospital, the first plum blossom had budded white against a row of scorched trees.
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lum blossom sprouted prickly white all over the trees in the Yushima Tenjin shrine. Bundles of wooden prayer plaques covered the racks outside so I guessed that the snobby students at the Imperial University must be having their examinations. A crowd of GIs were gathered in the garden beyond the arch and I wandered toward them to find out what they were looking at.
Beneath a blossoming plum tree, a Japanese girl stood dressed as a geisha. She wore a purple and crimson kimono and held a tasselled parasol over her shoulder, a gold fan hiding her face. The soldiers were all pointing cameras at the girl, squinting through the viewfinders, and the air was full of the exciting sound of the shutters clicking and film whirring. The girl shook the fan delicately, then snapped it shut.
Satsuko.
The girl looked so much like my sister that my heart actually stopped. I saw her treading water in the fiery canal; I almost felt the flames scorching my cheeks. One of the GIs called out and she shifted. Her eyes fell upon me, and my heart filled with terror.
There was no sign of recognition in her white-powdered face. I struggled to recognize the wide, deep black eyes of my sister as she turned her head, raising the fan again in another pose. Her nose was not quite right I realisedâand she was much shorter that my sister, stocky even. An awkward sense of guilt and relief flooded my heart. Satsuko was dead, after all.
Down by the woman's feet was a cardboard sign scribbled with clumsy English:
Genuine Japan Geisha Girl. Photographâ1 Yen.
There was a little tin can next to the sign, already filled with banknotes. She started spinning her parasol, pouting and pushing out her chest in a way that no real geisha would ever have done. Her face was as wooden as a doll's as the soldiers pulled her into position by her kimono sleeve, pushing their cameras right up in her face.
I thought of the tall American in the trench coat, who'd taken photographs of us that day by our baseball pitch. I remembered how I'd held the solid bulk of his camera in my hands, and how, for a moment, I'd caught Tomoko in the rangefinder, the twin images of her shy face blurred and sharp. There must be a photograph of her, somewhere, I thought. Perhaps I could track down the American somehow, ask him for a copy . . . Then, at least I would have something to remember her by.
A soldier was squatting in front of me. All of a sudden, I shoved him as hard as I could, and he fell over onto the gravel. I leaped on him, grasped hold of the camera and pulled, the man gasping and clutching at his throat as the leather strap garrotted him.
The strap snapped, and I tumbled backward, managing somehow to keep hold of the camera. I sprinted away through the garden, angry voices hollering behind me. A second later, heavy, crunching footsteps came hot on my heels.
Nearly stumbling in front of a bus, I sprinted across the avenue. As I ran alongside the university walls, horns blaredâthe soldiers were trying to hold up the traffic and negotiate their way to the other side. I spun around the corner and slipped through the famous Red Gate. Students and professors were coming out of the buildings and shouted at me as I dodged around them. I ran out past the quadrangle and through the back gate at the other side, then slid down against the wall, completely out of breath. As I pulled the camera out from beneath my shirt and examined the elegant dials and embossed serial numbers, my heart started to pound even harder. It was a Leica, just like the one that trench coat had used. I slid it into my canvas satchel, a fantastic idea forming in my mind.
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Shin's hoarse voice was bellowing from inside as I paused outside the entrance to the inn, my hand on the wooden screen door. I slid it open a crack, and peered into the darkness. The children were all kneeling on the tatami of the reception hall, clearly engrossed in some kind of game. Nobu, Koji and Aiko had their heads bowed low and were whimpering as Shin strutted up and down before them, a blanket around his shoulders.
“Take me, sir,” Koji said. “Please!”
Aiko jerked up her head. “No, sir! Take me!”
“What's in it for me?” Shin asked, in a strangled voice, as if he was an aristocrat. “You.” He pointed at Nobu.
“I'll do anything you like, sir,” Nobu pleaded.
Shin waved his muddy straw sandal in Nobu's face. “Kiss my feet then.” Puckering his lips, Nobu gave his foot an unhappy peck.
Shin spun around and squatted over Nobu's head, gripping his shoulders as he spread his bandy legs. “Eat my shit!”
Nobu brayed like a donkey and pulled away. “No, sir!” he shouted. “Please don't make me!”
I heaved aside the rattling door and rushed into the hall.
“What's going on?”
Shin's face froze. Slowly, he began to give his wide, idiotic grin, showing the broken teeth behind his thick, curling lips.
“Well now, big brother's home at last,” he said. “Got any treats for us today?”
“Shut up.”
“Bean jam buns? Or is it apples again?”
I felt as if he had punched me in the stomach. Tomoko's body had lain for hours in the wasteground, as we struggled to dig down into a frozen bomb crater to inter her. Pale and blanched in the moonlight, her body had been withered away almost to a skeleton, black apple pips glistening on her chin.
“We were just playing a game,” Koji stammered. The other children stared at me nervously. Shin slapped his hand over Koji's mouth. “Shut up! It's none of his business!” he shouted.
“What's none of my business?”
“It's none of your business!” Shin's face was red and he was furious.
Koji struggled to pull Shin's hand away. “Why don't you just tell him?” he whined. “Just tell him!”
“Tell me what?”
Aiko was bobbing up and down as she piped up: “About the holiday camps! The holiday camps!”
An eerie feeling passed through me as I heard the phrase.
“What's this?”
Aiko was nodding earnestly. “The holiday camps, Hiroshi-kun. We're going away to be adopted.”
The hair prickled up on the back of my neck. I sat down cross-legged on the floor.
“You had better tell me what this is all about. Please.”
Slowly, they all sat down on the floor in front of me.
“Well,” Aiko began, “I don't really knowâ”
“It was the Americans, wasn't it?” Nobu said. “It was their ideaâ”
“One at a time.”
Koji frowned, tracing a vague shape with his finger in the dust on the floor.
The Americans, he began, had apparently decided to set up holiday camps in the countryside, for all the Japanese children who had lost their families during the war.
“Just like us!” Aiko said, excitedly.
Some of the camps were in noble houses by the seaside, Koji continued, some of them up in the mountains, in old monasteries, but all of them had warm beds and three meals a day, hot rice and soup with them all. You could choose whether you wanted to help out on the farm, digging the fields or feeding the animals, or you could go back to school and have lessons with the teachers. There were all sorts of toys and games, model airplanes for rainy days, activities and trips to the countryside or the beach, swimming galas, running races, butterfly collectingâ
Koji was panting as he trailed off. The other children were gazing at him like they were hypnotized.
It all sounded so marvellous that, for a second, I let myself imagine that it was true. I pictured us all, miles and miles away from Tokyo, racing along a shimmery beach, splashing and diving amongst the blue waves. For a moment, I imagined Tomoko, standing by a rock pool. Wearing a white swimming cap, the skin brown and sunburned around her shoulders.
“Tell him about the family visits,” Aiko whispered, nudging Koji in the ribs.
Koji nodded. “They're the best of all.”
Every Sunday, he said, mothers and fathers who had lost their children in the war drove up to the camps to inspect the children. They asked the headmaster about their behaviour, then chose the ones they liked best to take home to bring up as their own.
“We're going to be adopted,” Aiko whispered. Her eyes were shining.
A horrible, empty feeling welled up inside me. I clasped my hands around my knees.
“Who told you all this?”
“All the gangs are talking about it,” Nobu said. “Everybody knows.”
As I looked at their bright faces, I felt utterly helpless. I gazed around the room, at the dark, damp patches in the ceiling, threatening to collapse at any moment; at the rotten tatami on the floor and the broken window shutters.
“I'm sorry,” I said. “I'm very sorry. But someone has been filling your head with fairy tales.”
Silence fell. It was as if I had smashed a mirror with a hammer. Koji smiled doubtfully, as if he thought I was joking. Shin's face was still red, and he looked at me with pure hatred.
“I'm so sorry,” I said, my voice wavering. “I wish it was true as much as you do. Really I do. But it's just not.”
I waved a hopeless hand around the decaying house. “I'm so sorry. But this is all we've got.”
Shin leaped to his feet, staring at me with white eyes. He smashed his fist into his palm as he loomed over me.
“You're always so clever, aren't you, you bastard?” he snarled. “You're always right about everything, aren't you? Well, this time you're fucking wrong!”
To my complete astonishment, there were tears in his eyes. His thick lips were trembling.
It was appalling, the worst thing of allâthat such a bully as Shin could be caught up in such a tangled dreamâ