Authors: Holly Thompson
and my mother emails
yokatta, ne?
good, right?
and my dad emails
wow!
and I think
yeah
to all three
I post some photos
for friends
then separately
email them to Lisa
W
hen Obon is over and
Kota has left and
we’ve taken down
the inside altar
and Koichi and I are taking down
the birdhouse altar
I murmur something like
until next year
but Koichi says
no
don’t say that
it seems the birdhouse altar
is used only for funerals
and the three Obon seasons
after a death
but never
when there is
not a death
in the family
now I remember thinking the altar
was a garden decoration
during that week we were here
for Jiichan’s funeral
and now I understand
why Baachan comes outside
to watch as Koichi and I
remove the greenery and
dismantle the wood sections
and now I know why
she sighs so
heavy
three years
since Jiichan’s death
over
he has truly
left us
if I were in New York
I would do like my Jewish cousins
with their relatives and
drape an arm over her shoulders
or take her hand
or give her a hug
but Kohama is not New York
and Baachan is not Jewish
and Baachan never
ever
hugs
she grunts
and fusses
and tells us to put the used greenery in the truck
and sweep the garden clean
where the altar stood
even though we know
and had already
started to do
just that
we resume work in the groves
thinning again the same groves
we were thinning in June
when I first arrived in Kohama
second pass
Uncle says
makes for sweeter fruit
less stress on the trees
so now we thin to get rid of
inferior fruit
scarred fruit
animal-damaged or
punctured fruit
any fruit unsuitable for market
but it seems a waste
so much good fruit
just tossed to the ground
so at the end of one day I ignore
Uncle’s frown
and gather
mikan
that aren’t rotten
or split
or drilled with beak holes
into a bin
after the dinner dishes
and under Baachan’s scowl
I squeeze the hard green fruits
juicing till my wrist and forearm ache
then add sugar
more
and more
and more sugar
far more sugar than Baachan wants to spare
for a drink
of discarded
mikan
but when I stir and pour
a glass for her
with ice cubes
even she admits
it’s better than lemonade
I take tiny glassfuls
to the others
and even set one
at the altar
for the ancestors
and you, too, Ruth,
if you’d like
a sip
A
fter thinning in the groves
all day one day
I come in from work
and on the table by the phone
lies a letter for me
not from my mother
or father
or Emi
but from Jake
friend
I say to Baachan
whose eyebrows are way up and
who I know
wants to know
who it’s from
she doesn’t say so but
later I know
she will also
want to know
what it says
after my bath
sitting on my futon
I read Jake’s words
on a half page of notebook paper
words that
stay with me
play over and over
in my head
even after
Physics and You
even after Newton’s prisms
even long after Yurie has turned off
the light
it’s good to know someone cares
I keep wishing I’d done more
like we do for my sister
even though that’s no guarantee
she won’t do what Ruth did
someday
I try not to hate Lisa
for what she did
but it’s hard
I try not to hate myself, too
I try not to hate all of us
for what we didn’t do
lying there
in the dark
I wonder if Jake’s list
of what we didn’t do
is the same as my list
which is
end the texting
talk with you
laugh with you
listen to you
include you
which seems so
basic and short
I keep thinking
there must be
something
else
in the morning Baachan
still has those eyebrows
way up
gives me extra work
shadows me
won’t let me go to the groves
keeps me with her
on the roof hanging laundry
in the gardens watering
on an errand to the tofu shop
like my very first days
in Kohama
she doesn’t ask
about the
friend
who wrote
doesn’t talk
about Jake’s letter
doesn’t mention it
all morning
but finally
as I rinse the rice for lunch
I tell her
who it’s from
and what it says
Baachan nods
and grunts
and mutters
and we eat lunch
and I go up to the groves
but when I come back down
end of the day
she says
shouldn’t you
maybe consider
telling this Jake boy
to write
to that girl
,
Lisa?
that night I check email
and with still no reply from Lisa
about my photos
I decide to do
what Baachan suggests—
write another letter to Jake
and tell him how quiet
Lisa has been
online
how I know she feels bad
how I think words
from him
might help
I start to write it out on paper
then turn on the computer
and this time
I send it by
email
then wait
okay
he emails back
in the morning, his night
nothing else
M
id-August
is the regular
Obon holiday
with most of Japan
off work and even Yurie
home two days
midweek
Uncle and Aunt keep working
saying
they’ve had their summer break
Kohama Obon
but Koichi and Yurie and I
are free to play
so we put mats, snorkels, masks, towels
and three of Baachan’s
bento
lunches
in Koichi’s car
blast music as we drive
down the west coast of the peninsula
curve after curve
of cliff
high above the sea
Yurie puts her hands in the air
and sways to the music
and the curves
I’ve never seen her
this way
relaxed
fun
acting young
we arrive at a crescent beach
edged by a village
of yellow and blue and red roofs
and backed by mountains
and flanked by craggy bluffs
on both sides
I think
I might just stay here forever
we change
then drop our bags onto
mats we set on the sand
and Koichi points to a float
takes his mark like the start of a race
says
yoi … don!
and we three fly to the water
charge
splash forward
dive under
swim crawl
hard as we can
out to the float