Authors: Holly Thompson
but on the way home
Uncle remembers he forgot
the cucumbers
I have only eggplants and peppers
and he insists we both
return to the gas station
and I’m thinking
this is different
Uncle never wastes an afternoon
and never visits during work hours
and normally doesn’t care
about cucumbers or if he did
would go back himself
and send me ahead
to help Baachan
or Aunt
with a chore
even after
we get the cucumbers
he remembers
suddenly
sheepishly
we need to see another cousin
by the bridge
but by then I’m thinking
this is way too
different
and I start to run
through the east side
of the village
over the bridge
to the west side
down the lane
up the driveway
through the house
past Baachan and Aunt
in the kitchen
up to Yurie’s room
where I let the
eggplants and peppers
drop
Uncle
not far behind me
is hollering through the house
as I’m kneeling before the computer
cursing it to boot up
fast
faster
damn it!
Baachan flies into the room
tries to pull me away
Uncle behind her
Aunt, too
but Uncle pulls Baachan off me
and I look at Baachan
see her eyes fill and
I know
something
happened
please
I say
B
aachan kneels beside me then
before the low table with the computer
that she doesn’t know how to use
as I open the browser
and pull up my email
and chat
and see all the
messages
and the name
again
and again
Lisa
Baachan holds me
as I check each message
first from Lisa to us all
last night, Japan night
her morning
just an hour after I
logged off
thanks everyone
you’ve been great but it’s
time to go
gotta make myself
better
only way
I know how
luv you
Lisa
then message after message
copied to every electron
in the atom
and beyond
as they logged on
then phoned
and emailed
anyone
everyone
desperate
to get someone
at the summer school
to find her
stop her
save her
and messages
hours later
after they got the news
from their mothers
who’d heard from Abby’s mother
who’d heard direct
from Lisa’s godmother
that she’d been found
in her dorm room
hanging
from her bathrobe sash
Baachan says
that a phone call before breakfast
was my mother with the news
and that my mother
wanted me to hear the news from her
not a computer
but that she had to comfort Emi
take Emi to meet with counselors
that Gina’s father had assembled
at the community center
for girls, siblings, friends, parents
anyone in town
who needed help …
so could they stall?
my mother had thought
they’d be home to call
during our lunch break
but they were delayed
as more and more girls, boys
parents and neighbors arrived
so my mother had called my father
who’d called here
during
shogi
and told Baachan
stall more!
now Aunt brings the phone upstairs
and they dial my home
in New York
I hear my mother’s words
I hear her voice
and my dad comes on
and I hear his words
hear his voice
all soft
and Emi comes on
and I hear her words
and I hear her voice
but I have none
and Aunt takes the phone
then gives it to Uncle
who leaves the room
I start to shiver
my whole body
and Aunt sets out the futon
and Baachan lays me down
and Aunt covers me
and Yurie comes home from work early
and stays beside me
lies beside me
holds me
at night I wake
in the dark
and turn
and Baachan
on a futon beside mine
turns toward me
pats my back
and Yurie on her futon
beside mine
turns toward me
takes my hand
somehow I sleep
between them
all night
I
lie there
a doctor comes
I take a pill
and sleep
wake
sleep
soups are brought
I sip
sleep
when I wake
someone is always there
someone always takes my hand
strokes my head
I don’t eat till late
the next day
almost dark
again
when Baachan
brings me a plate
of pancakes
covered with canned slices of
mikan
and sweet whipped cream
which she spears mouthfuls of
on a fork
and feeds me
as I tremble
and stop
to cry
when I can finally speak
to my mother
by phone
I learn that
as it turns out
in Lisa’s pocket
was a printout
of an email
from Jake
who wrote
we can’t hate ourselves
just find a way to make this
turn you into someone
better than you were
that’s what we all have to do
that’s all we can do
I translate this to Baachan
who squeezes her eyes shut
shakes her head
mournful, slow
and uses that handkerchief
that’s always tucked and ready
in her front
apron pocket
Newton’s third law
of reciprocal action
says
for every action there is an equal
and opposite
reaction
that all forces are interactions
all forces come in pairs
Physics and You
spells it out
says
if body A exerts a force
on body B
then body B will exert a force
of the same magnitude
on body A
push and pull
I think
maybe this
is what happened
with Lisa
and you, Ruth—
body A
and body B
A
fter two and a half days
Baachan tells me to get up
and shower
and then come help
in the kitchen
start your body moving
she says
your mind will follow
Yurie has left for work
Aunt, Uncle and Koichi are in the groves
they’ve all eaten
Baachan’s washing up
I sit at the table alone
I eat rice, miso soup
then Baachan and I
go for a walk
up to the temple
before the heat starts
before the cicadas
are deafening
when there is still
coolness to be found
in shade
we trudge uphill
Baachan pausing often
to wipe her brow and neck
with her handkerchief
as we climb higher
beyond the temple
up terraces
of stone monuments
we bow before the Mano grave
Baachan standing in prayer
long after I have opened my eyes
to stare at family names
at the temple
closed and quiet
we ascend stone steps
and sit down
on the weathered boards
of the veranda
under the deep eave
facing the bay
and faint gray hint
of Mount Fuji
suicide can spread
Baachan finally says
utsuru
she adds
like a virus
you have to stop it
put up barriers
I rock back and forth
exhale
ask
do you think it was a mistake—
the letter to Jake
the email from Jake
to Lisa?
a hot wind gusts
behind us
from the south
curling over the mountaintop
brushing tree canopies
and rolling down the slopes
to breathe on us like dragon fire
there
on the veranda
no
she says
what I think was a mistake
was sending a girl
of fourteen away
to a different state
to live in a dormitory
by herself
during a summer like this