Authors: Valerie Miner
She spotted Teddy's spidery scrawl. And two letters for Betty, who, like Roy's sister, had cultivated pen pals through a Quaker group. Wanda questioned this practice â it made the camp seem like an exotic outpost. She reminded herself the kids had little enough pleasure. It couldn't be a bad thing to make genuine communication with other people. She walked to the door, checking through the letters. Another Sears, Roebuck bill. Boy, they kept track of their customers. And a baseball catalogue for Howard. Nothing from Mr Omi about her newspaper job.
Since there was no mail for Mama, Wanda stopped by the canteen to buy her some Lifesavers. And since the canteen was right next to Mr Omi's office, she decided to drop by and ask when she could expect a decision about the job.
Mr Omi sat at the far end of a long office, his back to the door and his head bent beneath a brass lamp which illuminated his crowded desk. He hardly needed the light at this hour, Wanda thought, and wondered if this was one of his ways of protesting the government budget restrictions. Mr Omi, an older
Nisei
,
was a complicated man. Intense, smart, very practical. He frightened her a little with his cool reason. Perhaps this wasn't the right time. Perhaps she should just be patient. Wanda started to turn and dropped Howard's catalogue on the floor.
âWhat's that?' Mr Omi was startled. âOh, Wanda. Come in. I was just thinking about you.'
âYou were?' She picked up the catalogue and struggled to hold all the mail in her arms while looking like a competent journalist. âI mean, yes sir, I was in the neighborhood and thought I would check to see if â¦'
âYes, yes.' He sounded more awake now. âSit here young lady and let's talk about this job.'
Wanda tried to relax, pretended she were Teddy, who would know the most sensible way to behave in a situation like this.
âYou had excellent writing samples. And congratulations on getting your article into
American Mind
.'
âThank you, sir.' She felt better now; she could feel her body cooling down.
âAnd you can type splendidly.'
Wanda nodded, listening to his tone. She imagined him a doctor advising, Yes, it's a healthy baby, with just one or two birth defects. âBut,' she said.
He smiled. âWomen's intuition. Yes, but. It's an embarrassment of riches. We had four people apply for that paid position. The decision came down to John Takata or you.'
âAnd John won.' Her eyes were fixed on the Sears bill.
âThat's about the size of it.' He shook his head sympathetically. âYou see, as a young man, he's more likely to use the experience when he gets out in the world.'
Wanda couldn't help the tears. She kept her eyes down so Mr Omi wouldn't notice.
âAnd a pretty girl like you, already engaged as I understand, will be raising a family soon.'
âIt's not fair,' she heard herself protest.
âFair?' Mr Omi looked more closely. âNo, I suppose not, Wanda.' He stared out his window toward the sentry tower. âNo one said life was “fair”. The choice, shall we say, was practical.'
âYes, sir.' Wanda blinked back the tears. She tried to remember Mr Omi's kindness after Papa's death. He was an old family friend. He liked her.
âSo you'll apply for that position at the school?'
âYes, that seems most likely.' She couldn't chase the bitterness from her voice. Oh, she wished she were going home to the girls tonight.
âYou'll be good at that, Wanda. You have a natural talent with people, like your father.'
âYes, sir.' She stood. âI'll let you get back to work now.'
âGive my regards to your mother.'
âYes, thank you. Good-bye Mr Omi.'
It was 4 p.m.
before
she got home, finished her chores and had a chance to read Teddy's letter. The promise of this letter had carried her through the afternoon. Now if Mama would only continue napping until Betty got home. Betty would be excited by her mail too. It pleased Wanda how like her sister she was. In a time when difference meant social hardship, similarity was reassuring. It would be fun to share their letters when Betty got home. Had Betty come to think of this horrible place as home? Well, she wasn't blind. She could see the barbed wire. She could see the guns. Sometimes it was the hypocrisy of camp that oppressed Wanda as much as the restrictions â the pretense of leading a normal American life in this abandoned crater.
Tea prepared, Wanda sank down at the kitchen table, which Howard had contrived from spare lumber. Luckily they had been given some old chairs by a committee at the nearby Hopi reservation. She put her feet up and pulled out Teddy's letter.
Dear Wanda,
How are you? I hope the heat has calmed down. We're moving through Indian summer now â temperatures pretty high outside. But inside the house we're all doing OK.
Ann is really enjoying the scholarship. She impressed her professor so much that she's skipped a class. Real brain. Still, I fret about her. She's been awfully caught up with her mother who, sadly, isn't any better. Ann seems to think Mama's waiting for her daughter to rescue her. I go to the hospital with Ann every couple of weeks and, believe me, it's enough to chill your heart. I reckon the important thing is that Ann loves this book work. She and Moira joke in Church Latin over supper. I don't follow, but this is better than the bickering.
Wanda shook her head.
She
had to talk Teddy out of her constant self-effacement. Of all the girls, Teddy possessed the most common sense. She just didn't credit that as intelligence.
Moira is also a little happier, although I don't count on it lasting. She ran into a pal of Randy's at a party who said Randy was missing her a lot. Who knows? I'm sure I was never fair to the fellow, but I can't help thinking Moira is better off without him. She's doing great stuff at the shipyard. Won some kind of morale-booster award. She has a couple of new friends. One of them â Vivian â has been over to the house a couple of times. A livewire. Hep, I guess. A lot of fun, anyway.
We're still pulling cucumbers in from the garden. It's been a great salad season, but then I guess I shouldn't mention it since you've been getting such lousy rations. Let us know if you need anything new in the next parcel.
Wanda was still embarrassed
by
the parcels. Not that she was too proud for welfare. No, she was over that. With the tight supplies here at camp, they all hoped for shipments from outside friends. And it wasn't as if she had asked for a ticket to this desert wonderland. But she worried about Teddy, Moira and Ann doing it so often. They didn't make much money. They all had family obligations too.
Now, no objections. I can just hear your worrying. We all love to do this. Like Christmas. Anyway, Moira found some of that chili for Howard. Is there anything special your mother wants? How's she doing anyway?
I got a letter from Angela yesterday. She loves the flying lessons. It sounds pretty exciting. The WAFs still say all her work will be in the US, that it's too dangerous for women to fly across the ocean. Baloney, but I'm glad she's staying Stateside.
I've been thinking a lot about how dumb it is for me to be typing sales reports while there's a war going on. And as much as I'd like to go off flying like Angela, I kind of think I'm needed here with my family (Pop is having a tough time with the drink again) and with Stockton Street. But I got to talking with this woman, Dawn. Have I mentioned her before? She suggested that I ask to help with the War Bonds Campaign â The Emporium has a booth on the street floor now, did you know that? Anyway, they said yes, so that's what I do part-time â sit on the street floor with those forms. Plan a bulletin board. I even got interviewed by two reporters from the
Examiner
last week. What a lark.
Otherwise, nothing much is happening. Dawn and her friend Sandra, who works in the Martinez shipyard, took me to Baker Beach Sunday. That was fun â like being a kid â at least the sand was familiar from my girlhood. Sometimes it is possible to forget about the war. For us, here, anyway. I'm sure it's not true for you â¦
Wanda wondered about that.
She
sometimes forgot this place was an internment camp and imagined it as hell. When the sewage stench got ripe and the crowds of people blocked out any shred of privacy, she was sure she was inside one of Moira's Catholic torture legends. At other times, walking with Roy on a rare, cool evening, she imagined Lion's Head as a Japanese ranch. But usually the war was hard to forget. She remembered Mr Omi's shrug when she called him unfair. She was beginning to realize how much she had wanted that silly job on the camp newspaper. Well, what could she do? She glanced around at the makeshift table and the skimpy decorations and Mama sleeping fitfully on the cot against the wall. Wanda closed her eyes in exhaustion.
âHi, Wanda.' A greeting from the doorway. High-pitched, precise. She resisted the voice, resisted identification. This was her day off.
âAnybody home?'
âShhh, you'll wake Mama.' Wanda opened one eye.
Betty was standing by the door, hands on her tiny hips, eight years old and already the châtelaine. Betty was a pretty child, taller than Wanda had been at her age, and more outspoken. Wanda found herself staring at the girl's short, straight black hair. Mama didn't bother with all the falderal she had done to Wanda's hair as a child. Betty seemed grateful for this; she said she liked to feel the wind on her head.
âNo, I won't.' Betty hesitated, with amusement or confusion, Wanda couldn't tell. For of course she was correct. Mama could sleep through their voices during the day. Only the dark silence robbed her of sleep. Mama was generally quiet in her suffering. But in the middle of the night, Wanda could hear her groaning and rolling over and over.
Stretching her arms back now, Wanda yawned. âHow was your day, old pal?'
Betty smiled, sat down, her hands clasped around her knees. âMr Sasaki is going to start giving piano lessons. And he said I could do it, if Mama approves.'
âPiano.' Wanda felt a twinge. She had always wanted to learn piano when she was little. But Papa said there wasn't enough money yet. And besides, Mama reminded her, they could never fit one of those big horses into the house.
âYes, you know that instrument with the black and white teeth that makes music.'
Wanda regarded Betty closely. This was one of those horrible moments when she felt like Betty's mother. Wanda didn't enjoy the responsibility of knowing more, of having to restrain her feelings. Yes, she was jealous of Betty. Jealous of her youthful insensitivity. Jealous that Betty had two mothers where she, herself, only had one who hardly spoke English. Jealous that Betty would learn the piano. Wanda considered that she was jealous of a childhood in jail and she felt ashamed.
âSo what do you think?' Betty was on her feet now, clearing off the table, impatient with Wanda's distraction.
âI think it's a good idea,' she said. âAnd very generous of Mr Sasaki.' She watched the grin spread across Betty's face. Wanda would have to remember that Betty was a child. She could not compensate Wanda for the lost voices of Stockton Street. Wanda would have to rely on letters.
Winter 1943.
Howard came home late from work and hurriedly changed clothes for supper. Mama, as usual, shook her head; she could not make it to the mess hall. She sat silently on the bed, her brow tight and her jaw set. Betty offered to bring home her meal. The three of them set out across the camp together.
âNews from the city?' Howard asked.
Wanda smiled, thinking how he, too, had grown accustomed to the regular dispatches from Stockton Street.
âMoira's job is fine. Looks like she may get back together with Randy.'
âOh, good,' Betty said firmly.
Howard and Wanda laughed.
âTeddy is spending more time with Dawn. And her father is on the wagon.'
âHow about Ann's classes?' Howard asked.
Wanda realized that she had left this news for last because she was hiding something. Just that ridiculous idea Mrs Nakashima had about her going to college. She was one of the few older women who wasn't pressuring gently about her wedding date. Apparently the government was allowing some young people from most camps to attend colleges in the East and Midwest. Mrs Nakashima had put down Wanda's name. You had to go where they sent you â Nebraska, Missouri, Colorado, Ohio. No, no, she had told Mrs Nakashima, she had too many obligations and no money. That's exactly why you must go, said Mrs Nakashima. Too many responsibilities for a girl your age and don't worry about the funds. They have scholarships. How could she leave Mama? And Roy? Would he think she had deserted him? No, it was a selfish idea and impractical.
âAnn's doing very well with the advanced courses. And managing to visit her parents a lot too.' She was trying to convince herself of something.
The dinner line stretched three yards out the front entrance. Chicken pot pie, the unappetizing word had passed down to them. Betty told Howard about the day's piano lesson. Wanda noticed that he seemed distracted. He didn't even notice Carolyn until she waved in his face. But then this kind of vagueness was part of Howard's personality. Sometimes it felt like he left the planet for hours at a time. The gentle absentmindedness was charming, really. Why did she have to criticize his lack of ambition?
Inside the mess hall, Wanda thought how she had described the place in her last letter, âspare and utilitarian'. She had explained that people tended to eat quickly â out of courtesy for those waiting in line and out of resistance to the cold atmosphere. Wanda felt like she was being fed rather than that she was eating. The real culinary rituals occurred during afternoon tea or at the occasional small party. They came to the mess hall for sustenance, not for nourishment. Often conversation was minimal like tonight and Wanda regretted this. She wanted distraction from Mrs Nakashima's far-flung ideas. She looked around at the faces â counting the friends she had made in the last month. The Morozumis sat in the corner. She wasn't sure, but she thought Betty had a crush on Tommy Morozumi. Carolyn Sasaki was helping old Mr Hata to a bench. Morton Shimasaki stood by the door to the dining hall, looking for his family. He was an excellent dentist and they were lucky to have him in camp. Funny the things she never thought about being grateful for.