Authors: Holly Thompson
and how to make a viewer
for seeing underwater
damselfish
anemones
sea slugs
crabs
along the shore beyond the pier
when I didn’t have a mask and snorkel
and that was when I began
to understand
there are at least
two sides to any story
that Jiichan had been mean
because he hurt
that he blamed
because he grieved
for a daughter
leaving
fault and blame—
both seem so easy to place
but much harder
maybe
to erase
I think
there must be at least
two sides
to your story, too, Ruth,
and maybe knowing
more of Lisa’s side
how she lived with
her godparents
not her parents
who were I don’t know where
might help explain
why she was so mean
to you
and why we all
followed
her lead
D
usk one evening
my Kohama second cousin
Asuka
high school student
calls on us
proper, like
phone call first
formal front-door visit
with summer gift presented to Uncle
who hands it to Baachan
who places it before the Buddhist altar
for Jiichan and the ancestors
by now I know the routine
and rise to do my part to
serve cold barley tea
chilled fruit
and small cakes
after which I
sit at the edge
of conversation
Asuka turns to me and says
do you remember me?
but I don’t
until she says
you stayed with us
when you were little!
and then I remember
the girl cousin who went off to school
while Emi and I stayed
at the house or followed
our mother on visits or errands
around the village
Asuka would return
in the afternoons
with homework
she’d do kneeling at a low table
and I would sit beside her
waiting
watching her make pencil strokes
in columns of
kanji
boxes
and sometimes
she would let me write
in her drill book
I stare at her
and finally
when she laughs
at my puzzlement
I see a resemblance to
the Asuka back then
but now Asuka
gets to the point
of her visit tonight
and invites me
to join her
and some friends
on the Marine Day
long weekend—
day trip to Tokyo
Baachan scowls
frets the cost
clucks and starts to lecture
I’m ready to protest
but under the table
Aunt holds my wrist
then speaks up
to assure Baachan
that I have my own funds for travel
that I will be chaperoned by Asuka
and, besides, I will benefit
from a day trip to the capital
visited only once
with my family
when Emi was small enough
to be carried
on my father’s shoulders
a photo album
that Aunt pulls
from a shelf
provides proof
and finally
as we laugh at snapshots of all of us
much much younger
Baachan says
she supposes
I can go
Asuka claps
and winks
at me
I like Asuka
her smooth and
natural manners
the way she addresses
Baachan with deference
but includes me with
smiling eyes
she’s two years older
but makes me feel
at ease
makes me feel
I can just be me
for a change
and that maybe with her
I will stop thinking
of you
the Marine Day long weekend
marks the end of the school term
end of my four weeks
at the middle school
and I’m not sorry to say good-bye
to friends I never made
classes I couldn’t always follow
conversations about TV shows I don’t know
borrowed textbooks
sailor uniform
white kneesocks
uwabaki
indoor shoes
not sorry, that is, until
students in my homeroom throw
a surprise farewell party
sing songs for me
present me with a class photo
and a basket full of origami
birds, cicadas
frogs, flowers, hearts
and Pokémon characters
plus a placard signed
with all their names
they tell me not to forget them
set out mini donuts they decorated
chips, cookies and drinks they bought
with their own spending money
one girl cries
and even outcast girl
hangs around
and in the end
hands me a present—
a cell phone strap with a tiny
mikan
charm
F
rom then on I work full days on the farm—
up at six
in the groves by eight
break before noon
down to the house for lunch
up to the groves by one
or two if the heat’s too high
done by five
we use shears to snip
the fruit, now large
as Ping-Pong balls
my arms no longer ache
my back and shoulders
feel strong
but the day is long
and when conversation stops
among the leaves
and it’s just the breathing
of wind in trees
and the
mee-mee-mee-meeen
of cicadas
there is much
too much
time
for my thoughts
and moments when I have to pause
catch my breath
hold on to a branch
and not because I’m tired
or lost my balance
but because I’m seeing you, Ruth,
alone
in Osgoods’ orchard
setting down your pack
having chosen
your tree
everyone knows
Lisa didn’t mean it
everyone knows
when a person says
certain things
they don’t mean
the words
they say
really
in the note you left
for your parents
and brother
you said
life was too hard
they could never know
what it was like
for you
at school
where you were ostracized
left out
despised
and where
just that day
in front of all us girls
after Jake handed you
a piece of paper
Lisa had given you
a look
and said
I hope you die
I saw you glare
at Lisa
hard, I thought
mean, I thought
bitch
we all said
hurt, I now realize
as you crumpled that note into a
tiny ball
that was still
in your jeans pocket
when you were found
in Osgoods’ orchard
here in Kohama
under the
mikan
trees
sometimes I see you
over there
among the apple trees
and I think how
after the graveside service
as we left the cemetery
Jake’s mom told my mom
and Gina’s mom
that you once told Jake
you loved orchards
the rhythm of the year
in sap, leaves, buds, fruit
the cycle of growth and rest
growth and rest
and how Gina and I then shared looks
and wondered
just how often you’d been there
with him
and wondered
what else we hadn’t known
about Jake
and you
and trees
she said you’d visit on your way home
from piano lessons
that you
and Jake
had a
rapport
now in my too much time
in the groves
I think maybe
I ought to write to Jake
email him
not to press him for more
background
or information
or understanding
or to draw him out
but to tell him
thank you
for giving you
that
at least—
rapport