Authors: Holly Thompson
and even when Baachan comes in
tugs the earbuds out of my ears
tells me to get into the bath
I don’t speak to her
just get my pajamas
towel
and go
even when I’m back upstairs
and Yurie brings dinner
on a tray
and I don’t eat a thing
except rice
and some boiled peanuts
even then
I don’t say
a word
when I finally stomp downstairs
I tell them I will write
to the
New York Times
the
Japan Times
every
Times
in the world
about the way they
treat crows
if they don’t quit
that custom
and make everyone else
in the village
quit that custom now
the farm is connected
to a cooperative
that’s part of
an agricultural organization
they can do this
I think
still
I’m surprised when
Uncle bows
Koichi bows
and they say
they are sorry
for upsetting me
and they will use
other ways to scare the crows
from now on
that night I read till late
Physics and You
general relativity
maximum force
kinetic energy
conservation
of energy
mass dependence
reversing the motion
and biographies of
Marie Curie
Alfred Nobel
and Hideyo Noguchi
then in the dark
I lie
iPod on
trying not to picture
you
trying not to recall
the crow
trying not to see
that blink
A
fter that
I write to Jake
figuring
what’s to lose
not email
but a real letter
on folded paper
in an envelope
and a close-enough address
even though no one
that I know of
from the atom
has dared
to write him
or email him
or text him
in New York
where he’s counselor-in-training
at the nature camp
outside town
I think you should know, Ruth,
those last weeks of school
after you did
what you did
on his family’s land
while he slept
inside his room
not fifty yards
away
he kept to himself
away from even
Noah and Ken
who used to always
be at his side
all those weeks
he studied alone
ran track
broke school records
and never spoke
to us
stupid spiteful girls
his words
as he left one of the
counseling sessions
those first days after
that was when I got mad
stood, shouted
we’re not stupid!
ran out of that classroom after him
yelled at him
yelled at teachers and counselors
coming after me
and asked
where the hell were you?
what I wanted to know was
if depression is so common
if depression was a possibility
for someone like you, Ruth,
then why didn’t they teach us about it?
where were the experts to tell
stupid spiteful
us
about social withdrawal
and mania
and gestures
and impulsiveness
and all the signs
that we might have
been able to interpret
to understand you?
in my letter to Jake
I want to ask why
he didn’t clue us in
did he think we’d just know?
did he think we’d just get it?
or did you ask him
not to say anything
to us
or to Lisa
about why you were
sometimes seen
with him?
but then I think of that word
rapport
and how I’d had to look it up
that night after the service
when Jake’s mom said it
and how maybe Jake was right
that we were
stupid spiteful girls
I do my best
not to sound
stupid
in my letter
use words that
show signs of
a fledgling
brain
I ride the bicycle
to take the letter to the post office
but when I go to buy a stamp
I see display sheets of 80-yen stamps
world heritage
anime heroes
calligraphy
wild boars
and even though it takes 110 yen
for a letter to the States
and even though I’m partial to
one anime heroine
I buy a sheet of 80-yen stamps
of the fiftieth anniversary
of the Japanese Antarctic research expedition
emperor penguins and seals
the
Soya
research ship
and Taro, brother of Jiro
two Sakhalin husky
survivors
hoping that two Antarctic research stamps
about the real expedition
and not the expedition made up
by Disney
will show
I’m not
stupid
O
ne evening after farmwork
we rush through dinner and
Aunt cleans up while
Yurie tugs at my arms
and pulls me
to the village hall parking lot
to practice Bon dances
one dance I’d learned
at Japanese weekend school
another I know vaguely
from my mother
who’d play a cassette
and make Emi and me
and my father
follow her
around the living room
some summers
she was homesick
but other songs and dances
are new to me
performed in a circle
to music on a CD
that they restart
and track back
again and again
to help newbies like me learn
where to put their feet
when to go forward
when backward
when to raise the fan and
when
to stop
Asuka dances, too
and after practice
she and Yurie and I sit
with cold canned tea
handed out by the
village women’s association
and as people drift off
for home
we talk
Yurie leaves when
she’s done with her tea
but Asuka and I
stay longer
till she and I are
the only ones left
and Asuka asks
about my friends
and New York
and how far is the city
from our town
and Manhattan and Broadway
and shopping and
I promise to show her around
if she comes to visit
each night
we gather
we dance
wave our fans
wave our arms
stepping forward
stepping back
then Asuka and I talk
sitting on the gritty boards
of that strip of veranda
by the darkened village hall
after everyone goes home
and I think
I’m glad to have
this cousin friend
and I think
to tell Asuka
about you
someday
O
bon comes to Kohama
and work stops
for us
but not for Yurie—
pharmacies in the city of Numazu
never closing
for the odd Obon dates
on this quiet part of the peninsula
like all farm families here
for Jiichan
great-grandfather
and other ancestor spirits
we set up the special altar
to welcome them home
Uncle assembles a wood frame
floor to ceiling with
planks set in for a table
like a food stall
at a fair
Aunt covers the planks with
grass blades cut to forearm length
then from a rod we drape
persimmon sprigs
abundant, unthinned clusters
of green
mikan—
eight, nine
even ten to a bunch—
taro stalks and leaves
edamame
more taro stalks and leaves
more persimmon sprigs
more
mikan
harvest greens
Uncle sets out the memorial tablet
Baachan brings water for the spirits
then in armloads
from the kitchen table
where they are heaped
we carry a watermelon, a pumpkin, grapes
peaches, corn, chestnuts
dry
somen
noodles
even Jiichan’s favorite black sugar candies
and we set them all
atop the blades of grass
we hang the family scroll
names of deceased
going back generations
and in front of everything
place an eggplant cow
and cucumber horse
for the spirits
to ride home
I think of Sukkoth
and you
sitting under an abundance
of fall harvest
in a backyard sukkah
as you must have done
as I do
with my father and mother
and Emi each fall
my mother loving that
Jewish festival
that reminds her so much
of Kohama
Obon