“Let’s go on a date,” Sensei would say. Even though we lived close to each other, we always met up at the station nearest the location of our date. We would make our separate ways to the station. If we ever ran into each other on the train on the way to meet up, Sensei would murmur something like, Oh-ho, Tsukiko, what a strange place to see you.
The place we went most often was the aquarium. Sensei loved to see the fish.
“When I was a little boy, I used to love to look at illustrated guides to fish,” Sensei explained.
“How old were you then?”
“I must have been in elementary school.”
Sensei had shown me a picture from when he was an elementary student. In the faded, sepia-toned photograph, Sensei was wearing a sailor hat and squinting his eyes as if it were too bright.
“You were cute,” I said.
Sensei nodded and said, “Well, Tsukiko, you’re still cute.”
Sensei and I stood in front of the migratory fish tank that held tuna and skipjack. Watching the fish go round and round in one direction, I was struck by the feeling that we had been standing there like this for a very long time, the two of us.
“Sensei?” I ventured.
“What is it, Tsukiko?”
“I love you, Sensei.”
“I love you too, Tsukiko.”
We spoke these words to each other sincerely. We were always sincere with each other. Even when we were joking around, we were sincere. Come to think of it, so were the tuna. And the skipjack. All living things were sincere, on the whole.
We also went to Disneyland, of course. As we were watching the evening parade, Sensei shed a few tears. I did too. Each of us, though together, was probably thinking of different things that made us cry.
“There is something wistful about the lights at night,” Sensei said as he blew his nose on a big white handkerchief.
“Sensei, you cry sometimes, don’t you?”
“With few exceptions, geezers are easily moved to tears.”
“I love you, Sensei.”
Sensei didn’t reply. He was watching the parade intently. His profile illuminated, Sensei’s eyes appeared sunken. Sensei, I said, but he didn’t reply at all. Once again I called Sensei, and there was no reply. I squeezed Sensei’s arm and gazed out at Mickey and the little people and Sleeping Beauty.
“I had fun on our date,” I said.
“I did too.” At last he replied to me.
“I hope you’ll ask me out again.”
“I will.”
“Sensei?”
“Yes?”
“Sensei?”
“Yes?”
“Please don’t go away.”
“I’m not going anywhere.”
The parade music grew significantly louder, and the little people leapt around. The procession finally began to recede. Sensei and I were left in the darkness. Bringing up the end of the line was Mickey, swinging his hips as he slowly walked along. Sensei and I held hands in the darkness. Then I shivered the slightest bit.
SHOULD I TELL the story of the only time that Sensei ever called me from his mobile phone?
I could hear background noise, which was how I knew he was using the mobile phone.
“Tsukiko?” Sensei said.
“Yes?”
“Tsukiko?”
“Yes?”
In a reversal of our usual roles, I became the one who said only “Yes.”
“Tsukiko, you really are such a lovely girl.”
“What?”
That was all he said before abruptly hanging up. I called him right back, but he didn’t answer. About two hours later I called Sensei at home, and this time he answered, his voice perfectly serene.
“What was that, before?”
“Nothing, I just suddenly thought of it.”
“Where were you calling from?”
“By the greengrocery near the station.”
The greengrocery? I echoed.
I bought daikon and spinach at the greengrocery, Sensei replied.
I laughed, and Sensei laughed too on the other end of the line.
“Tsukiko, come quickly,” Sensei said suddenly.
“To your house?”
“Yes.”
I grabbed a toothbrush and pajamas and face lotion, throwing them into a bag and scurrying over to Sensei’s house. Sensei stood at the gate to meet me. He took my hand as we went inside to the tatami room where Sensei laid out the futon. I put sheets on the futon. It was like an assembly line as we made the bed.
Without saying a word, Sensei and I collapsed on top of the futon. It was the first time Sensei had embraced me passionately and deeply.
I spent that night at Sensei’s house, sleeping beside him. In the morning when he opened the rain shutters, the berries on the laurel trees gleamed lustrously in the morning sun. Bulbuls came to peck at the berries. Their warbling song echoed throughout Sensei’s garden. Shoulder to shoulder, Sensei and I gazed out at them.
Tsukiko, you’re such a lovely girl, Sensei said.
Sensei, I love you, I replied. The bulbuls warbled their song.
IT ALL SEEMS like so long ago. The time that I spent with Sensei—at first faint, then deepening in intensity—passed me by. Two years from when we encountered each other for the second time. Three years once we began what Sensei referred to as our “official relationship.” That was all the time we shared together.
And it hasn’t even been very long since that time.
I have Sensei’s briefcase. Sensei left it to me.
His son didn’t much resemble Sensei. He had stood silently before me, bowing, and at that moment something about his stance reminded me vaguely of Sensei.
“You were very kind to my dad, Harutsuna, before he died,” his son said, bowing deeply.
When I heard him speak Sensei’s name, Harutsuna, my tears welled up. And I had hardly cried up until that point. I was able to cry when I thought about him as Harutsuna Matsumoto, like a stranger. I was able to cry when I realized that Sensei had already gone away somewhere, before I ever came to know him well.
Sensei’s briefcase lies beside my dressing table. Once in a while I still go to Satoru’s place. Not as often as before. Satoru doesn’t say anything. He’s always moving about, busy at work. It’s warm inside the bar, and there have been times when I even doze off. One mustn’t behave so poorly in public, I’m sure Sensei would say.
Sensei taught me this poem by Seihaku Irako at some point. I try reading it and other poems out loud when I’m home alone. I’ve been studying a bit since you passed away, Sensei, I murmur.
Sometimes when I call out, Sensei, I can hear a voice reply from the ceiling above, Tsukiko. I’ve started making yudofu like you, Sensei, with cod and chrysanthemum greens. Sensei, I hope we see each other again one day, I say. And from the ceiling, Sensei replies, Surely we shall see each other one day.
Those nights, I open Sensei’s briefcase and peer inside. The blank empty space unfolds, containing nothing within. It holds nothing more than an expanse of desolate absence.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR AND THE TRANSLATOR
HIROMI KAWAKAMI is one of Japan’s most popular contemporary novelists. She was awarded the Akutagawa Prize in 1996 for A Snake Stepped On (Hebi o fumu). Her novel Strange Weather in Tokyo (Sensei no kaban) was short-listed for both the Man Asian Literary Prize and the Independent Foreign Fiction Prize, and has been translated into thirteen languages. Manazuru won the 2011 Japan–U.S. Friendship Commission Prize.