The Mermaid’s Song
The evening of August 27th, Hajikano and I headed for the site of the Minagisa summer festival. She wore a yukata she’d only worn once three years ago, and I wore a cheap jinbei I bought in the area. We walked down the dim rural roads, our clogs resounding under the voices of higurashi. Thanks to her deep blue yukata, Hajikano’s white skin stood out more than ever.
The closer we got to the festival, the more we heard taiko drums rumbling the earth, the sound of flutes and sho, guiding voices on megaphones, and the stirring of people. There was a long line of cars outside the local elementary school designated for parking, and just ahead of there, we could see the community plaza.
Just as we were stepping in, a small firework went up to announce the start of the festival. Everyone around stopped at once and looked up to the sky, gazing at the white smoke left behind. Just after, the area was filled with applause.
In the center of the plaza was a scaffold, and strings of lanterns extended radially from the pillar. Stands were packed close together along the long sides of the plaza, one of the short sides served as an entrance, and the other short side had a giant stage set up. A few dozen or hundred people were already seated, and the head festival runner was up on stage giving a greeting.
I opened the program given to me at the entrance and went over the plans for today. As expected, the reading of The Mermaid of Agohama and the singing of the Mermaid’s Song were still there. They must have found a replacement. It was only natural, I guess. In the corner of the program was a photo of this year’s Miss Minagisa. She was a pretty woman, certainly, but seemed too lively to suit the part of the mermaid - of course, maybe I only thought that because I knew that role had been for Chigusa.
We bought usuyaki and yakisoba at the stands and went to the stage. There, we saw a children’s iai performance, a middle school wind instrument band, buyo and minyou dances by volunteers, and spinning tricks by a performer. An hour went by in a blink. As a raffle started up, we left our seats, waded through the crowd, sat on a planter near the parking lot, and observed the hubbub of the festival from a distance.
As Miss Minagisa’s reading was about to begin, I felt something cold on the back of my hand. I thought it was just my imagination, but seeing Hajikano look to the sky, I knew I hadn’t been the only one to feel it. Less than a minute later, it began to rain. It wasn’t intense, but it was enough to get you soaked if you weren’t paying attention. Everyone took shelter in tents or the community center, or ran to the parking lot; the people on the plaza scattered at once. In no time, a voice on a megaphone announced that the stage shows would be canceled.
Hajikano and I hid from the rain under the community center’s overhang. The thin raindrops blurred the lights of lanterns and stands, dying the plaza a dark red. Girls running with carpets held above their heads, old people walking pitifully with umbrellas up, children running around without regard for the rain, merchants hastily putting away their stands - as I watched it absentmindedly, a voice suddenly hit my ears.
The Mermaid’s Song.
I didn’t hear it from the stage, but from right beside me.
I looked Hajikano in the eye. She smiled shyly and stopped singing. “The rain doesn’t seem like it’ll stop soon,” she said to cover her embarrassment.
“It’s fine, keep going,” I told her.
She nodded and resumed singing.
Her voice soaked into the air filled with rain.
This was my third time hearing her sing the Mermaid’s Song.
The second time was a month ago, on the roof of the hotel.
The first time was six years ago, at an abandoned shrine on a mountain.
*
It was back when I still called Hajikano “class president.”
The summer of 1988 was in one way my worst summer, and in another way my best summer. As I mentioned once before, that summer I’d fallen victim to autonomic ataxia, and had chills so bad I had to stay under a down blanket in the middle of the day in July. The coldness got worse day by day, ultimately hindering my everyday life. Going to a university hospital that was a three-hour round trip even using buses and trains, I was examined, and it was judged to be a result of stress (which was obvious). The doctor said I needed periodic hospital visits and a long recuperation. And thus my summer vacation started early.
It was unlike any summer I knew. There was such a gap between what I saw and what I felt, everything seemed somehow less real. Even though I’d been given a long break, I didn’t have any will to go outside and play - for that matter, I couldn’t even focus on reading inside. I feel like most of my time was spent watching a video tape on repeat. I forget what the video was. I only remember it was some old foreign film.
Once exactly a week had passed since I stopped coming to school, as I was watching the TV in my room as usual, I heard a knock on the door. The knock had a strange amount of force, not too strong, not too weak, low-tempo and musical in a way that just barely kept itself consecutive. I’d never heard such a polite knock before. I was sure it wasn’t my mother knocking.
“Who is it?”, I asked them. The door slowly opened, and a girl with a cute white one-piece appeared. She shut the door without making a sound, then turned back to me and bowed her head.
“The class president?” I sat up, forgetting the cold. “What are you here for?”
“Visiting.” Hajikano smiled at me, let down her backpack, and sat next to my futon. “And also, to bring the handouts you’ve been missing.”
I hastily looked at the state of my room. I’d gotten out of the habit of cleaning since no friends had come into my room in months, so it was a mess. If I’d only known she was coming, I would have gotten it nice and neat, I lamented. Then I looked at myself and felt even gloomier. Hajikano was dressed so sharply, she could walk right into her graduation, but I looked pathetic, wearing an unmatching jacket over creased pajamas.
I dove back under the covers to escape her gaze.
“Did a teacher ask you?”
“No, I proposed it myself. Since I was curious how you were doing, Yosuke.”
She took a clear file out of her backpack, neatly took out the folded B3-size papers, checked what was printed on them, and put them on my desk. Then she sat next to me again, and looked at me as if to say “now then.” Here come the questions, I thought. Why do you keep not coming to school? Why are you wrapped in a down blanket when it’s summer? What kind of sickness is it? Why did you catch it?
But contrary to my expectations, Hajikano didn’t ask anything. She took out a notebook with her name and class written on the front, opened it where I could see, and started going over the relatively high-importance information from the past week’s lessons.
What was the meaning of this?, I wondered, but I obediently listened to her. Within minutes, I was deeply engrossed in what she was saying. New knowledge being told to me from a live human mouth. That was the sort of stimulation I needed most after spending entire days in my room.
Once she was done, Hajikano put her notebook in her backpack, said “I’ll come again,” and left. As soon as she was gone, my mom came into the room without knocking.
“Well, isn’t that nice of her to visit. You should cherish friends like that,” she said with pleasure.
“She’s not a friend,” I sighed. “She’s the class president, so she’s nice to everyone.”
I wasn’t just saying that to cover up my embarrassment like boys my age often would. The relationship between Hajikano and me back then simply wasn’t such that you could call us “friends.” As of moving up to fourth grade, her seat was closer, so we talked more, but that was it; it was limited to the classroom, and ever since we changed seats at the start of June, we didn’t talk much at all.
I was honestly happy about Hajikano coming to visit me when I was sick, and deeply grateful for her going over the lessons I’d missed, but thinking that she probably did it out of sympathy depressed me. Because really, she was “the class president” who “had to be nice” to “a poor classmate.” Surely she only saw me as a weakling to pity.
The next day, and the day after, Hajikano knocked at about the same time. And she thoroughly went over the lessons for the day. I thought her good will to do so could be largely interpreted as just fulfilling her duties as a class president. But as she paid frequent visits to my room to do everything she could for me, there was certainly a part of me that couldn’t help being captivated. If it weren’t for my belief that her kindness only came from pity, I think I would have been totally smitten in a few days.
At the time, I had a self-awareness of my love that could easily be called bizarre for a fourth-grader. If it were a month or two earlier, I would probably have a vague choking feeling, but not be able to figure out what it was. But since starting to think of my birthmark as ugly, my personality became extremely introspective. When I had time, I would mentally go over all these things I had just sort of accepted before, examine them, give them proper names, and put them back where they were. Love was one thing I found through this re-examining process.
Every time Hajikano finished going over the day’s lessons and left, I felt a terribly miserable feeling. The big problem was, just as she expected to happen, I was very much soothed by her. Even though she was only being nice to me out of pity, my heart legitimately trembled at her smile and her slightest actions, and I couldn’t be more miserable about that. Wanting her to think of me as someone who understood things quickly, I secretly did lesson prep with the textbook, and I excitedly cleaned my room around the time school got out - and I was so embarrassed with myself for doing it. I decided to take as blunt an attitude as I could with Hajikano, to at least counter it somewhat. So it wouldn’t feel lonely when she eventually stopped coming.
Please, don’t show me any weird dreams, I thought. I can’t have it anyway, so don’t let it into my sight. Stop toying with people with the pretense of being conscientious. But Hajikano didn’t know about those thoughts, so she innocently held my hand and smiled “your hand’s nice and cold, Yosuke,” and lied down next to me to give detailed explanations of diagrams in her notebook. And so my chills got steadily worse.
July 13th was dedicated to a school-wide cleanup of the whole campus. All day, I could hear kids making a clamor outside. There didn’t seem to be any classes that day, so I figured Hajikano wouldn’t come teach me anything. But at 4 PM, I started to get fidgety, then the doorbell rang as usual, and there was a knock on my door.
That day, Hajikano wore cut-and-sew clothes of white fabric and a calm light green skirt. The uniform for the cleanup day was gym clothes, so maybe she went back home to change her dirty clothes, I thought.
“What is it?”, I asked. “There weren’t any classes today, were there?”
“Nope. But I’m here.” Hajikano smirked mischievously.
“For what?”
“Just visiting.”
Hajikano sat by my bedside like usual, smiling at my face without doing anything in particular. I couldn’t stand it and flipped over in bed.
“You don’t have to come on a day like this, do you?”
“I guess it’s become a habit. And I’m worried for you, Yosuke.”
I believe I was very happy to hear those words. And thus I chastised myself for getting elated, and blurted out something thorny.
I turned back around and said to Hajikano:
“Liar. You just like yourself for being nice to me.”
I thought she’d bluntly deny it.
I thought she wouldn’t even pay it any mind.
I thought she’d laugh it off. “Yosuke, you dummy.”
But Hajikano didn’t say anything.
She tightly pursed her lips and stared into my eyes. She had an expression like a long needle was being slowly pushed into her.
After a few seconds, Hajikano came to her senses and blinked, then tried to smile. But it was certainly an awkward one.
With an expression hard to pin down the emotion of, she mumbled.
“…That one really hurt.”
She slowly stood up, turned her back to me, and left the room without a goodbye.
Initially, I hardly felt any sort of guilt. I even felt proud for hitting upon Hajikano’s sore spot and getting her to run. But as time passed, the haziness in my chest grew thicker. It gradually covered the entire room, tormenting my heart inside and out.
Had I perhaps been making a terrible mistake?
If Hajikano really were using me for the sake of self-satisfaction, then no matter what I said, she could easily ignore it or refute it. Hypocrites generally establish a way to retaliate when their good will is questioned. They’re well aware of how to act to seem saintly, and keep on hiding their true intentions. That’s how it goes. Especially if it’s someone smart.
But Hajikano seemed hurt by me calling her out on it.
Was that proof that she saw me as an equal?
Did she feel betrayed because she wasn’t showing sympathy as a hypocrite, but from her heart?
If that were the case, then I’d done a terrible thing to Hajikano, who was doing so much for me.
I kept worrying all evening in my futon.
…I need to apologize to her.
My heart became set on that as of the next morning.
I felt like I couldn’t convey my feelings well over the phone. When the noon bell rang, I got a duffel coat from my bureau and put it on over a thick sweater. My whole body smelled of bug spray. In the coat pocket were tissues and candy from last winter.
It had been a while since I went outside by myself. In fact, leaving out the “by myself,” it had been a week. Being in a gloomy room for so long, the sky’s blue and the trees’ green, the sun’s brightness and the smell of grass, the cicadas’ buzz and the birds’ chirping - it all felt more intense than I remembered it. Was the world always such a stimulating place?, I thought at a loss. I pulled my coat together as if to protect myself, put my hood all the way up, and took my first step on the path to school.
I purposefully chose a weird time to leave the house so I could avoid being seen as much as possible. My aim was spot on; I didn’t see a single grade schooler on the road to school besides me. I prayed I could get to school without seeing anybody.
I passed a number of adults, and they looked at me dubiously, but luckily I made it to school without meeting anyone my age. I looked up at the clock tower; it was just about lunch time.
The school seemed a little more formal than usual after not being there in a while. I put my head down and quickly walked to my classroom. I looked through the open door, but didn’t see Hajikano inside. I reluctantly went inside and asked some girls talking in the corner where she was. While they were suspicious of my getup, they told me Hajikano was absent today because she wasn’t feeling well.
Disappointed, I left the classroom. Just then, I finally noticed the existence of a few dozen photos put up on the bulletin board in the hall. I had my head lowered the first time, so I didn’t see them at all.
The first one I looked at was a photo of Hajikano. It was an extremely well-taken photo, so I stopped and stared at it for a while.
The photos seemed to be from a race, a class event in May. Each one was numbered, and you could write the number of the photo you wanted on an envelope to buy it. If I had to guess, it was probably targeted toward parents who came for teacher conferences.
I searched for photos with Hajikano, looking at them in order. The photographer was probably trying to get as many students as possible without bias, but Hajikano clearly showed up more often than any others. Photographers unconsciously choose subjects that make a good picture, after all. I always think that when I watch TV, too. For instance, photos of a school are taken in a priority hierachy, starting with “a particularly child-like child,” followed by “a pretty girl,” then “a serious kid about to respond to a question.” And subjects that are likely to cause viewers discomfort are cleverly pushed out of frame.
While looking to see if there were any pictures that showed Hajikano closer-up, I unintentionally found a photo containing myself. It was a complete sneak attack. I wasn’t prepared, expecting there to be not a single one.
Thinking about it now, it was a miracle photo, taken by coincidence. Not in the sense that the photo came out well, of course. I mean it was a miraculously awfulphoto. It was like a repulsive deep-sea creature.
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