Read The Language Inside Online
Authors: Holly Thompson
I treat it like an assignment
that I want to do well
and add an extra page
for her grandparents
or cousins in Tohoku
but I miss just being with Madoka
with Madoka I could always talk
or not talk
either way she understood
like before we left Japan
when Madoka and I went to the beach
to swim before dinner
it wasn’t very clean
never is late August
but Madoka’s head bobbed on the waves
the cliffs rose in the distance
and above them, nearly not there
the faint gray stamp of Mount Fuji
when a plastic bag
turned into a jellyfish
we scrambled out, showered
then walked to the end of the beach
where the windsurfers go in
and where the rocks of an ancient
artificial island
surface at low tide
we waded through shallows
over rippled sand
staring at those rocks
heaped hundreds of years ago
to make the safe harbor
we’d studied in school
and as we stared at that history
which I’d come to think of as mine
Madoka said softly
amerika-jin ni nacchau
—
you’ll turn into an American
I
am
an American
I said
but inside you’re Japanese
Madoka said
using the word
nakami
—filling
for inside
I laughed
said
well, that won’t change
good
Madoka said
and don’t start talking all loud and obnoxious
or eating too much
I won’t!
I said
don’t change
she said
then I noticed
her chin trembling
we wandered back from the sandbar
and when we reached dry beach
she stopped
remember when we first went up to Miyagi
after the tsunami?
I nodded
and we first looked into Jiichan
and Baachan’s house?
I nodded
I didn’t think I could do it
I thought I’d made a mistake
going there so soon after
and with my aunt still missing
but you just grabbed one of the shovels
handed me a bag and started in on the mud
bag by bag,
you said
you’d read that on someone’s blog
that’s how to get it done
and you were right, bag by bag
she looked at me sideways
then turned back to the waves
they’ll be waiting for you up there, you know
all of my relatives
I whispered
it might be a year
sick at the thought
I could be away that long
or longer
she nodded
that’s okay
they’ll still be waiting
her eyes glistened
and I knew that it wasn’t so much for our parting
as for all that had happened this year
all we’d seen together
smashed cars
fish in trees
sad eyes of people
and debris we’d bagged and added
to heaps upon heaps of debris
in an endless stretch of ruined towns
I stood with her on the wet sand
this friend I’d walked to elementary and
middle school with
took ballet with
played volleyball with
this friend whose grandmother’s arms
we’d held as we searched the rubble
of her missing daughter-in-law’s home
we didn’t need words
we just inhaled and exhaled
side by side
watching the waves
until she said
we’ll weigh you
before and after
what?
she smirked
to see if you get fat
she was good at that
reading the air
saying the right thing
at the right moment
moving us along
back to joking
I gave her a shove
we walked up the shore
unlocked our bicycles
and rode back to her house
to eat our last two-family meal together—
for how long?
I knew we all wondered
at this school in Massachusetts
I listen to clips of conversations
move from class to class
biology to art to English to Chinese
wondering who of these 1,200 students I should talk to
and how I can begin conversations
or try to make friends
with my filling
so different from theirs
I don’t know when to say what
I don’t know if something’s funny or not
I don’t get sarcasm
layered over sarcasm
and jokes made by
unjoking faces
I know how to read silence in Japan
I can read the air in Japan
but I don’t have a clue
how to read the air here