Authors: Marilyn Hilton
There are two hundred and sixteen steps
from our driveway to Farmer Dell's house.
I slip through the last forty-three
because he hasn't spread any sand or salt.
Maybe he doesn't want company.
I knock on the outside door,
and step back down to the walk
and wait. I hear heavy footsteps inside,
and the door opens
just wide enough for Mr. Dell's face to show.
“What do you want?” he asks.
“I'm Mimi Oliver.”
I shift to my other foot. “We're neighbors.”
“What do you want?”
“Well . . . we're shoveling, and there's a lot of snow,
and it's hard shoveling all that snow.”
“Why'd ya come here, then?”
Farmer Dell has exactly the growl I imagined,
his nose hooks over his mouth,
and his eyebrows are thick and bushy,
like moths nesting on his forehead.
“I was wondering if . . .”
He stares. He's going to make me ask.
“. . . we could borrow your snowblower.”
“I don't give my things out to strangers. What do you think I amâ
a charity?”
“N-no.”
“Is that all?” Farmer Dell asks, and starts to shut the door.
“Wait,” I say. “Is that boy here?”
“What boy?”
“The one who was playing with Pattress.”
And just then, Pattress pushes the door open
all the way with her nose.
When she sees me, she wags her tail and barks happily.
“Hi, Pattress! Do you want a snowball?” I ask.
Her ears stand up at
snowball
,
and she throws her head back, barking.
“So, is he home?” I ask.
“There's no boy here.”
“Well, maybe when he comes home we can play with Pattress.”
Mr. Dell's eyes narrow.
“You go home now,” he says, and shuts the door.
Pattress barks behind it
for her snowball.
I turn around and walk
two hundred and sixteen steps
back home. Mama and Papa
have finished the driveway,
so I shovel a path to the back door.
Papa has never been so mad.
“I told you to leave him alone.”
“Yes, Papa.”
“I told you that some people don't want to be friends.”
“It's hard to shovel snow.”
“There will be a lot harder things in life,
so shoveling a few inches of snow is good training.”
“You mean a few feet.”
“Mimi,” he says, and takes my hands gently
to make me pay full attention.
“It is important that you understand.
We are new here. These people have lived in this town
many years. Their parents and grandparents
and great-great-grandparents were born here.
To them we are visitorsâ”
“You mean strangers?” I ask.
“To some people, we are. And you should know that
we might always be. But we still have to respect them
and their ways.”
“Then, let's go back to California,” I say.
Papa drops my hands. “It's not that easy, Mimi-chan.
Besides, life wasn't perfect there, either.”
“At least we didn't have to shovel snow.”
Papa nods and chuckles
but gets serious again. “What should you have done differently?”
When I was five or even ten
the answer would have been “Obey you and Mama.”
But something's different now. That
is no longer the only solution.
Then Papa says, “If you can't tell me,
then go to your room and think about it.”
But first, he hands me something from his briefcase.
“You want to take this with you?”
It's a
Life
magazine from January.
On the cover is that picture of Earth
taken from the moon.
I snatch the treasure and hug it tight. “Where did you get this?”
“It comes to the department. Everyone else has read it.”
“You spoil her,” Mama says. “How will she learn consequences?”
Papa sighs and looks sheepishly at Mama. “Just this once, Emiâ
It might help her find the answer.”
I try to blink away
Mr. Dell's scowling face
and his angry words
because I don't want to let him
make me cry.
Is it me that makes people here act so chilly?
Or is it my family?
We are American,
we speak English, we eat pizza
and pot roast,
and potatoes sometimes.
I feel like I have to be
twice as smart and funny at school,
and twice as nice and forgiving in my neighborhood
than everyone else
to be acceptable.
But everyone else can be
only half of that
to fit in.
Sad thoughts
just make you sadder if you let them.
I'm too sad now to stop them from taking me
with them.
I can't blink fast enough,
and when I press my face against the cold pane,
my tears turn to crystals.
Last year, I knew about the Apollo program.
And I knew about Dr. King
and Bobby Kennedyâeach time,
Auntie Sachi kept the TV on
to hear the news
and cried.
When we could watch
My Three Sons
again,
we knew life was back to normal.
But I didn't know about the two widows hugging each other.
One is Mrs. Kennedy, and the other is Mrs. King.
They both lost their husbands.
They both must have cried through boxes of tissues,
knowing they'd never see them again.
So, did they both wonder,
when
Hogan's Heroes
came back on,
why their lives weren't back to normal?
When this photo of Earth was taken from the moon,
I was in Berkeley
in California
in the United States
in North America
on Earthâ
that same shimmering blue and white ball
twirling in blackness
and swirling with storms
that's in the picture.
But from space there are no borders
separating countries, states, peopleâonly
land from water,
earth from sky,
dark from light.
Who I am and
who I become
depend on
what I look at,
what I listen to,
what I touch and smell and taste.
The Apollo 8 astronauts
watched Earth rise above the moon
and were changed.
Now I am seeing what they saw,
and it is changing me.
Spring
1969
When Papa and I come home today,
Mama is standing by the side of the house,
hugging her coat around her and staring at the ground.
“Look,” she says, pointing at a purple flower
with petals cupped like hands piercing the snow.
“Is that a tulip?” I ask.
“It's a crocus,” she says.
“Someone who used to live here planted a bulb.
And now the bulb is a flower.”
Did the people who planted the bulb when the ground was soft
hope to see the flower today?
Did they plant it before they knew they would leave this house?
Or did they plant the bulb just for us,
like wrapping a present
and never seeing it opened?
When the ground is a blanket of snow
and ponds turn to ice
and everyone mummies up in scarves,
it feels like everything has stopped moving,
stopped breathing,
stopped living.
But secret things are still happening
in the deep below.
And when the time is right
they make their way to the surface
and explode in a surprise of purple.
Mama uses her mother-of-pearl-handle scissors
to unwrap a package from Auntie Sachi.
“Look, Mimi-chan!” she says,
and slides her fingernails pink as blossoms
under the seam of the brown paper wrapping,
winds the twine around her fingers,
and ties a loose knot for safekeeping.
Then she carefully peels back the paper
covering a box.
“What's in it?” I ask impatiently.
“Wait,” Mama says, and lifts the lid.
Inside is tissue paper.
“Auntie sent us tissue paper?” I ask.
“Let's see,” Mama says, and opens the layers.
Underneath lies a length of silk
blue as a robin's egg
and a note.
Dear Emiko,
You never treat yourself,
so use this silk for a kimono
for spring.
“It's so pretty,” I say, touching the fabric. “Isn't it?”
Mama just makes her Mifune face,
then gently folds up the silk
and puts it back in the box.
In history, David Hurley says his uncle was killed
at Pearl Harbor, and it was a good thing
we bombed those Japs.
“We only did it to end the war,” he says.
“We're the good guys.”
“What do you say about that, people?” Miss O'Connell asks.
I want to say what I heard from Auntie Sachi
about when she was a little girl and had to move to Arizona.
I want to say maybe good guys
don't always do good things.
But I'm afraid to here in class.
“Mimi? Your family is Japanese,” she says.
“Well . . .” I look aroundâ
now I have to say something. “What about the relocation camps?”
“The what?” David asks.
“When Americans who were Japanese
had to leave their houses and live in camps in the desert
until the war was over.”
“That never happened,” David says, and
“I never heard of that,” Linda says.
Auntie Sachi was there, so I say, “I'm sure it happened.”
Miss O'Connell raises her hands for quiet.
“You have to understand
how the country felt at the time.
People were scared because
we were at war with Japan.”
No one is saying “Yeah, that doesn't make any sense”
or “That sounds horrible” or
“How could they do that to people?” or even
“Is it true?”
They're just looking at me like I made it all up
and want to cause trouble. But Miss O'Connell says,
“You weren't alive at the time,
so you can't understand.”
Now I wish I'd kept quiet,
the way Uncle Kiyoshi tells Auntie to be
whenever she brings up her life in Arizona.
Auntie Sachi wouldn't have given me the
Time
magazine
if Uncle Kiyoshi hadn't read it yet.
She wouldn't have let us stay in their house
if she wanted us to move out.
She wouldn't say she loves both her daughters the same
and give one more rice.
She is always truthfulâ
so I know she didn't lie
when she told me that during the war
her family had to sell their house and grocery store
and everything they owned in Sacramento
and move to Arizona
to live in a shack
in a camp
surrounded by barbed wire
with hundreds of other families
while her big brother fought in the army
for our country.
“You're a liar, Liar!”
they're telling me in history.
“Show us where that's in our book,”
they want to know.
It's not in our history book.
Maybe the people who wrote the book
forgot what happened to Auntie,
or decided to leave that part out
so no one would ever know what happened.
And after a while, everyone would forget
or call those who remembered
liars.
Tonight I tell Mama and Papa
what happened in history.
“It's true, right?” I ask.
Mama picks up her plate and takes it to the sink.
“Mama, right?” I repeat, in case
she didn't hear me the first time.
“What is past is past,” she says,
her back still to us. “We need to forget
and do our best now.”
Papa has been watching her back
and now turns to me. “I agree with Mama
to a point. We can't dwell on what happened
but we need to remember
so we don't do it again.
It is our history,
but we don't want it be our future.”
That is why I've decided
that even after I hand in my journal to Mr. Pease
in June, I'll keep writing in it.
I don't want to forget,
and I don't want someone else
to tell a different story about me.
At 3:36 this afternoon
Stacey will turn thirteen.
She wanted to come to the drugstore
and share a banana split to celebrate
the moment of her birth.
Today is also that soda jerk's day off,
so I feel okay being here.
But I wish I didn't have to think about
where not to go.
“What do you want for your birthday?” I ask.
I hope she says earrings, because
last week I'd bought her some, and
they're in my pocketbook.
She slices the banana with her spoon.
“I really want the Cream album
but Daddy says it's devil music, so I know I won't get it.”
“My dad has that one. It's cool.”
“Then I'll have to listen to it at your house,” she says,
tipping her spoon at me.
“Sure,” I say, happy that she'll be over again.
We eat more ice cream
and I ask, “Are you going to have a party?”
It would be my first one here.
She pokes the banana with her spoon, then mumbles,
“I don't know . . . not today, anyway.”
Then she turns bright red
and buries her face in her arm.
“I'm so sorry, Mimi,” she sobs.
“Whyâwhat happened?” I ask.
She lifts her head and wipes her nose with a napkin
and looks at me with red-rimmed eyes.
“I'm having a party Saturday,
but . . . didn't ask you.”
“Oh,” I say, guessing why.
“Mimi, you're my best friend,
but Motherâshe's so old-fashioned.
I wanted you to be there so bad,
but I knew she'd say no.”
This soda fountain hasn't been good to me.
And now I know
that Stacey wanted me to come here on her birthday
because I couldn't go to her house for her party.
The clock says 3:38. The moment has passed.
I put Stacey's present on the counter
and say, “Happy birthday.”
But I don't say things like “I thought we were friends” and
“I hope it rains at your party,”
because then I'd feel worse than I do now.
And because angry words are like minutes on the clockâ
once you use them, you can't get them back.