rolled downwind in a way that made me think of the skin being shed from a snake. I thought this was clever and tried explaining it to Satsu, but she didnât seem to care. Mr. Tanaka would have appreciated it, I thought, and so would Kuniko. I decided to explain it to both of them when we reached the Tanakasâ home.
Then suddenly I realized we werenât headed in the direction of Mr. Tanakaâs home at all.
The wagon came to a stop a few minutes later on a patch of dirt beside the train tracks, just outside the town. A crowd of people stood with sacks and crates piled around them. And there, to one side of them, was Mrs. Fidget, standing beside a peculiarly narrow man wearing a stiff kimono. He had soft black hair, like a catâs, and held in one of his hands a cloth bag suspended from a string. He struck me as out of place in Senzuru, particularly there beside the farmers and the fishermen with their crates, and an old hunched woman wearing a rucksack of yams. Mrs. Fidget said something to him, and when he turned and peered at us, I decided at once that I was frightened of him.
Mr. Tanaka introduced us to this man, whose name was Bekku. Mr. Bekku said nothing at all, but only looked closely at me and seemed puzzled by Satsu.
Mr. Tanaka said to him, âIâve brought Sugi with me from Yoroido. Would you like him to accompany you? He knows the girls, and I can spare him for a day or so.â
âNo, no,â said Mr. Bekku, waving his hand.
I certainly hadnât expected any of this. I asked where we were going, but no one seemed to hear me, so I came up with an answer for myself. I decided Mr. Tanaka had been displeased by what Mrs. Fidget had told him about us, and that this curiously narrow man, Mr. Bekku, planned to take us somewhere to have our fortunes told more completely. Afterward we would be returned to Mr. Tanaka.
While I tried my best to soothe myself with these thoughts, Mrs. Fidget, wearing a pleasant smile, led Satsu and me some distance down the dirt platform. When we were too far away for the others to hear us, her smile vanished and she said:
âNow listen to me. Youâre both naughty girls!â She looked around to be sure no one was watching and then hit us on the tops of our heads. She didnât hurt me, but I cried out in surprise. âIf you do something to embarrass me,â she went on, âIâll make you pay for it! Mr. Bekku is a stern man; you must pay attention to what he says! If he tells you to crawl under the seat of the train, youâll do it. Understand?â
From the expression on Mrs. Fidgetâs face, I knew I should answer her or she might hurt me. But I was in such shock I couldnât speak. And then just as Iâd feared, she reached out and began pinching me so hard on the side of my neck that I couldnât even tell which part of me hurt. I felt as if Iâd fallen into a tub of creatures that were biting me everywhere, and I heard myself whimper. The next thing I knew, Mr. Tanaka was standing beside us.
âWhatâs going on here?â he said. âIf you have something more to say to these girls, say it while Iâm standing here. Thereâs no cause for you to treat them this way.â
âIâm sure we have a great many more things to talk about. But the train is coming,â Mrs. Fidget said. And it was true: I could see it curling around a turn not far in the distance.
Mr. Tanaka led us back up the platform to where the farmers and old women were gathering up their things. Soon the train came to a stop before us. Mr. Bekku, in his stiff kimono, wedged himself between Satsu and me and led us by our elbows into the train car. I heard Mr. Tanaka say something, but I was too confused and upset to understand it. I couldnât trust what I heard. It might have been:
Mata yo!
âWeâll meet again!â
Or this:
Matte yo!
âWait!â
Or even this:
Ma . . .
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