Amrita
by Banana Yoshimoto
List Price: $14.00
Pages: 125
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 0671532855
Publisher: Washington Square Press

Chapter
1
I've often heard that if
you go through something really intense your perception of the world
will change entirely. Every now and then I wonder if things weren't
different in my case.
Now I understand. I'm
finally at a point where I can recall everything: all twenty-eight years
since my birth, every one of the so-called "episodes" of my
life as Sakumi Wakabayashi, that strange conglomeration of misfits who
came together to form my family, those foods that I liked, those things
that I didn't. Every element that had gone into making me who I was
gradually made its way back to me, and now I have the power to reflect
on all that has happened. It's like remembering a story someone told me
in the past.
I can only perceive my past
as a story. Nothing more.
In other words, at some
point I had lost the power to distinguish what was real, all of those
things that had happened in life prior to the accident. I no longer had
any way of knowing how I felt about myself and the world. Perhaps I'd
felt the same way all along, perhaps not. I really wonder what things
were like.
Was my life, all those days
and months and years, nothing more than past time, piled up like fallen
snow?
How was I ever able come to
terms with myself?
Apparently when you do
something major like cutting off all your hair, your personality
undergoes a transformation as well, because you change the way you act
around other people.
...or at least that's what
I've been told.
Before they performed my
surgery, they shaved my head, and in an instant I was bald. By the time
winter rolled around my hair had finally grown in, and I was sporting a
trendy, short cut.
When I revealed myself to
my family and friends, they barked out unanimously, "Sakuchan!
We've never seen you with short hair. You look so different, almost like
a new person."
Really? I thought,
returning their smiles. Later, all alone, I opened the pages of my photo
album in secret. Without a doubt, it was me in the pictures -- that long
hair and radiant smile. All the places I'd visited, all the scenes I'd
encountered. I recognized each one of them from somewhere. I
remembered...
...the weather in this
picture, and...
...I had my period when
they took that shot, so it was a pain to even stand up, and...
...and so on.
There was no question about
it; it really was me in that album. It couldn't have been anyone else.
Still, something refused to ring a bell. A strange sensation, almost as
if I had been floating.
Now I want to stand up and
give myself, steadfast and determined, a round of applause for
maintaining "me," even though I had been thrust into
such a strange psychological dilemma.
***
There were quite a few of
us at home back then: my mother, me, my little brother Yoshio, who had
just entered the fourth grade, and my mother's old friend Junko, who was
living with us for a while. My cousin Mikiko, a student at a nearby
women's university, was also at home. My father had passed away many
years before, and since then my mother had both remarried and divorced.
That's why my brother's father was different from mine. Actually, there
was another sister between me and Yoshio. Her name was Mayu. She was my
younger sister, from my mother's first husband, so we shared the same
father. Throughout her early life Mayu worked in the entertainment
business, but that didn't last for very long. Eventually she got out of
it and moved in with a friend who was a writer. In the end her heart was
troubled, and she died -- as if she had taken her own life. It all
happened quite some time ago.
I used to wait tables five
nights a week. Even though I was on the night shift, and we served
drinks, there was nothing questionable about the place where I worked --
it was just an old bar, the kind everyone's familiar with. My boss, the
bartender, was a hippie, so the inside of the bar looked like some kind
of campus festival, a decor you see a lot of nowadays. I also did odd
jobs around a friend's office every now and again, whenever I found time
in the afternoon -- secretarial work, mostly. I suppose I was into a lot
of things back then.
My father was rich when he
died. I have a hunch that at one point I thought a lot about the amount
of money he left us, and about the best way to succeed in life while
enjoying everything it has to offer. Chances are my feelings were
subconscious, but it seems I was preoccupied with those thoughts --
always. Now as I look back, I see that I was no prima donna, and I
hadn't turned into a rebel, either. I had just reached a strange
juncture in life. Nothing more.
Now I'm in love with all
that's happened to me. I've really taken a fancy to it. It's enough to
make me laugh aloud -- I really have no excuse. Simply put, I've come to
a point where this is how I perceive my existence, and if possible, I
want everyone in the world to feel as wonderfully about it as I do.
***
I left the bar around three
one night, and when I got home my mother was sitting at the kitchen
table -- bent over and frowning. I always found her in that spot,
sitting in that position, whenever she had something to talk to me
about. At least that's how it was back when she was about to get
remarried. I remember that on the day my stepfather proposed she was
sitting at the table in the same way. Even though she was thrilled to be
engaged, she pretended to be sober, obviously an act. Ever since Junko
had moved in my mother had used her as a sounding board, so it had been
a while since I had talked to my mother like that in the kitchen.
Something told me that the
topic of conversation that night would be my kid brother. He was acting
kind of peculiar lately, which apparently had caused a stir at his
elementary school. Ever since Mayu died, the job of raising my brother
seemed to fall endlessly on my mother's shoulders. Thinking about that
makes me feel bad, because sometimes it seemed like my mother didn't
care for the life she'd been given.
Even though we both lived
in the same home, in that home where I floated through life without a
care in the world, my mother seemed different. It hurt me to see her so
troubled.
I asked her if anything was
wrong.
The house was deadly quiet,
the kitchen plunged in darkness. Only the small lamp hanging over the
sink was lit, shimmering with an eerie, incandescent glow. Under that
light my mother looked like a black-and-white photograph. I could see
the dark shadows that lived inside the tight curves around her eyebrows
and lips.
"Sit down here for a
minute," she said.
"Okay," I
replied. "But how about some coffee?"
Mother nodded and stood up.
"Sounds good. I'll make it."
I pulled a chair over and
listened as it screeched against the floor. I plunked down in the chair,
landing with a thud. Since I was on my feet all night long, I tended to
lose all my power the instant I finally sat down. Then the stiffness
from my sore back muscles would release and spread over my entire body.
I could feel it happening that night.
There's something familiar
about warm coffee on a late night. I wonder what it could be. It always
makes me think of my childhood, even though I never drank coffee as a
child. Like the morning of the first fallen snow, or a night of a strong
typhoon, there is something reminiscent about late-night coffee, every
time it makes a visit.
Mother spoke up. "It's
about your brother."
"What's wrong?" I
asked.
"He says he wants to
become a writer."
First I'd heard of such
news. "Why would he want to do something like that?" I said.
On the whole, my brother was just like other boys his age, a kid who'd
like to become a businessman simply for the money, or because of how
they're portrayed so fashionably in television dramas. But a writer?
My mother shook her head.
"Well, according to Yoshio, God appeared to him in his
dreams."
A small gasp of air left my
lips. I smiled and said, "Yeah, apparently that's really popular
nowadays." My mother was silent, so I continued speaking.
"Perhaps you should just leave him alone; after all, he's still
just a kid. He doesn't know what he's talking about."
"But that's not the
least of it. Everything about him has been strange lately," my
mother replied.
"Whatever the problem
is, it's probably best just to wait and see what happens, rather than
going off and worrying about it so much."
"I suppose he'll grow
out of it."
"Besides, what's wrong
with him wanting to become a writer?"
"I'm not sure. I
just...Oh, I don't know. It just gives me a bad feeling."
"Well," I said,
"Yoshio's the first boy in this family and none of us really know
what to do with him. We'll just have to wait and see."
"First Mayu died, and
then you split your head open. Now this." My mother let out a sigh.
"When will it end? I'm beginning to think that there'll never be a
time without problems. I mean, you should see Yoshio when he writes. I
feel like I'm watching somebody possessed when he's scribbling on his
manuscript paper."
"Weird," I said.
Intuition told me that my mother was the perfect example of a lighthouse
that shines so brightly that ships coming in from sea get lost on their
way to shore, falling victim to unusual destinies. I figured her special
charm sought to change the very energy that it took to keep it alive.
She was already aware of that fact, and she was hurt by it. As such, I
didn't want to bring it up that night.
"Think of it this
way," I replied. "If something were to happen to the family,
then we'd be just like Mishima's A Beautiful Star. Wouldn't that
be great? It would be so much fun." I didn't realize it until
later, but to a certain extent my predictions would wind up coming true.
My mother laughed.
"Tell you what,"
I said. "if it means anything, I'll sit down with the little squirt
sometime tomorrow and interview him, see what he's really up to."
"Oh, please do. Then
you'll see why I'm so worried."
"Is he really acting
that unusual?"
"Like a totally
different person," my mother said, bobbing her head. When I told
her I would talk to Yoshio, her face grew bright -- brighter than it had
been since the start of our conversation. I was relieved. I'd finally
managed to bring her spirits up to a reasonable level.
When you're alone in a dark
kitchen in the middle of the night, you're in a place where thoughts
come to an eternal standstill. It's not possible to be there for a long
time, and it's wrong. It's wrong for mothers, daughters, and wives to be
imprisoned there forever. The kitchen is not only a place where we
create wonderful borscht, but it's also a breeding ground for malice and
kitchen drinkers. It's the region of the home that holds the power to
preside over everything.
***
Only recently have I
discovered that humanity, that large, solid body which seems so
steadfast and strong, is actually nothing but a soft, flabby object,
easily ruined under pressure -- like when it's stabbed, or run into.
This thing we call
humanity, soft and as fragile as an uncooked egg, manages to survive
each day unscathed. Human beings function together and carry on separate
lives, each and every one of us. All people -- the people that I know,
the people that I love -- manage to go through life one day at a time,
despite the fact that we do it holding weapons that could easily destroy
us at any moment. Every day brings a new miracle.
Once I start thinking like
this I find it hard to get distracted.
Of course there will always
be calamities in this world, and I wonder why they exist. I ask myself
that every time someone I know passes away, or I see someone in pain.
But then I can't help thinking about the other side of the story as well
-- the miracle of life that each one of us witnesses every day. Compared
to the wonder of daily life, perhaps there isn't a whole lot we can do
about the sorrow...
...or so such thoughts
cross my mind, and when that happens I feel like I'm the one who's come
to a stop, right in the middle of living.
Be it the universe, be it
the people I know. Be it their parents, and those loved by the people I
know. Numberless births. Numberless deaths. Limitless numbers that would
make you shudder if you could see them. Let me see the numbers now --
those numbers close to infinity -- as I think through my foggy
perception of the world.
***
My friends refer to that
day as "the day she took a fall on the stairs." It was early
autumn, the twenty-third of September.
I was in a hurry to get to
work. I thought it would be faster to take a shortcut -- a route I
rarely used. It meant climbing down a stairwell behind the street I
normally took, a stairwell that was infamously steep. It's behind my old
junior high school, and the broad stone steps were also notorious for
getting dangerously slippery during winter. Everyone knew that the
stairwell was closed when it snowed.
It must have been the
combination of the navy blue twilight, a hue fading away into the
darkness of night, and the yellow half-moon hanging midway in the sky
that took me away that day. I lost my footing, came down, and smashed my
head against the stone.
The impact was so strong I
lost consciousness. They had to carry me away to the hospital.
When I came to, I had no
idea of what was happening around me. My mind pounded with a strange
pain that seemed to drag my head along with it. I reached out to
discover my head was covered in bandages, and then I saw myself back on
the stairwell, and remembered all the pain and surprise that came along
with it.
In front of me was a
nice-looking, middle-aged woman. She opened her mouth and addressed me.
"Sakumi."
Since she appeared to be
the right age, and since she was standing right there beside me in the
hospital, I had the notion that she was, maybe, my mother. At least
that's what went through my mind. It was the only reason I could give
for her being there. Something about her was oddly familiar, but I
couldn't say who she was, or what she was like. The information just
wasn't there. She had to be my mother, or someone like her, because she
was there with me in my room that day.
Did she look like me? Then
it hit me -- I couldn't remember my own face.
One thing was certain. If
this woman was there, taking care of me like that, it would have been
wrong to say something that might offend her. As I lay there troubled,
wondering what to say or do, a small flashback trickled into my mind,
This woman was at home (But where was home? Which sky was it under? What
kind of place was it?) and she was crying. The memory of her tears came
back to me, bubbling up from the crystal-clear surface of my pool of
memories, as if it were a flashback in a movie, a scene that had been
filmed with a filter over the camera lens. My grandfather had died, yes,
I was sure of it. You know, tears really do flow one right after
another, each grazing your cheek and hitting the ground...
...or so the memories came
back to me.
Then I saw my sister.
I couldn't remember her
name, but the likeness of a gorgeous young woman came floating up along
with the impression that I had had a sister. The image of her face was
so strong that at first I thought she was something I had created in my
mind. Then I felt sure it was Mayu, and I watched her from behind as she
organized a pile of things that she'd left behind.
A while ago, back when I
was living on my own, I went through a rocky breakup with a boyfriend.
Talking to my mother over the phone, tears began to fall from my eyes.
My mother stopped in the middle of her sentence and said, "My
goodness, Sakumi. You're crying."
I surprised her because I
rarely cried, even as a child.
Oh, this person standing
next to me really was my mother. There was no mistake about it. I
couldn't hurt her. The impression echoed over and over in my mind like
the chant of a Buddhist shingon.
She must have thought that
I was still under the anesthesia. I had large, black circles under both
of my eyes. But when she saw that I had come to and was glancing up at
her through my blurred vision, she began to rejoice.
Eventually everything
cleared. I realized that by perceiving myself in one way I would manage
to go on living, but if I thought about things another way I would only
wear myself down. In a matter of seconds I'd been introduced to "Sakumi,"
and before long I'd received a crash course on her life until then. Of
course my real knowledge was limited to what came to me on a day-to-day
basis, and from there on out I was forced to live a haphazard life, a
balancing act, so to speak. But what else could I do? I was only certain
of so much.
"Mother?"
The word just slipped from
my mouth. She nodded her head slowly. It was a nod from the heart, full
of hope and excitement. I burst out laughing like a new bride. There I
was, a newborn in this world, having just uttered my first word, a warm
and pleasant word at that. Yet there was something bleak and dreary
about me, as if I were nothing more than a little hooligan pretending to
be a new bride. My head pounded, and brought with it a pain so intense
that the concept of "mother" seemed to drill itself straight
into the part of my brain that had become a thick, very thick, piece of
compressed flesh. The sound of that word had simultaneously caused a
lump to form somewhere near my heart. What could it have been?
Moving my eyes, I saw that
it was the middle of the day in my hospital room, and the bright,
shining sky streamed into my room from the outside window. The light
reminded me of my own consciousness -- bright, blue, and completely
empty.
My memory would eventually
come back to me, but most of it happened gradually, like the words of a
letter written in invisible ink slowly seeping through the lemon juice.
Still, the glass wall that came between me and myself, something that
should have been clear and lucid, was cloudy and unclear. It was like a
waterproof wristwatch that somehow manages to trap a drop of moisture
within its mechanism, fogging up the outer glass. Regardless of how hard
you shake it, the water doesn't go away. But that's okay. It didn't
matter anymore.
***
When I got home from work
the next afternoon, I knocked cheerfully on my brother's door. I've
often thought that when something this interesting happens at home, the
only way to approach it is directly. Hence, the interview.
"Come in." It was
Yoshio's voice.
Opening the door and
entering the room, I saw my brother sitting at his desk, his shoulders
bent over. Looking closer, I could see that he was fervently scribbling
tiny characters all over a piece of B5-size manuscript paper.
"I hear you're
becoming a writer?" I asked.
"Yeah." My
brother nodded, obviously not too concerned with the conversation.
"Do you want to write
mysteries like Jiro Akagawa?" I said, recalling that only a few
months earlier Yoshio had really been into a number of his books.
"No," my brother
said, shaking his head. "Classics like Akutagawa." I could see
the seriousness in his eyes. Without warning I felt tired, as if I had
had the wind knocked out of me. There was an aura around my brother that
hadn't been there before, just like there was something new about me. It
pierced straight through my heart.
"What about Mayu's old
boyfriend, Ryu-chan? He's considered to be more than a pop writer, you
know." I was referring, of course, to the man my sister had lived
with when she died, Ryuichiro. He was a writer of cult fiction, the only
writer I knew.
"Yeah, I respect him a
lot," Yoshio said. "He's a good writer."
Ryuichiro.
I recalled how difficult
his book had been, so vague and abstract.
"You mean you read his
book and understood it?" I asked.
"No, not really,"
Yoshio replied. "But when I look at the pages, they give me a good
feeling. I suppose I could say the whole book has a nice fragrance about
it."
"Hmm..." I'd
never thought about books that way before. All I knew was his book, in
particular, was dark fiction, so dark that I wasn't sure if I would ever
know what he was trying to get at.
My brother continued,
"When I read it I remembered Mayu."
Now it was clear, and I
nodded my head in reply. Her face was the beauty of perfect
independence, a galaxy of possibilities. It delicately encompassed
everything, all on its own. That's why I was having such an absurdly
painful time recalling it. It was natural and straightforward, something
like a flower, so moist and sweet it released a soft perfume, just like
Yoshio had said.
I love her face -- the
image of my sister.
Even now I see her in my
dreams, smiling.
"Well then, write a
good book and let your big sister read it," I said.
"Will do," Yoshio
replied. For some reason when I looked at him he seemed more like an
adult than a child.
"But I..." I
stopped for a moment. "I really want you to turn out okay, Yoshio.
Even if you become a writer, that still doesn't make you better than the
other boys your age. I want you to grow up to be the kind of guy who
makes girls go crazy. You know, a good-looking guy who can write well,
too. That would be so much better than turning out like those boys with
bad manners."
"Gotcha. I'll watch
out."
"So tell me," I
said. "Why the change? I mean, all of a sudden here you are, acting
like an adult, all smart and clever, and you're writing. What's gotten
into you? Come on, you can tell me. I promise to keep it a secret from
Mom." I grinned as I spoke.
Seriousness returned to his
eyes and he said, "Something happened to me -- up here." He
pointed to his forehead.
"What?"
"They came in a dream,
a bunch of gods, saying all sorts of weird things. That's when it
happened -- I got all changed inside. Now my mind won't stop working. I
just think about things, you know, like how strange people are. We eat,
poop, and pee, and our hair grows long. There's no way of stopping it.
Even though we're only who we are, right this very second, we still
bring up the past and worry about the future. It's so weird! And when I
think about those things, I figure the only way I'm going to explain how
I feel is by writing my thoughts down. Something tells me that if I make
up stories about different people in different places, I'll finally get
a grip on what I have to say."
I had to be impressed by a
discourse like that. "Okay," I said, "I understand, and
you have my full support. But I want you to remember something --
something that I've dreamed about for a long time: One day when you're
in high school, once you've grown big and tall, I see the two of us
going downtown to buy a present for your girlfriend. We'll pick out
something fancy, and I'll pitch in some money to help you buy it. Then
we'll have tea at a nice, chic cafe in one of the department stores
where cool grown-ups shop downtown. I know I might be asking a lot, but
ever since you were born I've been thinking about how wonderful a date
like that will be -- ever since that cold day you blew into our house
with the fallen snow."
"I'll remember,"
my brother said.
Relieved, I sat down and
picked up a book that was lying next to me on the floor. I glanced at
the title: 100 Real-Life Mysteries.
"What's this?" I
asked, holding up the book.
"Oh!" my brother
said with excitement. "That's really interesting." His face
seemed to finally reflect the child that was in him.
"Huh..." I said,
flipping through the loose pages. I stopped at one spot and began
reading:
A WOMAN WITH TWO MEMORIES
Ever since a freak automobile accident, Mary Hector of Texas has had
recollections of a life quite different from her own. This
forty-two-year-old housewife lived a tranquil life with her husband, a
high school teacher, and their two boys until the day she was hit by
an approaching vehicle on the way to pick up her husband from work.
The other driver had fallen asleep at the wheel. Although Mary
sustained several serious wounds, reports indicate that there was no
injury to the brain. Two months after being released from the
hospital, she realized that she had a complete set of separate
memories, far from what she remembered about her own life as Mary
Hector. The second memory came from a young girl who had died of
pneumonia at age seventeen in Columbus, Ohio. Her name was Mary Sontag.
Since Mary Hector could remember everything from Mary Sontag's
mother's name to the name of the high school she had attended, she
consulted with her husband over the issue. After doing some research
to confirm the validity of Mary's vivid "second
recollection," evidence was found that proved a Mary Sontag had
existed in Columbus, Ohio. Studies have shown that people with two
memories, although extremely rare, do exist. However, Mary's situation
remains an exception. The resemblance between the two women might stop
at their first names, but that does not explain this extraordinarily
unique phenomenon.
"Wow, pretty
interesting," I said.
"Don't you think
so?" Yoshio replied, sounding like an expert.
Closing the book, I stood
up and said good-bye, and headed for my room. I figured it would be okay
to leave my little brother alone, since there didn't appear to be
anything wrong. It was winter, and the corridor between our rooms was
chilly. Every inch of the hallway seemed saturated with the scent of
night. The glass window that ran the length of the hallway was pitch
black, and I gazed into it, hoping that along with my face it would
reflect all I had lost in memory.
***
That night I had a peculiar
dream.
I dreamed that I was
sitting on a bench, staring across a vast landscape spread out endlessly
before me. The sky was frighteningly blue, a blue so thick it looked
like a Jell-O mold. I felt like I would be sucked into it at any moment.
The color burst up from the horizon, rising endlessly into the heavens,
in a gradation clear enough to touch. Nothing could prevent the sky from
rising. There was just the dry air, parched earth, and a few buildings
popping up here and there, forming a border along the horizon.
I'd never seen this place
before, not once in my entire lifetime. It was overwhelming. As I sat on
the oak bench examining my surroundings, a dusty wind came up and blew
my hair. I glanced over and realized I was not alone. A woman was
sitting next to me on the bench. In my dream I recognized her
immediately.
Could I be in Texas?
No, it could have been
anywhere. Then again, it must have been nowhere. It was a place where
heaven and earth come together, a place where one dream unites with
another, a place where the sweet, dry wind blows on forever.
I began to speak.
"Mary, please share with me your thoughts on memory. Mine has been
giving me a lot of trouble lately."
Her eyes were blue, a color
that looked like it would melt into the sky. I was despondent,
surrounded by too much of the same color. Was it because the color
melted two people's lives into one? The sea of our memories, the echoes
of the past -- that color seemed to have it all.
She glanced up and said in
a low voice, "The me that's only me is the only me that I can't
remember." She smiled. "Sounds like a child's word game."
I looked at the deeply cut
wrinkles in the corners of her eyes.
She continued, "I'm in
the kitchen getting dinner ready, or looking at the sunset -- that's
when it happens. I feel remorse during those everyday moments, when I'm
not doing anything in particular. It's like there's a devil in my heart
trying to make me feel bad about what happened, you know? Whenever that
feeling comes over me, I think to myself that maybe that's something
from the other Mary. In other words, it's gone that far -- her memories
have melted into my own. Of course, a part of me thinks that my own life
is just as important as hers -- but don't get me wrong: I don't hate
her, even though she did get inside me by some bizarre twist of
fate."
"But is it
possible," I interrupted, "to know if you ever existed without
her?" I looked off into the distance, realizing how desperate I had
been for someone to talk to. "I know that concerning myself with
things like that I'll never make it out on my own, but every so often I
just lash out in pain. It hurts, really hurts. I try looking at the
stars, or my brother, and everything looks familiar, but at the same
time something keeps telling me I'm seeing things differently than
before. I feel like I've died and come back to life."
Mary lowered her head, and
stayed silent for a while. Finally she glanced over to me with a faint
smile. At that point I realized Mary had a much stronger recollection of
death than I did, because even though she was sitting with me on the
bench, somewhere inside all of her memory she really had passed away.
How could she put up with such a thing? It was so frightening. She and I
were there without permission, in a world with a landscape too vast for
our eyes, not to mention that she'd have to go through the pain of dying
all over again.
"Yes, I suppose things
like that do happen," Mary said. "And when it happened to me I
think I took it much harder than you. But now I see that inside of me
there are two spirits viewing the world from my eyes. What could be
wrong with that?" She looked away happily.
A drop of water fell from
the sky.
"Oh, look," I
said. "Rain. Even on a beautiful day like this."
The drop of rain had fallen
through the bright rays of the sun from a single white cloud floating
against the blue sky. At first I took it for a small fragment of ice,
then more raindrops came down, one right after another, landing in our
hair -- mine black and hers golden yellow. Like something delightful,
the rain fell through the warm air, casting a cold shadow around us. The
rain was quiet, throwing light across the beautiful scenery like tiny
little globes, giving us quick glances of the brilliant sun. Everything
looked sweet glittering in the light. Now the world was wet around us,
and even though I thought the moisture on my cheeks had fallen from my
eyes, when I wiped away the tears I discovered that it was only water
from heaven.
"So it's just the four
of us now," I said, "the two of you and the two of me, all
looking at the sky and the earth and the rain, which fell from a single
white cloud."
Mary nodded silently.
I woke up, and for a brief
moment longed for the landscape and rain that had shimmered in that sky.
It had been a spectacular dream. I don't know why, but it was something
to be thankful for.
Yes, I really think so.
Copyright © 1994 by Banana
Yoshimoto
Translation copyright © 1997 by Russell F. Wasden
Excerpted from Amrita © Copyright 2009 by Banana Yoshimoto. Reprinted with permission by Washington Square Press. All rights reserved.
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