When I decided to write my will, I soon noticed that I couldnât start writing anything at all without an assumption of who was going to be reading it.
Holding a pen over stationery I bought from a nearby shop, I thought about what to write for a long time.
Cicadas were stopped on the power poles outside, and they were noisy enough that it felt like they were inside.
While the cicadas were there, I could blame them for not being able to move my pen - but even after they flew off, I still hadnât written a single word.
Who was I hoping would read this will in the first place? A will is fundamentally a means of communication. I had to write to tell someone something about me that they couldnât see otherwise.
I asked myself, what did I have to tell anyone? Of course, I immediately thought of my childhood friend, Himeno. So should this will contain my thanks toward Himeno, or a confession of my love?
As a test, I took about an hour carefully writing a letter to her. To summarize what it looked like when I was done:
I donât know what you think of me by now, but Iâve kept loving you since that day ten years ago.
I survived until twenty because of my memories from when I was with you, and I wonât survive beyond twenty because I canât stand a world without you.
Now that Iâm about to die, Iâve finally realized that. In a way, Iâve already been dead for a long time. Ever since the day we went our separate ways.
Goodbye. Iâm praying ten-year-old me survives inside you for a little longer.
Reading it again, I thought that I probably wouldnât mail this letter. There was a serious problem somewhere in there.
This wasnât the kind of thing I wanted to be saying with it. And it was impossible for me write down exactly what I wanted to say. Iâd sooner die.
I think my desire came down to that last line I wrote. For Himeno to still remember me as I was at ten for a little while.
And if that was the objective of the letter, then it seemed I should maybe not write anything at all.
Any form would do; if it was just addressed to Himeno, and I was the sender, that would be enough. And that would result in the least misunderstanding.
If a blank sheet of paper seemed odd, I could write a single sentence: âI just wanted to send a letter.â
Or maybe - another option was to not talk about my death at all, but write about normal, everyday things.
I threw the pen onto the table and crumpled up the letter so Miyagi couldnât read it, then turned up to the ceiling.
âŚAt any rate, when was the last time I wrote a letter? I searched my memory.
Communicating with letters wasnât a common thing, and since elementary school, I had no one to send New Yearâs cards or anything like that. There must have only been a few letters throughout my whole life.
Aside from that when I was 17, the last letter I wrote was⌠in the summer of fourth grade.
That summer, when I was ten, our class buried a time capsule behind the gym. It was a suggestion from that same teacher who gave us the morality lesson that first led me to think about the value of life.
The students all wrote letters to put inside the round capsule.
âI want you to write those letters to yourself ten years from now,â she said. âMaybe you wonât be sure what to write, since I just said that out of the blue⌠I know, you can write things like "Did your dream come true?â, or âAre you happy?â, or âDo you remember this?â, or âWhat would you like to tell me?â Thereâs a lot you could ask. You can also write about your own hopes, like âPlease make my dream come true,â or âPlease be happy,â or âPlease donât forget about this.ââ
She couldnât have predicted that in a decade, some of those children had given up on their dreams, werenât happy, and had forgotten a lot.
Maybe it wasnât a letter for your future self, but a letter for you at the time when you were writing it.
She also said this.
"Also, at the end of the letter, please write who your best friend right now is. âŚDonât worry too much about what they think about you. If itâs a case of "They hate me, but I like them!â, please just write it. Donât worry, Iâll be sure no one else sees it, not even me.â
I couldnât remember what I wrote to myself. I couldnât even remember whose name I wrote.
The time capsule was to be dug up ten years later. That was this year, but Iâd yet to hear anything about it.
It could have been I was the only one who wasnât contacted, but more than likely, they just forgot.
I thought that Iâd like to read that letter again before I died. But not meeting with any of my classmates. Just by myself.
"How do you plan to spend today?â, Miyagi asked as I stood up.
âTime capsule raiding,â I replied.
It had been a year since I went back to my home town. After leaving the station, which was as shabby as a prefab hut, I was met with some familiar sights.
A town of green hills. The cries of insects and the overpowering smell of vegetation couldnât even be compared to where I lived now. Even straining my ears, all I could hear were bugs and birds.
âSurely you canât sneak into an elementary school and dig holes in the middle of the day?â, Miyagi asked, walking behind.
âIâll wait until night, of course.â
But while Iâd gotten this far on impulse, I hadnât considered how I would kill time until the sun set in a town with no amusements or restaurants to speak of.
There wasnât even a convenience store in walking distance. It would have been time-consuming, but maybe better to take my moped.
As much time as I had to waste, I had no intention of going home to my parents. Meeting friends was also a no-go.
âIf you have time on your hands, perhaps you might tour some places from your past?â, Miyagi suggested, seeing right through me. âPlaces you used to visit often as a child but havenât in a few years, say.â
âPlaces from my past, huh⌠It wasnât a very good past I had here.â
âWith the exception of Ms. Himeno, I assume?â
âDonât bring up her name so lightly. I really donât want to hear it out of your mouth.â
âIs that so. Iâll be more cautious henceforth. âŚHowever, while I donât mean to be nosy, I would not advise meeting anyone.â
âWasnât planning to.â
âGood, if you say so,â Miyagi said, abating.
The sunlight seemed to pierce through my skin. It was going to be another scorcher. I sat on a bench outside the station and considered my options going forth.
Suddenly, I looked to my side and saw Miyagi applying what appeared to be sunscreen. I always thought she was really fair-skinned, and I guess she worked to keep it that way.
She was so overly serious that I expected her to be indifferent about her appearance, so it came as a surprise.
âArenât you invisible to everyone but me?â, I questioned.
âEssentially, yes.â
âAlways?â
âYes, Iâm only seen by those I observe. However, as you are aware, there are exceptions. âŚFor example, when you first visited the shop. When I am not on observer duty, I can be seen by those who are intending to sell their lifespan, time, or health. âŚIs something the matter?â
âNah. I was just wondering why youâre fussing over your appearance if nobody can see you.â
Unexpectedly, Miyagi seemed to take this comment as quite an attack.
âI do it for myself,â Miyagi retorted as if hurt. âYou would take a shower even if you had no plans to meet anyone, wouldnât you?â
She really did seem offended. If it had been any other girl, I would have been rushing to apologize, but with Miyagi, I was glad I could get back at her. I wanted her to criticize my careless remarks.
While walking around wondering where to go, my feet led me to a thicket near my old home and Himenoâs. We played there often as kids.
I regretted how I was falling right into Miyagiâs suggestion. She illuminated just how boring and ordinary my actions were.
I took quite a detour trying to keep away from my parentsâ house. I visited a candy store I used to frequent, but the shop had folded and the sign was gone.
I started on the path into the thicket, then walked off the trail for about five minutes before I reached my destination.
There was a broken-down bus there which served as a so-called âsecret baseâ for Himeno and I in our youth.
The remaining specks of red paint on the bus looked like rust from a distance, but if you went inside and could ignore all the dust built up on the seats and floors, it looked unexpectedly nice. It seemed like it should have been crawling with bugs, but I barely saw any.
I walked around the bus looking for traces of Himeno and I. But as I went to leave after not finding anything and giving up, I finally noticed something on the driverâs seat.
Something was written on the side of the seat in blue permanent marker. I took a close look at it and realized it was an arrow. Looking to where it pointed, I found another arrow.
After being directed around by six arrows, I found, on the back of a seat, what seemed to be an ai-ai-gasa. The silly elementary school thing where you write your name and the person you secretly love under an umbrella.
Naturally, it was my name and Himenoâs.
I had no memory of drawing such a thing, and only Himeno and I knew about this place - so it had to have been Himeno.
I didnât think her the kind to do something so traditionally girly. Still, a smile formed on my lips.
I stared at the umbrella for a while. Miyagi watched from behind, but didnât appear to be preparing any sarcastic comments.
Once it was burned into my sight, I left the bus, and like I did as a child, used a fallen tree to climb onto the roof. Brushing away some fallen leaves, I lied down flat.
And so I laid until I heard cicadas ringing in the evening.
After visiting my grandfatherâs grave, it was night, and I headed for the elementary school.
I borrowed a shovel from the shed, went behind the gym, and started digging with a rough idea of where the thing was. The green light of the emergency exit dimly illuminated my surroundings.
I thought it would be easy to find what I was looking for, but either my memory was wrong, or it had already been dug up. I was digging for an hour, but all I got was a lot of sweat and no time capsule.
My throat was dry. My hands were getting really blistered, also aided by my time at the batting center yesterday. Miyagi sat by and watched me dig holes, writing something in her notebook.
While I smoked to take a break, my memory finally came back to me. Thatâs right, we were going to bury it by a tree behind the gym, but someone mentioned that a new tree might be planted there, so we buried it somewhere else.
After less than ten minutes digging behind the backstop, I hit something hard. I carefully excavated the round object so as not to damage it, then brought it into the light. I thought it might be locked, but it slid right open.
My original plan was to only take my letter and put it back right away. But after all that effort, I wanted to look through all the letters. A guy whoâs going to die in a few months should be allowed at least that much.
I picked one at random and opened it up. I skimmed through the âmessage to your future selfâ and the âbest friendâ part.
Once I was done reading, I opened up a notebook, wrote the letter-writerâs name, and drew an arrow pointing to their best friend.
After repeating this with a few more letters, the number of names and arrows increased, gradually creating a relationship chart. Who likes who, whoâs liked by who. Which are requited, and which ones arenât.
Just as expected, by the time Iâd read all the letters, the lonely name on the chart was me. Not a single person had chosen me as their âbest friend.â
And⌠while I searched the time capsule thoroughly for Himenoâs letter, I couldnât find it. Maybe it just happened that she wasnât there the day we buried it.
If she had been, surely sheâd have written my name, I thought. I mean, sheâd secretly drawn an ai-ai-gasa with our names in our secret base. Sheâd definitelywrite my name. Maybe added a heart or two.
If only Himenoâs letter were there.
Stuffing my own letter, which Iâd found earlier, into my jeans pocket, I reburied the time capsule. I returned the shovel to the shed, washed my hands and face with the nearby faucet, and left the elementary school.
I dragged my exhausted body along the road. Miyagi spoke from behind me.
âI should hope you understand now? You ought not cling onto your past relationships. Above all, youâve effectively kept none of them. After Ms. Himeno changed schools, did you send her even a single letter? After graduating high school, did you once contact Mr. Naruse? Why did Ms. Wakana abandon you? Did you show up to any class reunions? âŚPardon the remark, but donât you feel that clinging to the past now is asking for too much?â
My face twisted, of course, but I had nothing to say back.
Maybe Miyagi was right. What I was doing was like not normally believing in any gods, but only going to shrines and temples and churches to beg for help when I was having hard times.
But if that was the case - with the past and future locked off from me, what was I supposed to do?
Back at the train station, I looked over the time table. The last train had left a long time ago.
I never really took the train much when I lived in the area, but for such a rural place, I didnât expect the last train to leave so early.
I could have called a taxi, and it wasnât like I couldnât have gone to my parentsâ, but I ultimately chose to spend the night at the station.
Think of it this way, Iâd rather have my physical pain exceed my mental pain than the other way around. By hurting myself just enough, I could turn my attention to that.
I lied on a hard bench and closed my eyes. There was the unceasing sound of bugs bumping into the fluorescent lights.
While I didnât think Iâd be sleepless because of how utterly exhausted I was, with the strange lighting and the bugs loitering around my feet, I knew I couldnât count on a particularly pleasant rest.
From the bench behind me, I heard Miyagiâs pen writing. I was impressed by her endurance. She must have not gotten much sleep at all in the days sheâd been watching me.
It seemed like even during the night, she was in a cycle of sleeping one minute and then being awake for five. She must not have had any other option, but observer seemed like too harsh a job for a young girl.
Of course, it wasnât like I was sympathizing. I just wished sheâd stop doing that job.