Difference between revisions of "Jinrui wa Suitai Shimashita:Volume 1 Chapter 1"
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==Chapter 1 - Planet of the Fairies== |
==Chapter 1 - Planet of the Fairies== |
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− | This was terribly bumpy. |
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+ | The vibration is horrible. |
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− | Paved decades ago, perhaps even centuries ago, the asphalt road was presently an abandoned highway without the slightest trace of humanity in sight. Weeds had sprung up on both sides, and roots had grown around it like veins, slowly transforming this place into a primeval wilderness. |
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− | The flatbed truck tread indifferently over this road that could hardly be called a road. |
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+ | Paved many decades, or rather, many centuries ago, what may once have been a highway road is now nothing but a rocky path. Its irregularity, along with the many weeds encroaching from its sides and the vein-like roots spread over it all add to the chaotic intensity of the rattling. |
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− | Seated atop it, I could only describe my feelings with exceedingly miserable vocabulary. |
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− | Every time the car rose up above an obstacle, abrupt shocks would vibrate up through the platform… thereupon shaking me and the boxes I was packed alongside with. |
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+ | On this sorry excuse for a path is a flatbed truck, trundling along with an air of indifference. |
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− | I blamed myself for thinking that traveling in the bed of a truck would be a graceful experience. It was far too stupid of me. |
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+ | The quality of the ride is the worst, in a word. |
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− | I was so fortunate as to be traveling on a road surrounded with flowers bursting in full bloom, yet I was in no particular mood to admire it thanks to the excessive pain in my buttocks. |
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+ | As the truck navigates each bump on the road, sharp jolts travel up to its bed... |
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− | This situation in itself reminded me of the song, “Donna, Donna.” <ref><b>“Donna, Donna”</b> - A famous relatively upbeat Yiddish theater song about a calf being shipped to slaughter. See: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donna_Donna additional information]</ref> |
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+ | shaking both me and the wooden crates I am packed together with. |
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+ | I am quite bitter at myself for foolishly expecting a ride on the back of a truck to be an elegant one. |
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− | “If only I had just sat down in the passenger’s seat… never mind.” |
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− | I mumbled to myself, but quickly rejected that train of thought. If I had sat down there, I would have been expected to singlehandedly strike up conversation with the caravan leader in the driver’s seat. As someone who was endowed with a brain that froze with total blanks and was otherwise terrible with strangers, that span of time probably would have shaved my nerves dangerously thin. |
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+ | Even though the view of the flowers bordering this meandering road is a sight to behold, the soreness of my bottom is such that I cannot enjoy any of it. |
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− | <!--Pg 11--> |
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− | My brain or my butt. Obviously I’d rather that the latter get shaved thin. |
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− | Be as that may, I seriously couldn’t bear this any further, so I turned towards the driver to ask a question. |
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+ | The situation feels quite similar to the song "Dona Dona". <ref><b>“Donna, Donna”</b> - A famous relatively upbeat Yiddish theater song about a calf being shipped to slaughter. See: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Donna_Donna additional information]</ref> |
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− | First I took a deep breath. |
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− | “...Excuse me, how mush lunger will it be?” |
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+ | "If only I'd sat in the passenger seat from the start... but I'm past that." |
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− | I messed up my pronunciation, but it didn’t seem like he noticed, so I didn’t correct myself. Ugh, I was really bad at talking to strangers. |
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− | “Three, maybe four hours. That is, if the sun doesn’t get covered up.” |
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+ | I softly vocalise my revulsion to the idea. To sit in the passenger seat would mean I would have to eventually strike a conversation with the caravan chief beside me in the driver's seat. For a person like me who loses her head and starts to blather when faced with strangers, it would have been a nerve-wracking experience. |
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− | The caravan leader must have been a statue with how little he moved his head as he responded. |
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+ | <!--Pg 11-->Between my sanity and my bottom, I prefer to whittle down the latter. |
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− | After I giving my brief thanks, my attention fixated itself on this crude solar cell unit that was spread open like an umbrella above the canopy. |
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− | This flatbed truck simultaneously used fuel cells and solar energy as its power source, so I figured it must have been a gasoline-electric “hybrid car.” The fact that it was still operational was rather miraculous—although, the car itself probably used only one of those energy sources most of the time. |
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+ | But, as one would expect, I can't bear the pain any longer, so I face the truck's cabin and call out to the chief after taking a deep breath: "... How mush merr till we reach?" |
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− | As we traveled, I started to feel restless. |
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− | Since that guy let me ride along for free, I really wasn’t in a position to complain. |
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+ | I slurred my words a bit, but since the chief doesn't really seem to notice, I shall refrain from repeating myself. |
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− | But since this truck was pulling an enormous load, it slowly lumbered forward at the thrilling speed of eight kilometers per hour. |
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− | “Four more hours of this...” |
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+ | Ahh, I'm just awful at talking to strangers. |
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− | Around then, the driver began to hum from his seat. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | "Three, maybe four more hours, I'd say. That's if the weather stays fair though." |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Statuesque, the chief responds without so much as a glance towards me. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | With a short thank-you, I begin to ponder on the rugged solar panel module that is mounted above the truck's canopy like an umbrella. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | While this truck appears to be a rare hybrid one that can use both solar and fuel cell based power, only one of the two power sources seems to be in regular use. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | As I ruminate on this, I grow restless. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Since I got a free ride, I can't really complain though. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | It's just that this behemoth of a truck is ambling on at all of 8 kmph. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | "Four more hours of this..." |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Presently, the chief begins humming. |
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<!--Pg 12--> |
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− | With the warm sunlight shining down on the driver, he looked so very nice and comfortable. |
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+ | It must be very comfortable to drive while basking in the sun. |
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− | I, on the hand, simply couldn’t bear the ache in my butt anymore, so I stood up. But then— |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Tiring of the pain in my bottom, I begin to raise my hips a little when the chief gives me a warning: "It's better not to stand up. There was once a person who did so; he ended up falling over the side. Oh, and then he died a slow death, tangled up in the tyres." |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | That makes me sit right back down. I decide to distract myself from the implications of that anecdote by looking at the opposite edge of the road lined with wild flowers. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | Most of my field of vision is filled with the yellow of rape blossoms. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | What a handy plant rapeseed is; its seeds can be squeezed for oil, and are also used in pickles. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | However, I won't be caught making the mistakes of my childhood again; traipsing into these plants will only get me covered in a cloud of aphids. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | My maiden heart is crumbling away, as is my patience for this ride on the truck's bed. |
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− | “I strongly advise against standing up, since there was once a person who did so but fell off. Incidentally, that person got swept up in the wheels and was dragged around for a very long time before he died.” |
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+ | To keep my mind off the pain in my backside, I idly watch the scenery go by. Suddenly, I notice something popping its head out of the flowers. |
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− | I immediately sat back down into my previous spot. |
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− | If that was the case, at the very least I needed to distract myself. I ended up looking at the cluster of wildflowers at the opposite side of the road. |
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+ | ... |
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− | A panorama of yellow rapeseed flowers occupied most of my field of view. |
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− | That was a very convenient plant that could processed into oil or pickled as an edible vegetable. |
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+ | Our eyes meet. |
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− | On the downside, if you approached them, there’d be a huge hoard of aphids that’d pounce on you. As a result, I had no desire to to prance into the midst of it like I might have had in the past. My maiden-like naivety had deteriorated, a little bit like what was presently happening to my tortured butt on this journeying flatbed truck. |
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− | With the ache in my buttocks gradually worsening, I dejectedly gazed at the scenery outside, just when a tiny head poked out from a bed of flowers. |
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+ | I would say the moment lasts for about a second? |
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− | “...” |
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− | Our eyes met. |
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+ | As if to escape, the head rears back into the flowers. |
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− | For probably a second or so? |
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− | However, it quickly ducked back in, as if to escape. |
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− | + | "... Well." |
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− | This was my second time seeing <i>them</i> ever since I was a child. |
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+ | I last saw one of <i>their</i> kind as a child. This was a rather short encounter, but my eyes weren't lying. Their kind leave quite an impression even when seen just once, after all. |
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− | Even though it was abrupt and lasted only a split second, I was absolutely sure I wasn’t mistaken. |
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− | From just one glance, they had this particular look that was simply unforgettable. |
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+ | Forgetting even the persistent soreness of my bottom, I smile to myself. |
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− | I smiled, forgetting how much my butt hurt. |
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− | “So they even lived in these kinds of places, too.” |
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+ | "So they even live around here, huh?" |
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− | It was common knowledge that they could live virtually anyplace where life was possible, but they rarely showed themselves in front of people. As a result, I personally considered this unexpected encounter to be a sign of good luck. |
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− | I needed to establish friendly relations with them. |
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+ | They are existences that live in any place inhabitable by people, but they are rarely ever seen by us. The unexpected encounter feels like a good omen to me. |
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− | As a member of the last graduating class of 《School》, this was my final duty. |
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− | I leaned against the edge of the platform, my cheeks feeling the gentle caress of a light breeze as I lost myself in memories of the past. |
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+ | I would be as friendly with them as possible. This is something of a duty I feel obligated to perform as one of 《School》's last graduates. |
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− | The graduation ceremony was three days ago. |
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− | It had taken place in this old decrepit lecture hall. |
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+ | Leaning against the side of the truck with my cheek being caressed by the gentle wind, I lose myself in my memories. |
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− | You might think that this’d be a dangerous place to hold a ceremony, but please don’t worry. |
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− | The auditorium was so old that it basically didn’t even have any more ceiling or stone walls that <i>could</i> crumble or fall down. |
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+ | It has been two days since the graduation ceremony, which was held in an old and rotting lecture hall. You might think it remiss to hold an important ceremony like that in such a dangerous place, but rest assured, the hall was so old that it had neither a ceiling nor walls that <i>could</i> collapse on anyone. |
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− | When we entered the auditorium, which was polished so spotlessly that hardly a single speck could be seen on the shiny floor, there was a lonely island of twelve chairs packed so closely together that we had to stand a little bit as we waited. |
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− | <!--Pg 14--> |
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− | The sharp fragrance that wafted up from a fresh-cut flower pinned on my breast made my nose tingle a little. They would be like this until they withered—a poignant reminder that these were the last moments we’d spend together as students. |
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+ | We all entered that hall whose floor was polished leaving not a single pebble, with a forest of twelve chairs in the middle. We stood around listlessly for a spell, unsure of where to sit. |
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− | Once we graduated, all that was left of us was to return to our villages. |
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− | I had thought I’d that accept this with all the calm indifference in the world. However, the moment I stepped into that auditorium, the scenery in my heart abruptly became blur. |
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− | I had a premonition in my gut that this ceremony wasn’t going to end so simply. |
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+ | <!--Pg 14--> |
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− | Excluding the faculty, there were a lot of attendees at this graduation. |
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+ | |||
+ | The sharp scent of the flower pinned to my lapel made the insides of my nose tingle. We all had the feeling that we would only be together until our flowers wilted. The only thing left for us to do after this would be to return to our hometowns after all. |
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+ | |||
+ | I had treated the notion lightly, and had thought myself disinvested in the matter. However, as I entered the hall, the landscape in my heart clouded over, as if a mist had descended. It was a premonition that this ceremony wouldn't end so simply. There were a number of attendees other than our professors in the hall as well. |
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− | But among those guests, there were hardly any parents. That was because to attend School, most of us came from distant villages and were subsequently introduced to the routine of dormitory life. |
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− | As such, the audience was comprised primarily of officials who were vaguely connected to education or the dealings of the School. |
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+ | Whoever they were, almost nobody in the room was a relative of us graduates. After all, we had left our homes far behind to stay in the dorms of the school. Most of the people present were school personnel. |
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− | Also, there were far more teachers and guests than graduating students. |
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− | When the ceremony began, intense pressure sank down on us. |
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+ | There were more attendees in the hall than there were graduates, and the atmosphere was tense. We had all resolved among ourselves not to cry during the ceremony. |
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− | Before it started, we had all boldly declared we weren’t going to cry. |
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− | It would have been embarrassing to shed tears in front of such a large audience of people, especially as we were about to become adults. |
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+ | In the presence of so many guests, it would be embarrassing for us graduates who were finally becoming adults to cry. The expectation was that the ceremony would end quickly; there were only twelve of us graduates after all. |
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− | Since there were only twelve graduates, the ceremony should have been a quick affair. |
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− | However, a large group of teachers lined up neatly on the stage and took their sweet time to call each of us onto to the podium one by one. They deliberately used informal language interspersed with touching comments. The presentation of diplomas was even carefully synchronized with a live performance of Chopin’s “Farewell Waltz.” <ref><b>”The Farewell Waltz”</b> - Waltz in A-flat major, Op. 69, No.1 by Frédéric Chopin, written for piano. Also known as the “Valse de l’adieu.” See: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waltz_in_A-flat_major,_Op._69,_No._1_%28Chopin%29 additional information]</ref> |
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+ | The professors lined up on the stage had other plans though. They took their sweet time in calling each graduate to the stage one-by-one. As they did so, they would all talk a little about that graduate, while Chopin's Farewell Waltz <ref><b>”The Farewell Waltz”</b> - Waltz in A-flat major, Op. 69, No.1 by Frédéric Chopin, written for piano. Also known as the “Valse de l’adieu.” See: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waltz_in_A-flat_major,_Op._69,_No._1_%28Chopin%29 additional information]</ref> |
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− | By the end of it, everyone was crying. It was unbelievable. |
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+ | was played in sync. Just a few simple words from the professors were enough to have everyone crying by the end; it was unbelievable. |
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− | The comments that the teachers gave were actually very simple. |
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+ | Let me summarise the theme of the professors' address for you. It was laden with word choices that were on occasion mean-spirited, with bold and colourful figures of speech as well as inversions of expression that successfully shook the hearts of all who listened. Where we expected cold realism, they employed lyrical sentences with personifications and vivid descriptions that evoked emphatic emotions. Such poetic gems were accentuated by expertly timed spells of silence, followed by more praise, in a constant cycle of adulation that culminated in an excess of tears in our eyes. They were definitely messing with us. |
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− | Supposing that they had notes in their hands, one sentence would have been enough to summarize their main point. It was probably something like, “Talk about a special memory you share with each student.” |
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− | But the biggest thing was how they managed to express themselves with such masterful skill. |
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+ | I became a wreck in less than a minute, but every one else was pretty much the same in this regard. |
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− | The words they used held just a hint of malice, mixed with large helping of diverse rhetoric. Together with the flashbacks that they powerfully evoked, they shook the foundations of their listeners like earthquakes; originally I thought they would have been calm and thoroughly rational, but they actually employed personification and vivid scenes of nature to produce emotionally evocative performances of lyricism. Every time they reached the end of sentence, an eternity of silence would hang suspended, just to be tightly resumed moments later as they sung our praises and swept us away, a hauntingly ephemeral coda to that spoken verse… again and again this procedure on the podium would rain upon us graduates to the point our moist eyes couldn’t take on any more water. Only afterwards would this deluge stop just in time, gently fading away like it was never there. |
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− | No matter how you saw it, they were out to get us. |
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+ | Even my friend Y, who didn't usually show any emotion in front of others had tears behind her glasses after she stepped down from the stage. |
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− | It took less than a minute for my ship to be hopelessly sunk, although my fellow graduates fared hardly any better. |
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− | Even my friend Y, who hated to show emotion in front of others, was hiding tears behind her glasses as soon as she got on the stage. |
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<!--Pg 16--> |
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− | Now that you think about it, this was probably our teachers’ way of secretly getting revenge for all the pain we caused them in the past as students. I personally thought this was very plausible. |
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+ | I have a feeling the professors were secretly taking their revenge on us for all the trouble we gave them. That's definitely what they were doing. After this session of public humiliation ended, each of us held in their hands an unblemished, pristine white graduation certificate. |
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− | After the scene of our public humiliation finally ended, all of us graduates held spotless, pure white, and shiny diplomas in our hands. |
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− | We had spent more than ten years of our life going through School, studying all sorts of subjects and experiencing all kinds of things, just to receive this trimmed piece of paper. It was as weightless as a feather, and it left a gap in my heart that felt just as empty. |
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+ | More than a decade had passed, and I had learnt and personally experienced a multitude of things, all for the sake of receiving this thin sheet of paper. But, mimicking the feather-like weightlessness of the certificate, the end of our journey left us with an unsatisfactorily hollow feeling. |
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− | We took our wilted flowers and pressed them within the graduation yearbooks that were given to us as mementos. These days, photographs have become quite a rare thing. In the past, one could to flip through pictures at a whim, stirring up memories of those old days; now, memories were just figments of imagination. |
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− | Like this, the sadness burst forth from the auditorium where we held our farewell party. |
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+ | All of us put our now-drooping flower decorations into the photo albums we got as souvenirs, to turn them into pressed flowers. Speaking of photographs, they were becoming quite the rarity in recent times. It used to be that one could look back on the past whenever they pleased by flipping through a photo album, but we could now only rely on our increasingly more ephemeral memories. The loneliness burst forth at the farewell party. |
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− | I’m afraid it’s simply impossible for me to put those blurry emotions into words, since I myself as the recordkeeper succumbed to these feelings as well. As such, I’ll only jot down the important details below. |
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+ | |||
+ | |||
+ | The indescribable chaos of it all, and my inability as an observer to go against its flow means I can only give you a broad description of its elements. The farewell party proceeded as follows. |
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− | It mostly consisted of the following. |
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<br /> |
<br /> |
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<!--Pg 17--> |
<!--Pg 17--> |
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+ | |||
− | Things were carried into the room, dishes that I’d never seen before; a multicolored rainbow of fallen fruit on the floor; makeshift firecrackers that somebody put together; corks popping from bottles of champagne; an improvised piano performance; shouting graduates; crying graduates; laughing graduates; graduates who got too carried away and embarrassed themselves to death (that would be me); my friend Y’s swollen red eyes after she came out from spending ten minutes in the bathroom; the older guests toasting drinks with each other; the male graduates being goaded by everyone to chug alcohol nonstop; the rough blare of a jazz trumpet; an old granny whom I’ve never met before crying while holding my hand; a ragtag disheveled choir; old people crying just as much as the graduates; the second hand and the hour hand overlapping as midnight approached— |
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+ | A feast full of dishes I had never seen before was brought in; a multicolored rainbow of fallen fruit on the floor; somebody set off some improvised firecrackers; champagne corks popped; there was an attempt at a piano performance; graduates shouting; graduates crying; graduates laughing; graduates dying of embarrassment after making fools of themselves (I was one of those); the red, puffy eyes of my friend Y returning from her roughly ten-minute session in the restroom; elderly guests sharing drinks; the graduate boys endlessly pouring each other drinks left and right; The scratchy tone of a jazz trumpet; Some random old lady holding my hand while crying; an off-tune chorus; a jumble of young graduates and old guests crying together, and the minute and hour hands of the clock overlapping as the time passed midnight. |
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<br/> |
<br/> |
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− | School was humanity's last educational institution. |
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− | |||
− | The universities of the past, cultural associations of the past, non-government organizations of the past… I heard that over one hundred years ago, all of these facilities were combined as the Institution of School. It was something that happened a very long time ago. |
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− | |||
− | This merging of institutions was analogous to a phenomenon that was occurring all over the world: the rapid decline of human population. |
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− | |||
− | As population fell, so did the did number of children. |
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+ | School was humanity's last educational institution. Over a hundred years had passed since it came into existence as the agglomeration of the universities, cultural associations and non-governmental organisations of the distant past. |
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− | Eventually there weren’t enough students. |
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+ | The merger of all educational institutions was the natural conclusion of an accelerating decline in the human population. If the population decreased, so too would the number of children. The student population began to dwindle. |
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− | As educational institutions merged, school districts sequentially expanded in size and discipline… this trend soon became the norm everywhere. |
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+ | In turn, the schools and universities would merge and the scope of individual educational districts increased... This became a dominant trend. It all went downhill from there. |
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− | It was only downhill from there. |
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− | As early as |
+ | As early as 50 years ago, the boarding school became the norm for education around the world. |
<!--Pg 18--> |
<!--Pg 18--> |
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− | Our School, which was humankind’s very last educational institution and the home to us twelve graduates, was finally accepting its fate and being closed down. |
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+ | In the past, institutionalised education was a given. But now, with the twelve of us having graduated, even humanity's last bastion of education, 《School》 was set to be shut down. From now on, education would once again become something inherited from parent to child. And now, I, with an aching bottom am on my way home. |
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− | From now on, you could infer that society would regress to the model where knowledge was passed on directly from parent to child. |
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− | This brings us back to my present situation with my still tormented butt. We were finally arriving at my village. |
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+ | A huge shadow looms over our path. It is a gigantic camphor tree. <ref><b>Camphor Tree</b> - Japan’s largest species of hardwood evergreen tree. As random trivia, Totoro from the Hayao Miyazaki film lives in a camphor tree. See: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinnamomum_camphora more information]</ref> Its profile is burnt into my memories from my childhood. That tree would act as a landmark separating the village from the outside world. |
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− | As we advanced along the road, there was a massive looming shadow that blocked our view. |
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− | That was a great camphor tree.<ref><b>Camphor Tree</b> - Japan’s largest species of hardwood evergreen tree. As random trivia, Totoro from the Hayao Miyazaki film lives in a camphor tree. See: [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinnamomum_camphora more information]</ref> Immediately I knew this was the same tree that was seared in my faint childhood memories; I had seen it before. |
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+ | In this region dotted by the ruined remains of houses in a sea of luscious wild grasses, it stood out prominently. For a child, it was a three-hour journey from the village to the camphor tree. It was a popular tourist destination for the children of the village. |
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− | The tree was a sort of landmark that separated 《The Village》and the outer world. |
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− | As my memories continued to resurface, we passed an area with a few ruins of peoples’ houses that were completely consumed by lush and vibrant undergrowth. The tree’s presence was extremely conspicuous. |
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+ | This truck would probably cover that distance in about two hours. I rest my back on my luggage and relax myself. A new life is waiting for me at the village. Having decided to find a job at my hometown after graduating, I am determined to take the path less travelled. |
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− | From the Village until the camphor tree, I think it would have taken a child about three hours to walk there on foot. That tree was considered a distant adventure for every child who lived in the Village. |
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+ | <!--Pg 19--> |
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− | Going at the pace of this flatbed truck, it would probably take another two hours to get there if things went smoothly. |
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− | I leaned back against my luggage, trying to relax. |
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+ | I have spent about ten years studying at School, and have gained knowledge in a variety of fields, including cultural anthropology and engineering. The time has come to put all that knowledge to use. |
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− | I had a new life waiting for me at the Village. |
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+ | As a scholar, I am still green behind the ears. Undoubtedly, this difficult journey would require the strength of youth, a will that would not give in to compromise, concessions, complacence or laziness, and a fastidious spirit of inquiry. There would be no hope of reaching the top without all these qualities. |
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− | When I chose to pursue a career at my village when I graduated, I had told myself that I’d put my all into it no matter how difficult the path proved to be. |
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− | |||
− | <!--Pg 19--> |
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− | I would finally be able to apply my knowledge and techniques of cultural anthropology gained from studying over ten years at School. I was still inexperienced as a scholar-apprentice, though. The road ahead was undoubtedly challenging, and it called for a blazing youthful spirit with a stubborn unwillingness to compromise, concede, admit defeat, or fall to laziness. If you didn’t have a desire for near-perfection, then you had no hope of truly reaching the top. Despite this, I still harbored the ambition of becoming a young researcher. After all, I was young and had been given the opportunity to do so. You could say heading forward was the only option open to me now. |
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+ | But I have in me a burning ambition to be recognised as a scholar. Being young is also a plus, and I have a chance to put my thoughts into action. There is nowhere else for me to go but forward. That isn't to say I would mind if I could take some shortcuts to achieve my goals though. |
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− | Though, I definitely wouldn’t complain if I could achieve my ambitions without lifting a finger. |
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<br><br> |
<br><br> |
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− | When we passed the fork in the road, the shaking stopped all of a sudden. |
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+ | As the truck turns into a side street, the vibration stops. |
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− | Presumably, we had entered Camphorwood already. As expected of civilized country, the ground was actually flat. |
||
+ | It seems we have entered the village of Camphorwood proper. The road is now much flatter, as one would expect from a place inhabited by people. |
||
− | “Mmn~” |
||
+ | "Mhmmmmmm~" ... |
||
− | Even though I was trying to sleep with a wet towel over my eyes while rudely crammed in the gap between two wooden crates, I knew precisely where we were just from the extent of the vibrations. |
||
+ | Even though my eyes are covered by a wet towel, and I am forced to sleep nestled between some wooden crates, the sharp decrease in vibration is all I need to understand where I am. |
||
− | But it seemed like my energy had actually drained from attempting to sleep like this. I didn’t even have the strength to get up or open my eyes. |
||
+ | The journey has sapped the strength out of me, and I can hardly gather the willpower to get up. I clumsily fumble over the truck's bed, looking for its raised edge. Having found it, I muster the little energy I have in my arms to straighten myself up. |
||
− | My hands blindly fumbled around for the edge of the truck so I could haul myself up with my wrists. |
||
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<!--Pg 20--> |
||
− | “Mmmmmmmnnnnnnnn~” |
||
+ | Contorting myself like an inchworm, I finally lean over the back of the truck's bed, and breathe out a sigh. |
||
− | Writhing like an inchworm, I clung the edge of the truck with great difficulty and gasped for breath. Because of the shaking from earlier, my stomach had nearly turned itself inside out. All of this acid was caught in my throat. |
||
+ | I can feel a constant sourness on the back of my throat, courtesy of my vibration-tortured stomach. |
||
− | I dragged myself up like I was doing a pull-up and rested my chin on the edge of the shelf. Finally I was able to open my eyes. |
||
+ | In a manoeuvre reminiscent of a pull-up, I lift my face up to rest my chin on the edge, and open my eyes to take in the scenery. |
||
− | Right now, the truck was weaving through gaps between peoples’ houses. |
||
− | The |
+ | The truck is weaving about through the houses in the neighbourhood. The fences around the houses are close enough to reach out with my arms and touch them. It seems that even the main street of this village is too narrow for a truck like this to pass through. |
+ | Ahh, my reunion with sweet, stable <i>land</i> is drawing near. With my energy somewhat restored, I scan my surroundings. There are clusters of houses in good condition retrofitted with smoke-belching chimneys of tin. I suppose everyone is busy making dinner. |
||
− | Ahhh, it wouldn’t be long before I’d reunite with the lovely flat ground that I had missed so much. |
||
− | The mere thought of this revitalized me slightly, and I eagerly surveyed my surroundings. |
||
+ | The houses inhabited by people are quite easy to spot owing to the bright pastel shades they are customarily painted with. But even if they look well-kept, these houses are most definitely decaying on the inside under the weight of centuries of history. Without a good coat of paint, a house may last only a few years, but the unpleasant effects of acid rain are apparent even on the more fortunate ones. |
||
− | Among the nicer cottages that were densely nestled up against each other, there were a few iron chimneys that stuck out of the roofs, puffing smoke. People were probably cooking dinner right now. |
||
+ | Even so, these pastel houses are now an indelible scene of the modern person's culture. |
||
− | The houses that people lived in were all painted in vivid pastel colors, making them very conspicuous. Although they looked like they were in fine condition, most of them were probably internally decayed buildings with histories of over a hundred years. Although they weren’t that severely rotten, the sight of the occasional bout of acid rain eroding the outer walls was not particularly pretty. |
||
− | |||
− | For the people of this epoch, however, these pastel houses were a part of the cultural heritage, evoking feelings of nostalgia and childhood memories. |
||
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<!--Pg 21--> |
||
− | The scenery that presently unraveled in front of my eyes curiously superimposed itself with images from my resurfaced childhood memories. It was a very thought-provoking experience. |
||
+ | My childhood memories are curiously juxtaposed with the scene in my eyes. |
||
− | Various things such that one cottage in the Village which received a very reckless pink paint job. |
||
+ | The memory of that one cottage with a garish pink paint job comes to my mind. |
||
− | Or like how we used to go to the town hall to look at picture books or play games. |
||
+ | As does that of going to the village hall to read books or play games. |
||
− | And also the gentle old lady who had a hobby of making sweets in that cream-colored house. As long as children brought her the ingredients, she’d whip up all kinds and varieties of sweets. |
||
+ | There was also that nice old lady in the cream-white house whose hobby was making a variety of sweets with whatever ingredients children brought her. |
||
− | The truck steadily advanced forward, and soon a plaza appeared before me. |
||
+ | The truck pushes on forward, and presently approaches a plaza. This round plaza was created by flattening a few buildings that had once been there. I can see a crowd standing there, waiting for the truck to arrive. |
||
− | The town square was a round space that had been cleared from several demolished buildings. |
||
+ | "wah!" - I pull my head back in, suddenly overcome with embarrassment. A strange shyness besets me as I contemplate seeing again the people I once knew. |
||
− | “Eeep!” |
||
+ | Even at the best of times, talking in front of a crowd is something I dread. |
||
− | All of a sudden I got flustered, and ducked down. |
||
+ | I would have preferred to greet and talk to everyone individually, but this lumbering giant that has just stopped in the centre of the plaza with me in it is attracting all the crowd's attention. |
||
− | I felt strangely mortified at the thought of meeting all the people whom I once knew a long time ago. Also, I was absolutely horrible at talking in front of large crowds. If I had a choice, I would have preferred to give my greetings to each of them individually… but the truck plodded onwards at the center of everyone’s persistent attention. It chugged forward while pulling its enormous load, until finally stopped in the middle of the Village Square. |
||
+ | |||
+ | I scramble into a gap between some boxes to keep myself out of the view of the rear of the truck, from where I assume things will be unloaded. Yes, this will be a good place to hide. If I sit on the floor and keep my head down, I won't be seen. I intend to stay here until the heat is off me. |
||
− | I desperately searched for a hiding spot that couldn’t be seen from the steps when the rear loading bay was opened, and I skidded into the empty space between a wooden crate and the side of the vehicle. I thought this spot was pretty good since I could conceal my entire profile if I pulled in my legs and ducked my head. I could wait here until everyone’s excitement died down. |
||
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<!--Pg 22--> |
||
− | But the entire world seemingly hated me. As fate would have it, when the metal winch turned and went clankity clank, the entire side panel of the truck lowered precisely at the spot where I was trying to hide from everyone’s sight. A throng of people had collected to pick up the supplies, and their eyes instantly fell upon the open stage. There was me, awkwardly folded up in the fetal position. |
||
− | + | However, the world isn't so kind as to let me off like that. |
|
+ | With an ominous metallic squeal, a crank is turned, dropping the side of the truck's bed. Of course, the side that opens up happens to be exactly the side I have chosen to hide in. In front of the crowd that has assembled to relieve the truck of its load, my crouching figure is revealed. One old man in the front row lets the pipe in his mouth drop to the ground as he watches on. |
||
− | It seemed like this truck was a model that could open up on its sides as well as in the back. |
||
− | A rather familiar-looking middle aged lady gasped in complete astonishment. She was just like somebody in my memories, and I’m pretty sure she recognized me too— |
||
+ | This truck is the type that could open up not only at the back, but also at its sides, it seems. A middle-aged lady with a familiar face snorts quizzically. Just as I remember her, she remembers me - "wait, are you perhaps-" |
||
− | “Aren’t you that—?” |
||
− | |||
− | I silently buried my head in my knees. |
||
<br><br> |
<br><br> |
||
+ | I quietly rest my head on my knees. |
||
− | Dragging my absolutely worn out and drained body, I finally brought my hand to the door of my own house. |
||
+ | |||
+ | After being embarrassed to death by everyone at the plaza, I drag my worn body home and rest my hand on the door. |
||
+ | "I'm home... Grandfather?" |
||
− | “I’m home… Grandpa?” |
||
− | + | My grandfather's figure -- which is exactly as I remember it -- appears from within the dim house wearing a lab coat and holding a hunting rifle. Seeing his brisk swaggering gait unbefitting of his age fills me with a sense of relief. |
|
− | + | "Oh, you're finally back, huh?" |
|
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Revision as of 14:11, 30 July 2022
Credits and Translator's Notice:
This english translation is brought to you by Matcha. It was translated from Chinese from the manuscript hosted at www.wenku8.cn, which was scanned from the official Taiwanese publication by Ozzie and typed into simplified Chinese by 七夜 ("Seven Nights"). The Japanese raw was consulted for spacing the lines, sound effects, names, and resolving unclear text. All images are derived from the Japanese raw.
If you enjoyed this translation, please support the author by purchasing an official copy of the novel.
Anonymous contributors are welcome to edit this translation as they wish. I favor a localized and liberal translation philosophy. As such, I am more concerned about capturing the atmosphere, mood, personality, flow, and "meaning" of the novel. Mimicking the exact Japanese/Chinese sentence structure or terminology is less important to me. Feel free to rearrange, combine, break up, and rephrase sentences. Also feel free to substitute pronouns or use a thesaurus when appropriate. This novel has quite elegant prose, so if you are talented in the poetic writing department, your contributions are very much appreciated.
Please DO NOT merge/split entire paragraphs or translocate content across different paragraphs. Do not remove details, add details, or change the "meaning" of a paragraph unless you are qualified to do so. Use your best judgement to preserve aspects of mood and theme. Also, please do not repost this translation outside of the wiki without attribution to all involved parties. This translation is for personal, educational, and non-commercial uses only.
You may reach me at the following email address: matcha (dot) anko (at) gmail (dot) com.
Status: Incomplete
19% completed (estimated)
1/125 pages completed
Chapter 1 - Planet of the Fairies
The vibration is horrible.
Paved many decades, or rather, many centuries ago, what may once have been a highway road is now nothing but a rocky path. Its irregularity, along with the many weeds encroaching from its sides and the vein-like roots spread over it all add to the chaotic intensity of the rattling.
On this sorry excuse for a path is a flatbed truck, trundling along with an air of indifference.
The quality of the ride is the worst, in a word.
As the truck navigates each bump on the road, sharp jolts travel up to its bed... shaking both me and the wooden crates I am packed together with.
I am quite bitter at myself for foolishly expecting a ride on the back of a truck to be an elegant one.
Even though the view of the flowers bordering this meandering road is a sight to behold, the soreness of my bottom is such that I cannot enjoy any of it.
The situation feels quite similar to the song "Dona Dona". [1]
"If only I'd sat in the passenger seat from the start... but I'm past that."
I softly vocalise my revulsion to the idea. To sit in the passenger seat would mean I would have to eventually strike a conversation with the caravan chief beside me in the driver's seat. For a person like me who loses her head and starts to blather when faced with strangers, it would have been a nerve-wracking experience.
Between my sanity and my bottom, I prefer to whittle down the latter.
But, as one would expect, I can't bear the pain any longer, so I face the truck's cabin and call out to the chief after taking a deep breath: "... How mush merr till we reach?"
I slurred my words a bit, but since the chief doesn't really seem to notice, I shall refrain from repeating myself.
Ahh, I'm just awful at talking to strangers.
"Three, maybe four more hours, I'd say. That's if the weather stays fair though."
Statuesque, the chief responds without so much as a glance towards me.
With a short thank-you, I begin to ponder on the rugged solar panel module that is mounted above the truck's canopy like an umbrella.
While this truck appears to be a rare hybrid one that can use both solar and fuel cell based power, only one of the two power sources seems to be in regular use.
As I ruminate on this, I grow restless.
Since I got a free ride, I can't really complain though.
It's just that this behemoth of a truck is ambling on at all of 8 kmph.
"Four more hours of this..."
Presently, the chief begins humming.
It must be very comfortable to drive while basking in the sun.
Tiring of the pain in my bottom, I begin to raise my hips a little when the chief gives me a warning: "It's better not to stand up. There was once a person who did so; he ended up falling over the side. Oh, and then he died a slow death, tangled up in the tyres."
That makes me sit right back down. I decide to distract myself from the implications of that anecdote by looking at the opposite edge of the road lined with wild flowers.
Most of my field of vision is filled with the yellow of rape blossoms.
What a handy plant rapeseed is; its seeds can be squeezed for oil, and are also used in pickles.
However, I won't be caught making the mistakes of my childhood again; traipsing into these plants will only get me covered in a cloud of aphids.
My maiden heart is crumbling away, as is my patience for this ride on the truck's bed.
To keep my mind off the pain in my backside, I idly watch the scenery go by. Suddenly, I notice something popping its head out of the flowers.
...
Our eyes meet.
I would say the moment lasts for about a second?
As if to escape, the head rears back into the flowers.
"... Well."
I last saw one of their kind as a child. This was a rather short encounter, but my eyes weren't lying. Their kind leave quite an impression even when seen just once, after all.
Forgetting even the persistent soreness of my bottom, I smile to myself.
"So they even live around here, huh?"
They are existences that live in any place inhabitable by people, but they are rarely ever seen by us. The unexpected encounter feels like a good omen to me.
I would be as friendly with them as possible. This is something of a duty I feel obligated to perform as one of 《School》's last graduates.
Leaning against the side of the truck with my cheek being caressed by the gentle wind, I lose myself in my memories.
It has been two days since the graduation ceremony, which was held in an old and rotting lecture hall. You might think it remiss to hold an important ceremony like that in such a dangerous place, but rest assured, the hall was so old that it had neither a ceiling nor walls that could collapse on anyone.
We all entered that hall whose floor was polished leaving not a single pebble, with a forest of twelve chairs in the middle. We stood around listlessly for a spell, unsure of where to sit.
The sharp scent of the flower pinned to my lapel made the insides of my nose tingle. We all had the feeling that we would only be together until our flowers wilted. The only thing left for us to do after this would be to return to our hometowns after all.
I had treated the notion lightly, and had thought myself disinvested in the matter. However, as I entered the hall, the landscape in my heart clouded over, as if a mist had descended. It was a premonition that this ceremony wouldn't end so simply. There were a number of attendees other than our professors in the hall as well.
Whoever they were, almost nobody in the room was a relative of us graduates. After all, we had left our homes far behind to stay in the dorms of the school. Most of the people present were school personnel.
There were more attendees in the hall than there were graduates, and the atmosphere was tense. We had all resolved among ourselves not to cry during the ceremony.
In the presence of so many guests, it would be embarrassing for us graduates who were finally becoming adults to cry. The expectation was that the ceremony would end quickly; there were only twelve of us graduates after all.
The professors lined up on the stage had other plans though. They took their sweet time in calling each graduate to the stage one-by-one. As they did so, they would all talk a little about that graduate, while Chopin's Farewell Waltz [2]
was played in sync. Just a few simple words from the professors were enough to have everyone crying by the end; it was unbelievable.
Let me summarise the theme of the professors' address for you. It was laden with word choices that were on occasion mean-spirited, with bold and colourful figures of speech as well as inversions of expression that successfully shook the hearts of all who listened. Where we expected cold realism, they employed lyrical sentences with personifications and vivid descriptions that evoked emphatic emotions. Such poetic gems were accentuated by expertly timed spells of silence, followed by more praise, in a constant cycle of adulation that culminated in an excess of tears in our eyes. They were definitely messing with us.
I became a wreck in less than a minute, but every one else was pretty much the same in this regard.
Even my friend Y, who didn't usually show any emotion in front of others had tears behind her glasses after she stepped down from the stage.
I have a feeling the professors were secretly taking their revenge on us for all the trouble we gave them. That's definitely what they were doing. After this session of public humiliation ended, each of us held in their hands an unblemished, pristine white graduation certificate.
More than a decade had passed, and I had learnt and personally experienced a multitude of things, all for the sake of receiving this thin sheet of paper. But, mimicking the feather-like weightlessness of the certificate, the end of our journey left us with an unsatisfactorily hollow feeling.
All of us put our now-drooping flower decorations into the photo albums we got as souvenirs, to turn them into pressed flowers. Speaking of photographs, they were becoming quite the rarity in recent times. It used to be that one could look back on the past whenever they pleased by flipping through a photo album, but we could now only rely on our increasingly more ephemeral memories. The loneliness burst forth at the farewell party.
The indescribable chaos of it all, and my inability as an observer to go against its flow means I can only give you a broad description of its elements. The farewell party proceeded as follows.
A feast full of dishes I had never seen before was brought in; a multicolored rainbow of fallen fruit on the floor; somebody set off some improvised firecrackers; champagne corks popped; there was an attempt at a piano performance; graduates shouting; graduates crying; graduates laughing; graduates dying of embarrassment after making fools of themselves (I was one of those); the red, puffy eyes of my friend Y returning from her roughly ten-minute session in the restroom; elderly guests sharing drinks; the graduate boys endlessly pouring each other drinks left and right; The scratchy tone of a jazz trumpet; Some random old lady holding my hand while crying; an off-tune chorus; a jumble of young graduates and old guests crying together, and the minute and hour hands of the clock overlapping as the time passed midnight.
School was humanity's last educational institution. Over a hundred years had passed since it came into existence as the agglomeration of the universities, cultural associations and non-governmental organisations of the distant past.
The merger of all educational institutions was the natural conclusion of an accelerating decline in the human population. If the population decreased, so too would the number of children. The student population began to dwindle.
In turn, the schools and universities would merge and the scope of individual educational districts increased... This became a dominant trend. It all went downhill from there.
As early as 50 years ago, the boarding school became the norm for education around the world.
In the past, institutionalised education was a given. But now, with the twelve of us having graduated, even humanity's last bastion of education, 《School》 was set to be shut down. From now on, education would once again become something inherited from parent to child. And now, I, with an aching bottom am on my way home.
A huge shadow looms over our path. It is a gigantic camphor tree. [3] Its profile is burnt into my memories from my childhood. That tree would act as a landmark separating the village from the outside world.
In this region dotted by the ruined remains of houses in a sea of luscious wild grasses, it stood out prominently. For a child, it was a three-hour journey from the village to the camphor tree. It was a popular tourist destination for the children of the village.
This truck would probably cover that distance in about two hours. I rest my back on my luggage and relax myself. A new life is waiting for me at the village. Having decided to find a job at my hometown after graduating, I am determined to take the path less travelled.
I have spent about ten years studying at School, and have gained knowledge in a variety of fields, including cultural anthropology and engineering. The time has come to put all that knowledge to use.
As a scholar, I am still green behind the ears. Undoubtedly, this difficult journey would require the strength of youth, a will that would not give in to compromise, concessions, complacence or laziness, and a fastidious spirit of inquiry. There would be no hope of reaching the top without all these qualities.
But I have in me a burning ambition to be recognised as a scholar. Being young is also a plus, and I have a chance to put my thoughts into action. There is nowhere else for me to go but forward. That isn't to say I would mind if I could take some shortcuts to achieve my goals though.
As the truck turns into a side street, the vibration stops.
It seems we have entered the village of Camphorwood proper. The road is now much flatter, as one would expect from a place inhabited by people.
"Mhmmmmmm~" ...
Even though my eyes are covered by a wet towel, and I am forced to sleep nestled between some wooden crates, the sharp decrease in vibration is all I need to understand where I am.
The journey has sapped the strength out of me, and I can hardly gather the willpower to get up. I clumsily fumble over the truck's bed, looking for its raised edge. Having found it, I muster the little energy I have in my arms to straighten myself up.
Contorting myself like an inchworm, I finally lean over the back of the truck's bed, and breathe out a sigh.
I can feel a constant sourness on the back of my throat, courtesy of my vibration-tortured stomach.
In a manoeuvre reminiscent of a pull-up, I lift my face up to rest my chin on the edge, and open my eyes to take in the scenery.
The truck is weaving about through the houses in the neighbourhood. The fences around the houses are close enough to reach out with my arms and touch them. It seems that even the main street of this village is too narrow for a truck like this to pass through.
Ahh, my reunion with sweet, stable land is drawing near. With my energy somewhat restored, I scan my surroundings. There are clusters of houses in good condition retrofitted with smoke-belching chimneys of tin. I suppose everyone is busy making dinner.
The houses inhabited by people are quite easy to spot owing to the bright pastel shades they are customarily painted with. But even if they look well-kept, these houses are most definitely decaying on the inside under the weight of centuries of history. Without a good coat of paint, a house may last only a few years, but the unpleasant effects of acid rain are apparent even on the more fortunate ones.
Even so, these pastel houses are now an indelible scene of the modern person's culture.
My childhood memories are curiously juxtaposed with the scene in my eyes.
The memory of that one cottage with a garish pink paint job comes to my mind.
As does that of going to the village hall to read books or play games.
There was also that nice old lady in the cream-white house whose hobby was making a variety of sweets with whatever ingredients children brought her.
The truck pushes on forward, and presently approaches a plaza. This round plaza was created by flattening a few buildings that had once been there. I can see a crowd standing there, waiting for the truck to arrive.
"wah!" - I pull my head back in, suddenly overcome with embarrassment. A strange shyness besets me as I contemplate seeing again the people I once knew.
Even at the best of times, talking in front of a crowd is something I dread.
I would have preferred to greet and talk to everyone individually, but this lumbering giant that has just stopped in the centre of the plaza with me in it is attracting all the crowd's attention.
I scramble into a gap between some boxes to keep myself out of the view of the rear of the truck, from where I assume things will be unloaded. Yes, this will be a good place to hide. If I sit on the floor and keep my head down, I won't be seen. I intend to stay here until the heat is off me.
However, the world isn't so kind as to let me off like that.
With an ominous metallic squeal, a crank is turned, dropping the side of the truck's bed. Of course, the side that opens up happens to be exactly the side I have chosen to hide in. In front of the crowd that has assembled to relieve the truck of its load, my crouching figure is revealed. One old man in the front row lets the pipe in his mouth drop to the ground as he watches on.
This truck is the type that could open up not only at the back, but also at its sides, it seems. A middle-aged lady with a familiar face snorts quizzically. Just as I remember her, she remembers me - "wait, are you perhaps-"
I quietly rest my head on my knees.
After being embarrassed to death by everyone at the plaza, I drag my worn body home and rest my hand on the door.
"I'm home... Grandfather?"
My grandfather's figure -- which is exactly as I remember it -- appears from within the dim house wearing a lab coat and holding a hunting rifle. Seeing his brisk swaggering gait unbefitting of his age fills me with a sense of relief.
"Oh, you're finally back, huh?"
My grandfather, who was rather tall among the old folks, placed his hand right on top of my head. I am, by the way, very tall for a girl.
“Huh, you’ve grown taller.”
“...Well, it has been quite a long while.”
On that topic, these past few years, I had shot up like a stalk of grain. I really didn’t want to keep growing much taller...
“Your skin’s looking nice too. Is it the carrots?”
“...Still hate them.”
My grandfather snorted.
“What, you haven’t grown up on the inside?”
“I think I did… probably.”
“Anyways, come in for now. I was just thinking of starting dinner.”
“Huh? I thought you were going hunting.”
I glanced at the shotgun he held in his hand.”
“Who goes hunting when it’s this late? I was just tweaking with it a bit to increase its firepower.”
My grandfather really liked guns.
“You rode the caravan truck back?”
“Yes.”
I didn’t mention the little incident I caused on the way here.
“Oh right, Grandpa. I think you’ve probably heard already, but I decided to become a Mediator just like you…”
“There’s some fine watercress for dinner. That stuff tastes great whether it’s with fried food or just bread.”
Even though I had grown taller, my grandfather’s ears callously glazed over my words like they still weren’t there.
We lined up a dried meat and vegetable stew, assorted western-style pickled vegetables and fresh produce, and a basket of sliced bread that was meant to go with the food.
My grandfather had prepared of all this himself.
Since he lived alone year round, he was extremely good at cooking.
Although he preferred whole roasts and smoked meat, occasionally he’d make more savory stews. The aroma of it kicked up faint memories of the distant past.
I carefully gathered a generous helping of pickled vegetables while each of us created a sandwich to our tastes. In the meantime, I spoke with my grandfather who was seated across from me.
“Is that so? The Institution of School is finally closing?”
“Yeah, there were so many related officials at the graduation ceremony… it really gave me a shock.”
“It’s always like that. When the school I went to shut down, a large number of officials also came by… Hey, you still haven’t fixed that bad habit of yours? Just open a shop already.”
There were five completely assembled sandwiches lined up in front of me.
“I get agitated if I try eating and making them at the same time… is that bad?”
“Whatever, suit yourself.”
Whenever I get into a rhythm with menial tasks like these, I always space out.
My friends joked that these runaway hands of mine were operating an entire cottage-industry, and my family often quipped that they were opening up a store.
“Are you going to eat all of those?”
“No, of course not. Even I can’t finish them all.”
I spoke without the slightest ounce of regret.
“You fool!”
My grandfather reached out and grabbed two of my sandwiches.
“Even if you’ve grown taller, you’re still that feeble thing like before.”
“I prefer the term civilized.”
“That’s a thing of the past. The past. Civilization or whatnot doesn’t exist anymore.”
“That reminds me, I rode on my first solar-powered truck earlier.”
“Those? They ain't got speed or horsepower, and they’re impossible to repair if they break down.”
“Fortunately the truck never stopped. The trip was relatively uneventful.”
“The caravan troupes have some pretty nifty toys. You should go get a job with them, since you’d probably find it interesting.”
“Uhh, no… it’s impossible for me to do physical labor.”
At this moment there was a change in my grandfather’s expression as seemed to remember something.
“You really want to work at my place? You really don’t have force yourself to inherit my line of work.”
“That’s exactly what I was thinking. I even went through the trouble to get an academic degree. Besides, the office is still there, right? I want to stay in a place that’s formally recognized by the Institution.”
“Your interests are quite strange. Why’d you insist on becoming a Mediator?”
“I thought this line of work would suit me.”
“Oh? And the reason is?”
“...I figured it’d be much more laid-back than laboring in the fields.”
I accidentally let my true feelings slip, caught off guard by the atmosphere of our reunion.
“So that’s the reason why…?”
Even my grandfather seemed astonished.
I confronted the taut look in his eyes and replied innocently.
“Of course you remember how fragile my health is, right Grandpa?”
“No, earlier you were talking about finding some laid-back work.”
...I said that?
“It’s not what you think! These days, agriculture and animal husbandry are part of the basic curriculum… but that kind of work is really hard on the body. That’s when I remembered that even old people could work as Mediators, so I figured that this line of work wouldn’t be too much of a burden on my health.”
Up against family, I wasn’t nervous at all.
“...My granddaughter’s picked up some really weird personality traits.”
“Wha?”
“To me, it looks more like you lack willpower. It’s not about how weak your body is.”
“Huh.”
“If you take it easy now, you’ll lose your motivation to do anything when you grow up.”
“Huh.”
“...Well anyways, if you still think like that after a month on the job, I’d be impressed.”
“Is your work really that difficult?”
Based on some cursory looks, I did do some research into the Mediator’s job description before I took the qualifying exams. But when you compared it with subsistence farming and other kinds of labor, I came to the conclusion that the Mediator’s job was a lot easier than the others… don’t tell me I was totally wrong?
My grandfather’s response was very vague.
“It depends on the person.”
I tilted my head at this. Could it be that some kind of harsh physical labor would suddenly appear?
“For now, just try and get in touch with “Them,” my useless granddaughter.”
“That’s a little rude.”
“But that’s precisely it. Tomorrow, come to the office and I’ll help you find a desk.”
And that’s how it was decided.
Author's Notes
- ↑ “Donna, Donna” - A famous relatively upbeat Yiddish theater song about a calf being shipped to slaughter. See: additional information
- ↑ ”The Farewell Waltz” - Waltz in A-flat major, Op. 69, No.1 by Frédéric Chopin, written for piano. Also known as the “Valse de l’adieu.” See: additional information
- ↑ Camphor Tree - Japan’s largest species of hardwood evergreen tree. As random trivia, Totoro from the Hayao Miyazaki film lives in a camphor tree. See: more information
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