Crane—A Dream of Molly (Chapter 2a up 20170224)
Posted: Wed Apr 27, 2016 11:35 pm
Editor's Note: It was not until the middle of the twenty-first century that my acquaintance Moriko returned to Japan. My husband had harsh words for her, and required a mild reprimand. Effectively, I was forced to liken him to his father in at least one unsavoury aspect. He recoiled as if I had slapped him, and I felt so terribly ashamed. In the end, things worked out well. I can assure you that this tale, at least, had a happy ending. Also, it is a companion story to that of Mori's long-time friend, Suzumiya Suzuki.
— H; Andorra la Vella; 2070
Crane—A Dream of Molly
Chapter 0: Creation (1989-2004) (this post, see below)
Chapter 1a: Crane (2005-2006)
Chapter 1b: Craving (2006-2007)
Chapter 1c: Cracking (2007-2008)
Chapter 2a: Prologue (2013-2020)
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Chapter 0: Creation (1989-2004)
My story might be said to have begun in what you'd call Lucknow, a town far to the north of the Vindhyas. Yes, this is probably not the story you thought you’d be reading, this being a primarily Japanese environment and whatnot. I bear you no ill-will, whether weeaboo or otaku, honourable nihonjin or clumsy gaijin. After all, I’ve somehow ended up a bit of each.
Let me introduce myself. My name is Moriko ‘Molly’ Kapur, 5’6” (or 167 centimetres) tall at one point in my life, and then of variable height thereafter. I had dense black hair in my youth, short and scruffy; it grew out long and straight in my teenage years. Later, I kept it long and braided it into two shoulder-length plaits—I adopted red ribbons in high school, and now the red on grey pleases me in my old age. My eyes are greyish-black, reflecting as purple or dark green or even amber under different lights.
Meet my family, such as it is. My parents were students at the University of California, Berkeley during the turbulent 1970s and 80s of Reaganism and science fiction. They returned to Japan, the clever second son of a high-caste family from Benares and the rebellious third daughter of a lower middle-class family from a village in Japan. She was pregnant with my elder brother, a man I haven’t met for decades and whom I have no desire to meet. I was born long after the worst of the family imbroglio had subsided, on 22 July 1989.
Molly Kapur was fourteen when her male parent decided to marry her off in a strategic alliance of sorts. I’ve tried writing about myself as if I were someone else, but it doesn’t quite work. I shall desist.
I remember Mother being rather upset; in her view, such behaviour amounted to something worse than child slavery. I had no opinion, since I had learnt early to avoid having opinions when surrounded by my paternal extended family. Taking a train that was packed beyond bursting and full of the stench of the great unwashed was not a problem. I probably stank as badly underneath the scented water. I was chaperoned, but company is sometimes no protection against disaster.
They say that destiny derails the plans of men and women. I prefer to think of such things, however, as train crashes inflicted on the locomotive of destiny by the stubbornly perverse antlike tracks of humanity. That’s how it was for me. I woke up in some private hospital feeling curiously light-headed.
Mother was furious, but not with me. My male parent was absent, and whatever betrothal plans he’d had for me were not only out of the window, but buried deep down in the valley with the rest of the train. Nobody, it seemed, would marry a bride with no legs, no matter how fair and functional the rest of her was. Such is life.
Stung into activity, Mother threatened to slash through her Indian family ties as with a katana, and managed to extract concessions. I was to be sent back to a school near her ancestral village, a school which was relatively expensive, but which catered mainly to unfortunates such as I. Mother got concessions, my male parent got revenge. The bastard registered me as 'Molly', a name I'd never liked.
And that is how Molly Kapur, or at least the girl I was then, ended up at the Sendai-Aoba Mountain District Academy. Everyone called it Yamaku for short. I hated it.
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— H; Andorra la Vella; 2070
Crane—A Dream of Molly
Chapter 0: Creation (1989-2004) (this post, see below)
Chapter 1a: Crane (2005-2006)
Chapter 1b: Craving (2006-2007)
Chapter 1c: Cracking (2007-2008)
Chapter 2a: Prologue (2013-2020)
=====
Chapter 0: Creation (1989-2004)
My story might be said to have begun in what you'd call Lucknow, a town far to the north of the Vindhyas. Yes, this is probably not the story you thought you’d be reading, this being a primarily Japanese environment and whatnot. I bear you no ill-will, whether weeaboo or otaku, honourable nihonjin or clumsy gaijin. After all, I’ve somehow ended up a bit of each.
Let me introduce myself. My name is Moriko ‘Molly’ Kapur, 5’6” (or 167 centimetres) tall at one point in my life, and then of variable height thereafter. I had dense black hair in my youth, short and scruffy; it grew out long and straight in my teenage years. Later, I kept it long and braided it into two shoulder-length plaits—I adopted red ribbons in high school, and now the red on grey pleases me in my old age. My eyes are greyish-black, reflecting as purple or dark green or even amber under different lights.
Meet my family, such as it is. My parents were students at the University of California, Berkeley during the turbulent 1970s and 80s of Reaganism and science fiction. They returned to Japan, the clever second son of a high-caste family from Benares and the rebellious third daughter of a lower middle-class family from a village in Japan. She was pregnant with my elder brother, a man I haven’t met for decades and whom I have no desire to meet. I was born long after the worst of the family imbroglio had subsided, on 22 July 1989.
Molly Kapur was fourteen when her male parent decided to marry her off in a strategic alliance of sorts. I’ve tried writing about myself as if I were someone else, but it doesn’t quite work. I shall desist.
I remember Mother being rather upset; in her view, such behaviour amounted to something worse than child slavery. I had no opinion, since I had learnt early to avoid having opinions when surrounded by my paternal extended family. Taking a train that was packed beyond bursting and full of the stench of the great unwashed was not a problem. I probably stank as badly underneath the scented water. I was chaperoned, but company is sometimes no protection against disaster.
They say that destiny derails the plans of men and women. I prefer to think of such things, however, as train crashes inflicted on the locomotive of destiny by the stubbornly perverse antlike tracks of humanity. That’s how it was for me. I woke up in some private hospital feeling curiously light-headed.
Mother was furious, but not with me. My male parent was absent, and whatever betrothal plans he’d had for me were not only out of the window, but buried deep down in the valley with the rest of the train. Nobody, it seemed, would marry a bride with no legs, no matter how fair and functional the rest of her was. Such is life.
Stung into activity, Mother threatened to slash through her Indian family ties as with a katana, and managed to extract concessions. I was to be sent back to a school near her ancestral village, a school which was relatively expensive, but which catered mainly to unfortunates such as I. Mother got concessions, my male parent got revenge. The bastard registered me as 'Molly', a name I'd never liked.
And that is how Molly Kapur, or at least the girl I was then, ended up at the Sendai-Aoba Mountain District Academy. Everyone called it Yamaku for short. I hated it.
=====
next