Arrival [updated 10-31-18]
Posted: Fri Oct 12, 2018 1:41 pm
Part I: Yamaku
Part II: Yasuda
Part III: Venturing Out
Part IV: Shopping
Part V: Nurse
Can also be read on Ao3.
____________
Mama Ando once said that I should just ignore all the teasing at school.
Mama Ando said that true beauty came from within.
Mama Ando said that those bullies who teased me were the truly ugly ones.
Mama Ando said that going to Yamaku was the best possible thing for me.
I wasn’t really sure I could trust everything Mama Ando said.
Yet here I was. In front of huge ornate gates marked Yamaku Academy, my two small battered suitcases holding all my worldly possessions at my feet, the cab driving away behind me. For a moment I wanted to run after the cab, tell the cabbie to take me back to the train station, flee back to the orphanage and Mama Ando. But I didn’t.
For one thing, I didn’t have enough money for a train ticket back.
For another, Mama Ando had made it pretty clear that I was done with the orphanage. “Tough love,” I think they call it, though it might have been simple exasperation and relief at finally seeing quit of their oldest and longest residing orphan. They probably threw a party after I left.
And, for another, the cab was already too far away for me to catch.
I sighed, and picked up my suitcases. The letter of admission I’d received had included a map of the school grounds, which I’d studied intently, determined to not get lost in this new place. But the map did not show all the gently rolling hills, and the topography made matching the buildings to the names I’ve memorized a little difficult. But I found the administration offices after only one false turn, which gave me some small sense of accomplishment.
I dragged my suitcases into the lobby of the building, and entered the main office. There was a long counter between the front of the office and the back, and behind the counter sat a plump and matronly looking woman at a desk. She was squinting at a computer screen and carefully pecking away at the keyboard. I stood there and waited for her to notice me—surely she must have heard the door to the office open when I came in? Or maybe she was just ignoring me in the hopes that I’d go away, not complicate her day by making for more work. I shifted my weight from foot to foot, feeling both foolish and restless, but I was too shy to say hello, or even gently cough to get her attention.
Eventually, she made a small disgusted noise and shook her head, and turned her attention away from the computer. When her gaze fell on me she gave a little jump. “Oh! I’m sorry, I didn’t see you there. Sorry, have you been waiting long?” She smiled at me, and her smile seemed genuine. Either she didn’t notice my scars, or perhaps she was used to such disfigurements, working here.
“N-no, not l-long,” I said. “I…I’m a n-new…student?” I didn’t know why I phrased that as a question, and I looked down at the floor.
“Oh. Are you coming to check out the school?” She stood up and moved around her desk to stand at the counter opposite me. “Would you like a tour? We usually schedule campus tours ahead of time, but I think I could find someone to show you around.” I shrank in on myself a little as she approached.
“I…I’m m-moving in?” Isn’t this a boarding school? Why would I be here to just check it out? I risked a short glance up at the woman. She was frowning slightly.
“Move-in day isn’t until next Monday,” she said. My heart sank. Today was Friday. “I’m afraid we’ll have to ask you to go home and come back then.”
I wondered how I could have gotten things so wrong. “I th-thought…move-in s-started on…Friday?” I should have realized something was wrong when I didn't see any other students on campus.
“Classes start on Friday. Next Friday, April first, but move-in starts on Monday. I’m sorry if there was any confusion in your admissions letter.”
I pulled my admissions letter out of my coat pocket. I looked at the relevant paragraph near the bottom of the page, and my heart sank. It said exactly what she’d just said. Stupid stupid stupid! How could I have mixed that up so badly?
“Oh.” I stared bleakly at the letter, wondering if I could possibly sink into the floor and disappear. I closed my eyes and struggled not to cry, my embarrassment fighting with my self-recrimination for dominance in my emotions. I wanted to flee, to run away from this kindly looking old woman, but I had nowhere to go.
“I’m sorry, are your parents still here?” she asked gently. “If not, we can call them to come pick you up, if they have a cell phone. They can’t have gone far.”
“I…d-don’t have any…p-p-parents. Any m-more. I’m…an orphan.” I always hated saying that out loud, even though it had been a truth in my life for almost eight years now. I’d been an orphan almost as long as I’d had parents. I shuddered at the thought. Some grim part inside me wanted to calculate the exact date I would topple over the edge and I’ll have been an orphan longer than I had parents, but I shoved that thought aside.
The woman behind the counter looked distressed. “Oh, you must be…Miss Ikezara?”
“Ikezawa,” I corrected quietly.
“Ikezawa, right. I’m sorry, dear. I’m Mrs. Noya, I’m the head secretary here at the school.” She puffed out her cheeks for a moment, looking thoughtful, then she plastered a smile onto her face again. “Well. In that case, we’ll just have to get you settled in a little early, won’t we? At least you’ll beat the rush for moving in.”
“I d-don’t want to b-b-be any…trouble.” Although if she didn’t help me find a place to stay, I didn’t know what I’d do until Monday. Sleep in the park?
Mrs. Noya waved a hand at that notion, airily dismissing it. “You’re not the first student to make this mistake, you won’t be the last.” A fact which should probably have reassured me somewhat, but it didn’t. “And we have three students who stayed with us over spring break, for various reasons. They can take you under their wings until Monday.”
I quailed at the thought of meeting three new people at once, but…it would probably be easier than meeting the whole school full of students at once, come Monday. Mrs. Noya went back to her desk and opened a file cabinet and flipped through the files for a moment. “Ikezawa, here we go.” She pulled out a folder, and skimmed the enclosed pages. “Hanako. That’s a pretty first name. You’ll be in room 226. Let me get your keys, and we can go get you settled in.”
“I d-don’t want to b-be any extra…trouble. I’m sssure you have a lot of w-work to do. I can…find my room.”
She ignored me with a wave of her hand and disappeared into a back room. She emerged a moment later with a couple of keys on a keyring. She let herself out from behind the counter by way of a swinging gate, and grabbed the handle of one of my suitcases. “Come on, dearie, let’s go see your new home.”
______________________________
An hour later found me sitting on my bed, alone in my room. I stared at my suitcases, waiting to be unpacked, but the thought of unpacking just then felt exhausting.
It was the first time I'd had a room to myself since—well, since the hospital room I'd spent too many months in, after. It felt odd, not having to share my space with other girls. I could open or close the blinds whenever I wanted. Decorate the room however I wanted. If I wanted to swap the positions of the bed and desk, all it would require was a bit of work. I didn't have to talk to anyone about it. The possibilities seemed endless.
But having all these options, I didn't want to do anything.
Of the three students who were here over spring break, only one was a girl, and she hadn’t been in when Mrs. Noya brought me to the dorm. “Her name is Takeko Yasuda, she’ll be a senior this year, I’m sure she can help you figure things out. She’s downstairs in room 108. Most of the students who have difficulty walking are on the first floor.”
I wondered why she had difficulty walking, but was too shy to ask. I assumed it would probably be apparent when I met her.
“I’m afraid the cafeteria isn’t open until Monday, but there is a small market down the hill and a few affordable tea shops and restaurants too. Do you have enough money to feed yourself for the weekend?”
I nodded, even though I wasn’t sure how long I could feed myself with what I had. I had a little over two thousand yen, money for lunch on the train and the cab ride that Mama Ando had given me before I left. I’d so rarely had spending money of my own, I really had no idea of how much food I could get with that. Well, a day or two of hunger wouldn’t kill me.
“Your scholarship includes a monthly allowance, which we’ll put in your mailbox on the first of each month. You’ll also be issued a full set of school uniforms, which you can pick up on Monday during the move-in. Do you need any help unpacking?”
I shook my head. Mostly I just wanted her to go away. This was the most interaction with another person I’d had in weeks, aside from Mama Ando and Sumika, and it was exhausting.
“No. Th-thank you. I’ll…be f-fine.”
Mrs. Noya nodded, “Very well. If you need me, I’ll be in the office until six, or until I get the new student paperwork finished, which probably means until midnight. If you need any help after hours, there’s always someone available at the nurse’s office, which is down the hall from the administration offices.”
I nodded, and tried to say thank you again, but the words got stuck in my throat.
After Mrs. Noya left, I just sank down on the edge of my bed and stared at my suitcases. There were bed linens in a neatly folded pile sitting next to me, I could make up the bed and take a nap, but that felt like too much work.
As I sat there, I found myself missing my old room at the orphanage, something I’d never imagined possible. Sumika, my most recent roommate, hadn’t been as nasty as some girls I’d roomed with over the years. She’d mostly just ignored me, which had been a relief.
The orphanage hadn’t always been pleasant, but at least it had been familiar. And Mama Ando had been nice. I wondered if I should write to her, let her know I had arrived, but she probably didn’t care. I was out of her hair now, and the less I bothered her, the better.
I lay down on my side on the bare mattress and curled up in a little ball. My stomach rumbled at me, reminding me that I hadn’t eaten on the train. I needed to find the store Mrs. Noya had mentioned if I wanted to eat, but the idea of setting foot outside my door was terrifying. I’d made it this far on adrenaline and sheer determination, but those had finally given out. I pulled the bare pillow from the stack of linens and rested my head on it. Just a little nap. I would unpack my bags after a nap. It wasn’t as if there was any rush, I had until Monday.
______________________________
I was awakened by someone knocking on my door. I was confused at first, looking around the room, wondering where I was, before I remembered. Yamaku. The dorm room. My dorm room. I sat up slowly and tried to get my bearings, and whoever it was knocked again.
I stared at the door, wondering who it could possibly be. Mrs. Noya, returning to tell me there’d been a mistake, and I had to leave? No, it was probably the other girl in the dorm. What was her name again? Yasuka? Something like that. I stood up and approached the door, but didn’t open it, suddenly nervous. This was my first meeting with another student here. What kind of impression would I make? Would Yamaku students be used to people who looked like me, or would I still be seen as a monster, an ugly freak, a perpetual outsider? I froze, unable to make myself open the door.
There came a third set of knocks, then I heard a girl’s voice through the door, “I guess she went exploring or something. We can catch up with her later.” A muffled boy’s voice responded with something I couldn’t quite hear, and the girl laughed. Were they laughing at me? Already? They hadn’t even met me yet. I heard their footsteps recede down the hall, sounding vaguely arhythmic.
I slumped and leaned my head against the door. This was supposed to be my new start. My chance to fit in with other students who had…issues, like me. And I’d just frozen like a mouse in front of a cat. I sighed. Maybe it had been stupid to think that I could change. That things might be better here.
I turned away from the door and bent to lift a suitcase onto the desk. The effort strained the skin on my right arm, reminding me that I’d not put any lotion on it or done my stretching exercises for a few days now. I’d have to remember to do that. Later.
My pitiful collection of clothing barely filled two of the four dresser drawers I had. Well, perhaps my school uniforms would fill out the rest. I rather liked the notion of uniforms, of looking like everyone else. I wondered what they’d look like.
As I unpacked a worn pair of only slightly too small athletic shoes from the suitcase, I was surprised to notice a slip of paper folded up inside one of them. I pulled it out and tucked the shoes in the small shoe cubby by the door. I sat down on the desk chair and unfolded the note.
I recognized Mama Ando’s handwriting at once, although there really wasn’t anyone else who might have written to me.
Dear Hanako,
I hope you are unpacking and settling in well at Yamaku. I know this is a large change for you, and changes can be frightening, but I truly do believe that this is the best possible opportunity for you. I wouldn’t have spent so many months fighting and arguing with administrators and bureaucrats to get you funding for tuition to the school if I didn’t.
She did what? I paused, startled. I had just assumed…well, to be honest, I had not really thought about where the money for the school had come from. I had assumed it was like being shuffled from one orphanage to another, just a matter of paperwork. But apparently not.
It may seem scary at first, but I think if you give it a chance, you will find that Yamaku has a lot to offer you, and you have a lot to offer to it. And to your fellow students. I know you have a kind and gentle heart hiding behind your shy and retiring facade, and I hope that once you settle in, you can finally find a way to let the rest of the world know just how wonderful you truly are.
I snorted and shook my head. Me, wonderful? I had a lot to offer? Not likely. But the words warmed my heart a little nonetheless.
I always worry a little when one of my children goes out into the world on their own, not because they were adopted. But you’re heading out even younger than most. So I worry more. Please write to me from time to time and let me know how things are going.
Fondly,
Mama Ando
I stared at the letter for a long while, not quite sure of what to make of it. I guess they hadn’t thrown a party when I’d left after all. I gently refolded the note, and placed it in a desk drawer, all by itself.
I finished unpacking my few things, and shoved the suitcases into the back of the closet. I raised the window blinds, blinking at the sunlight suddenly streaming into my room. The window faced west, and the setting sun was bright and warm on my face. I looked out onto Yamaku’s campus. It was still and quiet for the moment, with no students around, and any groundskeepers presumably already gone for the weekend. It was early spring, so there wasn’t much color, but I could see a lot of neat flower beds where there presumably would be color soon.
I sat back down at my desk and pulled out the small stationery set I had been given for my birthday a few years back. A cruel gift to give to an orphan, I’d always thought—who did I have to write to? But now I had a letter to write.
I clicked the ballpoint pen a few times and stared at the blank page before bending over to write.
Dear Mama Ando…
Part II: Yasuda
Part III: Venturing Out
Part IV: Shopping
Part V: Nurse
Can also be read on Ao3.
____________
Mama Ando once said that I should just ignore all the teasing at school.
Mama Ando said that true beauty came from within.
Mama Ando said that those bullies who teased me were the truly ugly ones.
Mama Ando said that going to Yamaku was the best possible thing for me.
I wasn’t really sure I could trust everything Mama Ando said.
Yet here I was. In front of huge ornate gates marked Yamaku Academy, my two small battered suitcases holding all my worldly possessions at my feet, the cab driving away behind me. For a moment I wanted to run after the cab, tell the cabbie to take me back to the train station, flee back to the orphanage and Mama Ando. But I didn’t.
For one thing, I didn’t have enough money for a train ticket back.
For another, Mama Ando had made it pretty clear that I was done with the orphanage. “Tough love,” I think they call it, though it might have been simple exasperation and relief at finally seeing quit of their oldest and longest residing orphan. They probably threw a party after I left.
And, for another, the cab was already too far away for me to catch.
I sighed, and picked up my suitcases. The letter of admission I’d received had included a map of the school grounds, which I’d studied intently, determined to not get lost in this new place. But the map did not show all the gently rolling hills, and the topography made matching the buildings to the names I’ve memorized a little difficult. But I found the administration offices after only one false turn, which gave me some small sense of accomplishment.
I dragged my suitcases into the lobby of the building, and entered the main office. There was a long counter between the front of the office and the back, and behind the counter sat a plump and matronly looking woman at a desk. She was squinting at a computer screen and carefully pecking away at the keyboard. I stood there and waited for her to notice me—surely she must have heard the door to the office open when I came in? Or maybe she was just ignoring me in the hopes that I’d go away, not complicate her day by making for more work. I shifted my weight from foot to foot, feeling both foolish and restless, but I was too shy to say hello, or even gently cough to get her attention.
Eventually, she made a small disgusted noise and shook her head, and turned her attention away from the computer. When her gaze fell on me she gave a little jump. “Oh! I’m sorry, I didn’t see you there. Sorry, have you been waiting long?” She smiled at me, and her smile seemed genuine. Either she didn’t notice my scars, or perhaps she was used to such disfigurements, working here.
“N-no, not l-long,” I said. “I…I’m a n-new…student?” I didn’t know why I phrased that as a question, and I looked down at the floor.
“Oh. Are you coming to check out the school?” She stood up and moved around her desk to stand at the counter opposite me. “Would you like a tour? We usually schedule campus tours ahead of time, but I think I could find someone to show you around.” I shrank in on myself a little as she approached.
“I…I’m m-moving in?” Isn’t this a boarding school? Why would I be here to just check it out? I risked a short glance up at the woman. She was frowning slightly.
“Move-in day isn’t until next Monday,” she said. My heart sank. Today was Friday. “I’m afraid we’ll have to ask you to go home and come back then.”
I wondered how I could have gotten things so wrong. “I th-thought…move-in s-started on…Friday?” I should have realized something was wrong when I didn't see any other students on campus.
“Classes start on Friday. Next Friday, April first, but move-in starts on Monday. I’m sorry if there was any confusion in your admissions letter.”
I pulled my admissions letter out of my coat pocket. I looked at the relevant paragraph near the bottom of the page, and my heart sank. It said exactly what she’d just said. Stupid stupid stupid! How could I have mixed that up so badly?
“Oh.” I stared bleakly at the letter, wondering if I could possibly sink into the floor and disappear. I closed my eyes and struggled not to cry, my embarrassment fighting with my self-recrimination for dominance in my emotions. I wanted to flee, to run away from this kindly looking old woman, but I had nowhere to go.
“I’m sorry, are your parents still here?” she asked gently. “If not, we can call them to come pick you up, if they have a cell phone. They can’t have gone far.”
“I…d-don’t have any…p-p-parents. Any m-more. I’m…an orphan.” I always hated saying that out loud, even though it had been a truth in my life for almost eight years now. I’d been an orphan almost as long as I’d had parents. I shuddered at the thought. Some grim part inside me wanted to calculate the exact date I would topple over the edge and I’ll have been an orphan longer than I had parents, but I shoved that thought aside.
The woman behind the counter looked distressed. “Oh, you must be…Miss Ikezara?”
“Ikezawa,” I corrected quietly.
“Ikezawa, right. I’m sorry, dear. I’m Mrs. Noya, I’m the head secretary here at the school.” She puffed out her cheeks for a moment, looking thoughtful, then she plastered a smile onto her face again. “Well. In that case, we’ll just have to get you settled in a little early, won’t we? At least you’ll beat the rush for moving in.”
“I d-don’t want to b-b-be any…trouble.” Although if she didn’t help me find a place to stay, I didn’t know what I’d do until Monday. Sleep in the park?
Mrs. Noya waved a hand at that notion, airily dismissing it. “You’re not the first student to make this mistake, you won’t be the last.” A fact which should probably have reassured me somewhat, but it didn’t. “And we have three students who stayed with us over spring break, for various reasons. They can take you under their wings until Monday.”
I quailed at the thought of meeting three new people at once, but…it would probably be easier than meeting the whole school full of students at once, come Monday. Mrs. Noya went back to her desk and opened a file cabinet and flipped through the files for a moment. “Ikezawa, here we go.” She pulled out a folder, and skimmed the enclosed pages. “Hanako. That’s a pretty first name. You’ll be in room 226. Let me get your keys, and we can go get you settled in.”
“I d-don’t want to b-be any extra…trouble. I’m sssure you have a lot of w-work to do. I can…find my room.”
She ignored me with a wave of her hand and disappeared into a back room. She emerged a moment later with a couple of keys on a keyring. She let herself out from behind the counter by way of a swinging gate, and grabbed the handle of one of my suitcases. “Come on, dearie, let’s go see your new home.”
______________________________
An hour later found me sitting on my bed, alone in my room. I stared at my suitcases, waiting to be unpacked, but the thought of unpacking just then felt exhausting.
It was the first time I'd had a room to myself since—well, since the hospital room I'd spent too many months in, after. It felt odd, not having to share my space with other girls. I could open or close the blinds whenever I wanted. Decorate the room however I wanted. If I wanted to swap the positions of the bed and desk, all it would require was a bit of work. I didn't have to talk to anyone about it. The possibilities seemed endless.
But having all these options, I didn't want to do anything.
Of the three students who were here over spring break, only one was a girl, and she hadn’t been in when Mrs. Noya brought me to the dorm. “Her name is Takeko Yasuda, she’ll be a senior this year, I’m sure she can help you figure things out. She’s downstairs in room 108. Most of the students who have difficulty walking are on the first floor.”
I wondered why she had difficulty walking, but was too shy to ask. I assumed it would probably be apparent when I met her.
“I’m afraid the cafeteria isn’t open until Monday, but there is a small market down the hill and a few affordable tea shops and restaurants too. Do you have enough money to feed yourself for the weekend?”
I nodded, even though I wasn’t sure how long I could feed myself with what I had. I had a little over two thousand yen, money for lunch on the train and the cab ride that Mama Ando had given me before I left. I’d so rarely had spending money of my own, I really had no idea of how much food I could get with that. Well, a day or two of hunger wouldn’t kill me.
“Your scholarship includes a monthly allowance, which we’ll put in your mailbox on the first of each month. You’ll also be issued a full set of school uniforms, which you can pick up on Monday during the move-in. Do you need any help unpacking?”
I shook my head. Mostly I just wanted her to go away. This was the most interaction with another person I’d had in weeks, aside from Mama Ando and Sumika, and it was exhausting.
“No. Th-thank you. I’ll…be f-fine.”
Mrs. Noya nodded, “Very well. If you need me, I’ll be in the office until six, or until I get the new student paperwork finished, which probably means until midnight. If you need any help after hours, there’s always someone available at the nurse’s office, which is down the hall from the administration offices.”
I nodded, and tried to say thank you again, but the words got stuck in my throat.
After Mrs. Noya left, I just sank down on the edge of my bed and stared at my suitcases. There were bed linens in a neatly folded pile sitting next to me, I could make up the bed and take a nap, but that felt like too much work.
As I sat there, I found myself missing my old room at the orphanage, something I’d never imagined possible. Sumika, my most recent roommate, hadn’t been as nasty as some girls I’d roomed with over the years. She’d mostly just ignored me, which had been a relief.
The orphanage hadn’t always been pleasant, but at least it had been familiar. And Mama Ando had been nice. I wondered if I should write to her, let her know I had arrived, but she probably didn’t care. I was out of her hair now, and the less I bothered her, the better.
I lay down on my side on the bare mattress and curled up in a little ball. My stomach rumbled at me, reminding me that I hadn’t eaten on the train. I needed to find the store Mrs. Noya had mentioned if I wanted to eat, but the idea of setting foot outside my door was terrifying. I’d made it this far on adrenaline and sheer determination, but those had finally given out. I pulled the bare pillow from the stack of linens and rested my head on it. Just a little nap. I would unpack my bags after a nap. It wasn’t as if there was any rush, I had until Monday.
______________________________
I was awakened by someone knocking on my door. I was confused at first, looking around the room, wondering where I was, before I remembered. Yamaku. The dorm room. My dorm room. I sat up slowly and tried to get my bearings, and whoever it was knocked again.
I stared at the door, wondering who it could possibly be. Mrs. Noya, returning to tell me there’d been a mistake, and I had to leave? No, it was probably the other girl in the dorm. What was her name again? Yasuka? Something like that. I stood up and approached the door, but didn’t open it, suddenly nervous. This was my first meeting with another student here. What kind of impression would I make? Would Yamaku students be used to people who looked like me, or would I still be seen as a monster, an ugly freak, a perpetual outsider? I froze, unable to make myself open the door.
There came a third set of knocks, then I heard a girl’s voice through the door, “I guess she went exploring or something. We can catch up with her later.” A muffled boy’s voice responded with something I couldn’t quite hear, and the girl laughed. Were they laughing at me? Already? They hadn’t even met me yet. I heard their footsteps recede down the hall, sounding vaguely arhythmic.
I slumped and leaned my head against the door. This was supposed to be my new start. My chance to fit in with other students who had…issues, like me. And I’d just frozen like a mouse in front of a cat. I sighed. Maybe it had been stupid to think that I could change. That things might be better here.
I turned away from the door and bent to lift a suitcase onto the desk. The effort strained the skin on my right arm, reminding me that I’d not put any lotion on it or done my stretching exercises for a few days now. I’d have to remember to do that. Later.
My pitiful collection of clothing barely filled two of the four dresser drawers I had. Well, perhaps my school uniforms would fill out the rest. I rather liked the notion of uniforms, of looking like everyone else. I wondered what they’d look like.
As I unpacked a worn pair of only slightly too small athletic shoes from the suitcase, I was surprised to notice a slip of paper folded up inside one of them. I pulled it out and tucked the shoes in the small shoe cubby by the door. I sat down on the desk chair and unfolded the note.
I recognized Mama Ando’s handwriting at once, although there really wasn’t anyone else who might have written to me.
Dear Hanako,
I hope you are unpacking and settling in well at Yamaku. I know this is a large change for you, and changes can be frightening, but I truly do believe that this is the best possible opportunity for you. I wouldn’t have spent so many months fighting and arguing with administrators and bureaucrats to get you funding for tuition to the school if I didn’t.
She did what? I paused, startled. I had just assumed…well, to be honest, I had not really thought about where the money for the school had come from. I had assumed it was like being shuffled from one orphanage to another, just a matter of paperwork. But apparently not.
It may seem scary at first, but I think if you give it a chance, you will find that Yamaku has a lot to offer you, and you have a lot to offer to it. And to your fellow students. I know you have a kind and gentle heart hiding behind your shy and retiring facade, and I hope that once you settle in, you can finally find a way to let the rest of the world know just how wonderful you truly are.
I snorted and shook my head. Me, wonderful? I had a lot to offer? Not likely. But the words warmed my heart a little nonetheless.
I always worry a little when one of my children goes out into the world on their own, not because they were adopted. But you’re heading out even younger than most. So I worry more. Please write to me from time to time and let me know how things are going.
Fondly,
Mama Ando
I stared at the letter for a long while, not quite sure of what to make of it. I guess they hadn’t thrown a party when I’d left after all. I gently refolded the note, and placed it in a desk drawer, all by itself.
I finished unpacking my few things, and shoved the suitcases into the back of the closet. I raised the window blinds, blinking at the sunlight suddenly streaming into my room. The window faced west, and the setting sun was bright and warm on my face. I looked out onto Yamaku’s campus. It was still and quiet for the moment, with no students around, and any groundskeepers presumably already gone for the weekend. It was early spring, so there wasn’t much color, but I could see a lot of neat flower beds where there presumably would be color soon.
I sat back down at my desk and pulled out the small stationery set I had been given for my birthday a few years back. A cruel gift to give to an orphan, I’d always thought—who did I have to write to? But now I had a letter to write.
I clicked the ballpoint pen a few times and stared at the blank page before bending over to write.
Dear Mama Ando…