The Vanishing Foreigner, Part 4
By Rick Nelson
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4
One day a week he had to make a train ride to a
company that was fifty minutes each way and he'd
gotten into the habit of doing the Japan Times
crossword puzzle during the trip. He'd bought a
mechanical pencil with an eraser for this purpose, but
the lead it came with was too hard to write well on
newspaper. He'd been meaning to buy a softer lead for
some time but kept forgetting, and when he saw the
convenience store on the corner just inside the
arcade, he was pleased to have an honorable excuse to
go inside and buy one. Danny ducked inside and to kill
enough time for the boys to get bored and leave,
engaged the cashier in conversation.
"Excuse me, but could you help me?" he said. She gave
him a hesitant nod and he went on. "I have a
mechanical pencil and I want to buy a..." He didn't
know the word for lead and began to think how to
rephrase his request. "I have a mechanical pencil but
I can't use it. I don't know the word for what I want.
It is like ink but not liquid... You put it inside."
"Ball pen?" she asked.
"No, not a ball pen. A mechanical pencil. I want the
round thing in the center of a pencil. It's hard like
metal and works like ink in a mechanical pencil."
"You want a pencil?"
"No. Not a pencil, not a ball point pen. You put it
inside a mechanical pencil in order to write." There
was a cup next to the register with a few pencils and
pens in it. He grabbed a pencil from it and pointed to
the lead. "Like this."
"You want a pencil?"
"No no no. May I have a sheet of paper?" he said and
gestured as if he were writing. Her expression remained
blank and she didn't move so he opened his wallet and
took out a scrap of paper. He made a squiggle then
jabbed a circle around it. "This is not ink, but this
is what I want... for a mechanical pen."
All the time they'd been talking Danny was acutely
aware she was staring at his hair and biting her lower
lip as if to keep herself from giggling. Beads of
sweat had begun to trickle down his neck and his scalp
felt as if every hair was trying to wriggling free by
the root. The boys were still circling outside on
their bicycles waiting for him. He had hoped to
outlast them, but his patience was dangerously close to
the breaking point. Suddenly he remembered the donut
shop nearby - he could wait them out there, over a
bottomless cup of coffee. He walked over to the pen
and pencil display and brought back two packs of
pencil leads. He laid them on the counter and said,
"Which one is softer?"
Her face lit up in a smile. "I got it!" she laughed.
"You want shin!"
"Shin is it? Great!"
"Do you want them both?"
"Only the softer one. Sorry, but I can't read
Japanese."
She picked one up and began reading the back. She
began to squint and after a while turned it over, read
the front, turned to the back again and read some
more. After a while she picked up the other one and
did the same. Danny folded his arms in front and stood
watching her. He was about to say something insulting
when she said, "Maybe this one."
"Maybe?"
"Soft, right? This one. One hundred and eighty nine
yen."
"Lemme see those," he said and took them from her. The
two packages appeared to be identical except one had a
prominent H and the other HB. "What's the difference
between H and HB?"
"This one," she said and pointed. "This one is
softer."
She had been dealing with him like a child ever since
he walked in and all of her actions indicated she
didn't know a thing about pencil leads nor cared
whether he got what he wanted. It didn't seem as if
she were willing to even try to understand him; all
she wanted now was to get him out the door. Since it
wasn't worth the effort to get to the bottom of which
pack of leads he needed and it was an insignificant
amount of money, he decided to buy them both.
"Another battle lost that should have never been
fought," he said in English, then in Japanese that
he'd buy them both.
Her forehead wrinkled and she tilted her head to the
side. Without a word she rang it up on the register
then reached under the counter and pulled out a
calculator. She typed in the amount he owed and with
both hands held it at shoulder height for him to read.
This had never happened to him before and the effect
was catastrophic.
He was thinking of the injustice of having just
explained to her in Japanese what he wanted, and
finally after being able to make himself clear, she
ignored that he was capable of communicating. Was she
trying to insult him, or had she written him off as
incompetent the moment he entered? What other reason
could there be? After all, the numbers the Japanese
use for prices are so simple an idiot could learn how
to count past a million within minutes.
He rolled his eyes, and when he did, something inside
of him gave way and the great empirical foundation of
knowledge that filters what we allow ourselves to see
presented itself. He became aware of a steadily
intensifying electric hum and a monolith rose before
him and hovered. Shafts of heat began racing up his
spine and it felt as if opposing forces had gripped it
at both ends and were slowly twisting it back and
forth. When he realized what the monolith represented,
it fissured and crumbled like a block of ice, hanging
for a second before dropping from view. The room went
red and his spine suddenly twisted as if it were being
wrung like a damp towel. The air was pressing in from
all sides and just when he thought he could bear it no
more, Danny imploded with a POOF! and disappeared.
She stood staring at the empty space where he had been
standing just moments before. A cloud of fine,
sparkling dust still hung in the air and when the last
golden cinder traced its way to the growing mound on
the floor, she said Waaa Bikkurishita!
A group of customers came in and once she had dealt
with them she called her manager. He didn't know what
to make of her story, but told her to close the shop
and called the police.
When the police arrived they had her go over her story
many times and each version was remarkably similar: a
red headed foreigner who couldn't speak Japanese
bought two packs of pencil leads. When he was shown
the amount on a calculator he disappeared in a cloud
of fairy dust, "like Tinkerbell".
Police hear all kinds of stories and figured that this
one was a particularly well executed prank.
Nevertheless, they kept their composure throughout the
investigation and even took samples of the "fairy
dust" scattered across the floor. Before they left a
detective instructed the manager and cashier to keep
quiet and he'd get back to them when they knew more,
but it was too late: she had filled her time waiting
by calling her friends and telling them the news.
Word quickly spread about the vanishing foreigner and
for a brief time business was brisk at the store.
However, when another rumor began that a ghost roamed
the aisles and followed people home, even their steady
customers began to shun the store and it eventually
went out of business and was torn down.
Within a year of Danny's death the story about the
foreigner who disappears when shown a calculator had
fanned out among shopkeepers and clerks all over the
country. As a result, nowadays few cashiers know the
reason for doing so, but as a matter of form show
foreigners the amount they owe on a calculator
regardless of their ability to express themselves in
Japanese. No harm nor slight is intended; indeed,
there are those who do it out of a wish to be polite
and are genuinely confused to find themselves the
sudden focus of a foreigner's wrath.
There are those that claim Danny's spirit still roams
Hiroshima and lingers about cash registers waiting to
possess any foreign resident in a particularly bad
mood. If you find yourself becoming inexplicably upset
during a transaction someday and counting to ten just
won't do, follow these steps: stand back, close your
eyes and repeat Watashi wa kienai ("I will not
disappear") three times to defuse the situation.
After paying your bill and thanking your cashier,
leave promptly but not too fast. Do not forget your
change. Do not look back.
Part 1 | Part 2 | Part 3 | Part 4
Rick Nelson grew up in Oklahoma and has lived in Japan
for all but a few of the last 27 years. His mother was
a librarian and professional storyteller and was instrumental
in developing his interest in literature and writing. Hiroshima inspires
him and he currently divides time between Hiroshima city and Shikoku.
The thumbnail image used for this piece is from Wikimedia Commons and
kindly released by AMagill under a Creative Commons cc-by-2.0 license. |