Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Mr. Takuya (1)

Mr. Takuya

Mr. Takuya left today. There was no reason why Mr. Takuya decided to leave, he just felt like wandering. Down the road he wandered toward an unknown destination, pushing his three wheeled rickety cart. The red umbrella had faded and lost much of its color. Swaying in the wind, the umbrella that had once demanded attention was now an aging, worn out sight, just like its driver. Along with Mr. Takuya trailed Tanuki, the Japanese badger who had mysteriously ended up as Mr. Takuya's companion. Tanuki resembled both a raccoon and a fox; he had short stiff fur and the familiar white and black pattern around his face, and sturdy legs which helped him kept in stride with Mr. Takuya. Tanuki really hated walking, he wished Mr. Takuya wouldn't wander like this. But he continued to follow, he had to follow.

Mr. Takuya was quite used to getting these urges to wander. He never got very comfortable, there was no point in getting comfortable because sooner or later the urge to move would come back. Mr. Takuya had been all over, in hopes of recovering his memory. He had completely lost his memory leading up to the accident. The accident had rid him of his long term memory. His mother and father, where he was born, what his last name was, all these memories were lost during the accident. Every new memory he acquired would be filed into his brain, replacing the oldest existing memories. For Mr. Takuya, remembering people, events and places was similar to the red bean cakes he sold in his cart. The first batch would be put on and baked, warming up on the stove top for a while. However once they were finished baking and sold, they were gone forever. The new batch of dough was like a new memory. Some memories would stay longer than others, but eventually a new batch would take over.

Mr. Takuya and Tanuki had walked through many towns and small cities. Their feet clocking each mile, continually adding up the total mileage. Although they had no destination, Mr. Takuya would know when to stop. It happened every time he went somewhere. After a certain point, he would stop, absorb his surroundings and know he had reached the end. During this particular trek, Mr. Takuya began to get a little worried. He had been walking for hours without stopping and had yet to find his next stop. He could tell Tanuki was also getting tired, which would mean breaking for a snack rather soon. Mr. Takuya looked up into the sun and guessed it was about five o clock as the sun cast a fiery orange glow across the road. They were approaching an overpass through which Mr. Takuya could see a small and rundown city. A tall tower stood out between smaller shabby buildings; the entire atmosphere seemed dirtier on the other side of the overpass. This, Mr. Takuya announced to no one in particular, is where we will stop. Although Mr. Takuya could not read Tanuki's thoughts, he knew Tanuki agreed. The feeling they had been waiting for started to overwhelm them both, this rundown town was their destination. Stopping under the overpass, Mr. Takuya parked his cart and opened the beaten umbrella and unfolded a small chair. Together they each enjoyed a nourishing snack of red bean cakes and baked sweet potatoes, observing what they had stumbled upon from their perch on the outskirts of town.

6 comments:

  1. AN EXCERPT FROM "The Badger and the Dragon, or Meeting the Neighbors"

    ...Today I wasn't interested in meeting more neighbors. However, my luck continued unabated. Taking a glance up from my cold feet I saw that there was a badger in the road.

    There was a badger in the road.

    Certain animals are allowed to be on city streets. Squirrels for instance. Pigeons. Dogs with leashes, particularly poodles. Cats. Sometimes a falcon wheeling overhead. Badgers are not on this list.

    There was a man with the badger. The man pointed at Wilshire Tower. He asked me what its name was. I told him that the creature he was standing next to was a badger, of the family Mustelidae, to which he replied that the badger liked to be called Tanuki, and that his own name was Mr. Takuya, and that he would very much like to know the name of the tall building over there if it wouldn't be too much trouble. I told him and he thanked me. I asked him if that's where he was going.

    Yes, he said, that is the right place to be.

    I quickly walked past him...

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  2. Pokey's day started out the way it always does. He fixes his cereal, pours the milk, and sits at the varnished table that belonged to his grandmother. She had this apartment before Pokey. When she died, Pokey was living with her at the time. Everytime he sits at the table, he remembers the day he tried to wake her before he went to work. The sun reflected off the floor, across her bed and onto the wall. She looked comfortable. Pokey wasn't sure what to do on that day. He went to work and called his mother to tell her that Nanie wouldn't wake-up. When he arrived home that night, his grandmother was gone and his mother sat at the table, having coffee and waiting for Pokey. This morning, the sun was missing from the south-facing window. The only sound was the scraping of the spoon on the bottom of the bowl.

    As Pokey settles into the parking attentant's booth just inside the entrance to the parking garage, the first sounds of day filter in through the slight crack in the glass window. He hears the hissing of sleet, and the belching of the breaks from the butcher's supply truck as it lurches onto Katz Avenue. He looks up to see the puddles forming at the end of the deck .

    Pokey reminds himself that if Mr. Gorlomi stumbles into the parking deck to get his keys, Pokey is to lock the door to the booth. Mr. Rocco told him, "Never give him his keys if he can't walk straight." Pokey gets upset when Mr. Gorlomi yells at him. Pokey just keeps the door to the attendant's booth locked and puts his headphones on. After a while, Mr. Gorlomi gets tired, or his bottle is empty, and he simply turns around and walks away shouting something over his shoulder. After those times, Pokey listens to Keith Jarrett on his cd player.

    This morning Pokey hears Mr. Tayuka's cart before he sees him. Pokey walks to the parking entrance and smiles at him and his dog. He hands the dog a small biscuit. At one point, Pokey asked Mr. Tayuka what kind of dog it is, but Mr. Tayuka never answers Pokey. He looks off into the distance and continues to walk as if he sees the bus he needs to catch, or the vendor he needs to speak with. Except, as far as Pokey can tell, Mr. Tayuka rides no bus or speaks with anyone. As he turns to go back to his booth, he sees a startled young man running by. Pokey thinks this man is in pain, or maybe he's afraid of something.

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  3. So now I'm at this boring job. I don't even know why there is a laundry mat in this rundown town, since it seems like no one wears clean clothes anyway.

    Sitting hear, I decide to draw what I see outside the laundry mat window. I see Mr.Takuya walking this big rat looking thing, and begin to doodle. There is something not right about that guy. Who has a big rat as a pet. And why is he walking right now anyway. It is brick cold outside and raining.

    Anyway...Mr.Takuya's image is gone, and now there is this dreary, depressing feeling outside. It is 12 noon and I begin to grow hungry. I know no one will come to wash clothes, so I decide to take my lunch, and instead of returning to work, I'll just go to the butcher shop, pick me up some of that crappy meat and call it a day.

    I hate going into the butcher shop. Dave, that nasty son of a gun, always tries something with anything that walks....Especially when he is drunk. His shop doesn't even smell like meat. It smells like sex and alcohol.

    UGHHHH...I guess I have to deal with it if I want to eat. Hopefully he is sober.

    On my way to Styx Meat, I see this guy. I have never seen him before but for some reason he attracts me. Not because he is hot or anything, Probably because of how out of place he looks. He looks like he has no clue about his surroundings. He's just walking with his head low near D&D. He probably doesn't know what the store is, since he seems really interested. For some reason when I see him, my dad's letter pops into my mind. Maybe he knows him

    I'll have to find out.

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  4. He continued to walk around, his collar still the only thing attempting to keep his head dry. Up ahead, he saw a rickety old cart with an umbrella coming off the top. He was curious, so he headed toward it. As he got closer, he thought the man pushing the cart looked familiar.

    "Sean, is that you? Sean! Hey, boy! Don't ignore me, it's your fucking father, turn around!" he screamed to the man. He continued to ignore Jed, only making him more angry, so he grabbed him by shoulder and whirled him around. "Since when do you treat your father that way? If only Yoko were here to see that, she'd have your ass!"

    The man couldn't get any words to form as a reply. He managed to wiggle his way out of Jed's grip, and he bolted, "Don't you run from me!" he screamed. "What is it with kids these days? Can't even get them to say hello to their bloody father." Jed said to the dog.

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  5. Marie sat down at her vanity and observed the plain reflection that did just the same to her as she to it. She never wore make up and the ownership of said vanity often baffled her.
    Using her dead grandfather's zippo Marie lit a cigarette and watched as the smoke's transparency diffused across her face. "Two black eyes and no canceler," she said to her reflection, "shit." Marie walked over to the window and sat on it's ledge. Glancing at the poverty she thought so keenly to immense herself in. It was raining. Her heavy eye lids trudged across the street, there was a pile of trash. "Why did I come her?" she whispered hazily as smoke cascaded(flushed) from her mouth and nostrils.
    She inhaled her next exhale and tossed her half smoked cigarette into the freezing rain. Marie stood up with the intention to shave her legs but something compelled her to watch the slow declining fall of her wasted cigarette. It landed on the border of a puddle but the ember remained orange. Just as Marie began to stand she saw, out of the corner of her eye, a cart. The cart stopped and from it a small fox like creature emerged. It hovered over her cigarette and after a moment of perplexity the fox-creature returned from where it emerged. Another moment passed but Marie's eyes pressed on ploring for the continuation of this strange occurrence. Sure enough, her hopes availed. The small hunched over man motoring the cart, like the fox-creature, walked out and hovered over the still embered cigarette. He picked the cigarette up, examined it, and took a drag, as if looking for a sign.
    "Are you mad," she yelled five stories above.
    "At you? I don't think," this man was very asian.
    "Sorry?" hoping for a bit of elaboration. Marie thought it obvious that she was not asking the man if he was angry, but clearly the man clashed with this reasoning.
    The asian man took a moment to really savor the taste of his drag and then looked up at Marie, "I don't think I'm mad at you." He looked contented as if that single drag answered his query with the cigarette and he resumed his duty of pushing his cart. Marie was quite befuddled by this speedy transaction and lingered at her window cill watching as the strange little man lumber away. Are these the people I am to coexist with, she wondered. The cart turned a corner and Marie went to shave her legs.

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  6. There is one thing that's bad about being here, I just thought about it. I might just be the ONLY one happy.
    Everyone's so sad and droopy. Like you can't just go walk up to people like we did in L.A.
    I saw this man pushing a buggy walking with some skunk type thing.
    He didn't smile.
    He didn't nod like a person usually does when passing.
    He just stared at me in disgust like I was the reason he was having a bad day.
    It's kind of funny when you think about it though, a skunk.
    I've never seen one.

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