The Translator
A Novel
Nina Schuyler
For Peter, Fynn and Yohann.
Contents
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Acknowledgments
Chapter One
Standing in the kitchen munching on pickled cucumbers, watching a stray dog pee in his yard, Jiro hears something crash into the garage door. The entire house trembles as if it is about to fall off its foundation.
He runs down the hall and yanks open the door. The electric garage door is broken, boards desperately clinging to the frame. Fragments of glass shimmer on the cement carport. The black Honda’s engine is still sputtering, spilling gassy blue smoke from the exhaust pipe. And there is his wife, sitting rigidly in the driver’s seat at a forward tilt, staring straight ahead as if she’s pondering whether to plow into the wall.
He rushes over to the car window and pounds on it. “Are you all right? What happened? Can you move? Open the window!”
Aiko doesn’t turn her head. Her white-knuckled hands grip the wheel. He looks at her fingernails, which he’s seen hundreds of times, but still he’s startled that they are so severely bitten, exposing raw pink skin. There is a moment of eerie silence, as if one world has shattered and another has yet to rise up in its place. Jiro can’t think what to do. Pull her out of the car? Call an ambulance? Her doctor? Her self-inflicted paralysis leaches into him and turns him into stone.
Last night in bed she told him again that her heart was punctured and her life was slowly dripping out of her. “What do you want me to do?” he said, not bothering to hide his frustration. Hasn’t she been talking like this for a year now? “Tell me and I’ll do it. I’ll do it right now.” Even he could hear the anger and helplessness in his voice.
As if coming out of a fog, Jiro realizes the door is unlocked. He opens it, turns off the engine, pockets the keys. She doesn’t appear to be physically harmed; and that’s the problem, he thinks. The harm is tucked deep inside. She’s seen dozens of doctors who’ve given so many different diagnoses, yet her hurt remains nameless.
Hanne sets down Kobayashi’s novel. The book did well in Japan, in part because Kobayashi revealed in an interview that his main character, Jiro, was inspired by the famous Noh actor, Moto Okuro. So intrigued, so fascinated was he by this remarkable man that Kobayashi began the book right after he met Okuro. “Moto cured five years of writer’s block,” Kobayashi told the magazine. “If he reads my book—and what an honor if he did—I hope he sees it as an homage to him.”
The name Moto Okuro meant nothing to Hanne, and she doesn’t know much about the ancient Japanese theater art of Noh, except that masks are used for different characters, and the characters speak in a stilted, almost unintelligible language. There’s music to contend with, and, almost like a Greek play, a chorus. She’d have to read Kobayashi’s Trojan Horse Trips herself first, on her own terms, she told the publisher. Only if she understood the main character would she be able to successfully translate the book into English. At her enormous blackboard, custom-made to take up one entire wall, she begins to write a sentence in Japanese.
Iradachi, the Japanese word for frustration. Of course you are frustrated, Jiro, thinks Hanne. You’ve brought your wife from one doctor to another, and more than a year later there is no sign of improvement, no answers. You are in the same place you were three, five months ago. And what has become of your life? Turned into something unrecognizable, you no longer know who you are.
She then writes Yariba no nai ikidoori, meaning an unfocused anger. But also yaru se nai kimochi, a helpless feeling, or a feeling of no way to clear one’s mind. A neat column of chalk characters fills the far side of the board.
She pauses, baffled. How can Jiro be experiencing an unfocused anger and a helpless feeling? And just a moment ago he was frustrated. It doesn’t make sense.
Whatever Kobayashi meant, she’s on her own here. Over the eleven months she’s been working on his novel, Kobayashi has responded to only a few of her e-mails and always with a curt—“Too busy.” “Figure it out.” “On another project.” Though, after the publisher sent him the first three translated chapters, he found ample time to quibble that she had cut his crucial repetitive words and phrases. But what does he know about translating Japanese, which prefers to keep someone guessing with its verb at the end of a sentence, into English, with its own linguistic quirks? Between the two languages, there are far too many nuances to name. After that charged exchange, based on Hanne’s counsel, the publisher decided to hold off sending him anything until the entire manuscript was done.
Unfocused anger Jiro may have, but not in the American way of yelling or stomping around the house, spewing vitriolics. Jiro means second son. Kobayashi would have done much better if he’d named him Isamu, which means courage. Jiro is a man of courage and enduring restraint who has been patient and loving and thoughtful and kind throughout this ordeal. Yes, ordeal. His wife begins to fade away for an inexplicable reason, and Jiro is left to salvage what he can of the marriage, of her. His anger would be quiet. Nearly invisible, but no less real.
Ittai nani o shite hoshii-n dai? What do you want me to do? Kobayashi dropped the verb, desu, which, if he used it, would have suggested a polite tone. Jiro is frustrated, at wit’s end.
Last night, Hanne dreamed Jiro whispered this same question to her, though his tone was not one of frustration, but seduction. For months now, she’s been dreaming about Jiro, erotic dreams, dreams of kisses stolen behind doors, of bare feet rubbed beneath tables, of tangled bedsheets and limbs. She can even conjure up his smell, or what she thinks it would be. Underneath his deodorant a slightly earthy smell, which she likes. That she’s fallen a little bit in love with him is no surprise. She’s spent months and months with him and when she wakes can’t wait for their daily sessions.
Another fragment from last night’s dream floats up to the surface of her mind. Jiro’s voice wasn’t just a sound nestled near her ear. It was all around her, as if his voice had become warm water and she was immersed in it. She also remembers water sloshing. And a porcelain bathtub. Steam. A man—Jiro?—was washing her feet, gently soaping each toe. Or was it David? No, she distinctly remembers the man speaking Japanese. And it wasn’t Hiro; she’d recognize her deceased husband’s voice. Besides, the dreams of Hiro always involve her taking care of him. In the beginning, Jiro’s hands made her skin tingle, her body melt. But the longer he touched her, the more his touch began to feel oddly sacred, like an anointing or baptism.
Some part of her brain becomes aware of hunger. When did she last eat? Breakfast, she remembers. An apple. A carrot. A long time ago, the phone rang. Maybe David, calling to find out if she’d have supper with him and what usually follows afterwards. From far off, she hears the foghorn blare on the Golden Gate Bridge. A low bank of clouds probably stretches over the steel-blue water, making it dangerous for ships to cross under the bridge. Looking out her office window, she’s surprised to see it is now dark, meaning she’s worked all day without a break. At some point she’ll have to make herself stop. Make herself eat. Try to sleep. But not now, not yet. She loves this. She c
an’t possibly interrupt this profound pleasure.
She pops a hard candy into her mouth.
Jiro rushes into the house and calls an ambulance. Then her doctor. As he listens to the phone ring, he rubs his face, wishing it were a mask he could scrub off. He is so tired. Her life has become unyielding, relentless darkness, as has his.
“I’ve done everything I can for her,” Jiro hears himself say to the doctor. His tone has a danko to shita kucho de that is new to his ear.
Danko to shita kucho de—in a firm tone of voice. You’ve tried everything, Jiro, Hanne thinks to herself. You’ve played out every hypothetical—what if Aiko wakes up smiling? What if she laughs today or the new treatment works? What if she’s magically, spontaneously her old self again? It is not just a firm tone, it is decisive. You’ve come to a decision, one that will fundamentally alter your life.
She translates: His tone has a decisiveness to it that is new to his ear.
Jiro says he fears for Aiko’s safety. He can’t quit his job and give her around-the-clock care. Unfortunately, he is not a rich man. “What I’m doing is no longer enough.” Hanne hears what he’s not saying: I am spent, everything sapped and now I’m a husk of myself. There isn’t any more; but if something more isn’t done, Aiko might not make it.
The doctor says he understands. These situations are very difficult, very hard. Jiro listens, but he’s not asking for permission or even understanding. Hanne intuits that. There is nothing, real or imagined, on the horizon. Nozomi wa nai, he says, there’s no hope.
There’s no future with her, thinks Hanne. Aiko will not improve, not under your care. This part of your life, the constant tending to your wife, the incessant worry, the fear for her safety, is now over. Finally, you’ll have peace. You’re surprised to hear me say that? I know this terrain. Remember, Jiro, the Greeks thought hope was just as dangerous as all the other world’s evils, because it prolonged one’s torment.
She translates nozomi wai nai as: His hope is gone.
Shikata ga nai, says Jiro. It can’t be helped.
When the doctor says he will meet the ambulance at the hospital and check her into the psychiatric ward, Jiro thanks him and hangs up. He hears the siren in the distance and shoves his knuckles into his mouth. Angrily, he wipes away his tears with the back of his hand and hurries to the garage. As the ambulance pulls into the driveway, his wife is still sitting in the driver’s seat, her face empty, as if she’s no longer fully in this world.
In the morning, Hanne’s son calls. Tomas, her eldest, her loyal son who dutifully phones once a week to ask about her well-being. He’s an excellent cook who, whenever he’s in town, likes to make her extravagant meals—Baeckeoffe and coq au vin and white truffle risotto—delighting in watching her eat. A thirty-three-year-old lawyer, he lives in New York City with his wife and two beautiful daughters.
“How is everyone?” says Hanne.
“Everyone’s fine,” he says, “just fine.”
She hears a remoteness in his voice. Everything is not fine, but, for whatever reason, he’s not prepared to talk about it yet. It’s her job to fill in the empty space until he’s ready. She tells him about the novel she’s translating from an up-and-coming Japanese author who is about to make his grand entrance into the American publishing world. She is, of course, assuring his entrance is grand. Working day and night, she loves it in the odd way when something consumes you. As she talks, Hanne wonders if the trouble is Anne. Seven years of marriage, that’s usually when a couple hits rough waters, when she and Hiro began to drift. She asks about her granddaughters, Sasha and Irene.
Sasha, the seven-year-old, reminds Hanne of her daughter when she was that age, with her raven hair, her slanted Japanese eyes, her nostrils shaped like teardrops. It’s been six years since she’s seen or heard from her daughter, Brigitte. Where is she now? Married? A young mother? Living in a city? The country? A veterinarian? A businesswoman? It’s mind-boggling how little she knows about her daughter.
Hanne imagines Tomas’s serious face, his lips tightening into two thin wires, brooding over the best way to phrase what he wants to tell her. He was always a careful, orderly boy, all his toys in separate cardboard boxes, which he neatly labeled, “cars,” “trains,” and a Christmas file begun in January where he stored his desires. Now Tomas is considered a success. If Hiro could see his son now. Tomas, who, as she understands it, can argue his way out of anything. Their son is tall; his height is his main inheritance from Hanne’s German-Dutch side of the family; most everything else comes from his Japanese father.
“Anne wants to take the kids to the Monterey aquarium,” says Tomas. “Maybe we’ll fly out and meet you there.” That seems to get him going, because now he tells her that work is going well. “Hey! I even got to use my Japanese last week,” he says. The law firm had a group of Japanese businessmen in the office. “I was pretty bad, but they were impressed.”
“I’ll bet.” Growing up, Hanne had exposed Tomas and Brigitte to five languages, emphasizing Japanese, since that was their father’s first language. Tomas battled each and every one of them, as if they were awful, bitter medicine. But Brigitte, she gobbled them up like little candies.
Among a big box of toys for Christmas for her granddaughters, Hanne slipped in a children’s book, The Tower of Babel. A blatant attempt to expand their puddle of a world not through religion, but language. Anne has explained more than once that they just don’t see the need to raise polyglots. There are so many things to learn about the world, and English, after all, is the lingua franca in the global economy. Before she quit her job to become a full-time mother, Anne had been a biologist, doing significant research on cell division or some such thing. Hanne suspects Anne views language as a silly endeavor—subjective fluff that could never carry the same cachet as the firm objectivity of science.
Tomas is talking about his new case that revolves around the word “reasonableness.” Did the plaintiffs act reasonably?
Hanne steps into the living room. One entire wall is made of glass overlooking the city. The daylight is at such an angle that she sees her reflection in the big window. Each year she seems to become heir to more of the countenance of her German mother—her dark blond hair and pale, pale skin, her big green eyes that hold an intensity not found in photos of Hanne’s younger self. A paring down to an essence that she wishes she could stop. All these years, and she can still conjure her mother’s commanding voice—“Halt die Ohren steif!” Keep your ears stiff! Her father, a translator for the Italian and Dutch governments, had been transferred again, so she can’t remember where this memory comes from because every year, a new country, a new house, new school, new students, most of the girls cocooned in their girl worlds and the entry door firmly shut. Hanne had come home from school in tears. Everyone hated her. The girls made fun of her blue socks. “There will be no complaining in this household,” said her mother. “That is not the way of this family. We bear our burdens quietly.” And Hanne knew what her mother was going to say next, how hardship was living in rubble in war-torn Berlin. Buildings reduced to charred skeletons and the stink of death everywhere, drunk Russian soldiers careening down the streets, stealing, destroying, raping. For two months until the Allies arrived, Hanne’s mother and her Oma hid in the basement of an apartment to escape the Soviet soldiers. “We ate rats, so this hardship you speak of is nothing. A speck of dust.”
Then in a quieter conspiratorial tone, “You’re a creature out of the ordinary, my dear,” said her mother. “More evolved than most, and, I’m afraid, little understood because of it.” She told Hanne that with each new language, Hanne became, quite magically, larger and grander than before. And now with seven languages, her mother smiled brightly, “you’ve become grandest of all. How can any of those silly girls understand you?”
Now Hanne says to her son, “Interesting. What is reasonable behavior?” She stifles a yawn. Her eyelids are heavy, dry. She is exhausted from her self-imposed work schedule. But once sh
e begins work today, she knows she’ll tap into energy she didn’t even realize she had and will probably work until midnight again, unless she calls David. After spending so many hours in her mind, David reminds her she has a body. A fifty-three-year old body, she tells him, a body that still has hot flashes, though she no longer has to carry a kerchief to mop her face. A kind man, he always corrects her—a beautiful body, a desirable body, a body he wants to make love to. She runs her hand along her gray V-neck sweater and tucks a loose strand of hair back into her chignon.
Tomas is still talking about his case, and now he’s resorted to legal jargon and case citations. A cloud covers the weak sun, darkening the room. Across the street on the front porch of an old Victorian stands a tall, wiry man in a fire-engine-red coat and black pants. His hair is a mop of wild black curls, he’s too flamboyantly dressed to belong in this neighborhood. He’s holding a dozen or so brightly colored flowers and dropping them one by one—peonies? Mums?—deliberately, precisely onto the sidewalk below. Hanne imagines him standing on a bridge, tossing the flowers into a river below. Is he celebrating something? Commemorating a death?
Tomas sighs, probably realizing his mother’s mind is somewhere else, and abruptly shifts gears. “I got some news about Brigitte.”
“Oh?” She tries to sound nonchalant.
“I got a call she was taken to a hospital. That’s all I know. Could be nothing. Could be something.”
The image of a feverish Brigitte comes to mind. Bright red cheeks, so lethargic, her lips chapped and cracking. She must have been six, maybe seven, and for days and days she was burning up with fever. Hanne set everything aside, stretched out beside Brigitte on the couch, and read to her or watched movies. Time sloughed away like an unnecessary skin, as Hanne tended to her, putting the cup of ice water to her lips, offering her saltines, scratching her back to lull her to fitful sleep.
Tomas wakes her from her reverie. “When I know more, I’ll call you.” He pauses, then adds “If she allows it.”
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