Page 16 of Otogizoshi: The Fairy Tale Book of Dazai Osamu
âSuddenly youâre laying down conditions? Well, it all depends on your results, of course. Maybe we could become friends.â
âEh, heh, heh!â The tanuki leers, suddenly displaying his lecherous side. âThatâs a coy way to put it. Sheâs sly, this one. Iâm justââ he starts to say but pauses to snag a passing spider with his tongue and slurp it down. âIâm just so happy. I almost feel like crying.â
He rubs his nose and pretends to wipe a tear.
Itâs a brisk, invigorating summer morning. The surface of Lake Kawaguchi is shrouded in smoky white mist. Up on the mountainside, the tanuki and the rabbit are drenched in that mist as they toil away cutting and bundling sticks.
; The tanuki displays not the single-minded devotion he promised, so much as a mindless frenzy, and it makes for a disturbing sight. Groaning exaggeratedlyâUnngh! Unngh!âhe swings his sickle with reckless abandon, letting out occasional howls of pain. He dashes left and right and back and forth in his fanatical quest for dead sticks, clearly wanting only to show his beloved Bunny what a hard worker he is. It isnât long, of course, before he runs out of steam. Wearing a look of utter exhaustion, he tosses the sickle aside.
âLook at this. Look at all the blisters on my hands. Ooh... They hurt. And Iâm so thirsty! Hungry too. I mean, that was some serious manual labor I just did. Letâs take a little break, what? Open up the old box lunch, and... oof, foo, foo!â Laughing this odd-sounding, embarrassed laugh, he reaches for the lunch box, which is about the size of a large oilcan, opens it, sticks his nose inside, and begins slurping up the contents. This he does with genuine single-minded devotion, not to mention sound effects: mush-mush, gatz-gatz, pep-pech. The rabbit looks up from her work and gapes at him, aghast. She sidles over to look inside the container but immediately draws back, giving a little cry of horror and covering her face with both hands. It seems there are some rather extraordinary ingredients in that lunch.
But today, for reasons of her own, the rabbit isnât heaping the usual abuse on the tanuki. She has remained silent all morning, wearing a manufactured half-smile on her lips, efficiently gathering firewood, and ignoring the overly excited tanukiâs manic behavior. Even after viewing the contents of the lunch and receiving a serious shock, she neither complains nor gags but goes right back to cutting wood. Sheâs downright tolerant today, and the tanuki is very pleased with himself: Is she finally falling for me, after seeing the way I cut firewood? Well, what woman wouldnât be impressed by a muscular performance like that? Some lunch, thoughâIâm stuffed! Kinda sleepy too. Maybe a little nap... Convinced heâs earned a bit of self-indulgence, he stretches out and is soon snoring loudly. Whatever fool dreams heâs dreaming, he holds forth at some length in his sleepâ âLove potions donât work, I tell ya!ââand doesnât awake until nearly noon.
âYou slept a long time,â the rabbit says gently. âIâve tied my firewood into one big bundle. You do the same, and weâll carry it all down to Ojii-sanâs house.â
âLetâs do that, yeah.â The tanuki yawns extravagantly, scratching his arm. âIâm starving. Itâs not good for me to be sleeping the day away on an empty stomach,â he says, and gravely adds, âIâm sensitive, you know. All right, then, Iâll hurry up and bundle all that wood I cut. The lunch box is empty, after all. Time to wrap this up and find some food.â
They head back down the mountain, both bearing large bundles of sticks strapped to their backs.
âYou go first,â says the rabbit. âIâm afraid there might be snakes around here.â
âSnakes? Iâm not afraid of no snakes. If I see any, Iâll just catch âem andââ Heâs about to say eat âem but swallows the words. âIâll catch âem and kill âem. Just follow me.â
âItâs so nice to have a big, strong man around at times like this.â
âYou flatter me,â the tanuki says, puffing out his chest. âBut, really, youâre being awfully sweet today. Too sweet, almost. Youâre not going to take me back to Ojii-sanâs and have him make me into tanuki stew, are you? Ah, ha, ha, ha! Anything but that!â
âWell, if youâre so suspicious, you neednât bother coming. Iâll go alone.â
âNo! I didnât mean it like that. Iâll go with you. Itâs just... Iâm not afraid of snakes, or anything else in this world, but that Ojii-san is a tough customer. I mean, he was going to eat me for dinner! Pretty barbaric, if you ask me. At least, itâs not exactly what youâd call genteel. Tell you whatâIâll carry this wood as far as the big hackberry tree just short of his yard, and you take it from there, all right? Thatâs as far as I go. I mean, if I came face to face with old Ojii-san right now, I wouldnât know what to say. Itâd just be awkward. Hey, whatâs that? I hear something. What do you think it is? Hear it? Itâs like a click, clack sound.â
âWell, what do you expect? This is Click-Clack Mountain.â
âClick-Clack Mountain? This one weâre on?â
âYes. Didnât you know that?â
âNope. I never knew this mountain had a name. Pretty weird name too. Youâre kidding me, right?â
âHeavens, no! All mountains have names, you knowâMount Fuji, Mount Nagao, Omuro Mountain. This oneâs named after the sound it makes. There it goes again, hear it? Click, clack.â
âI hear it all right. Funny, though. I never heard it before, not even once. I was born on this mountain and in thirty-some-odd years here, Iââ
âMy! Is that how old you are? The other day you told me you were seventeen! You beast. I thought your face was too wrinkled and your back too bent for seventeen, but I didnât think youâd try to shave off twenty whole years! You must be almost forty, right? Thatâs old.â
âNo, no! Seventeen. I am seventeen. Seventeen. Hey, sometimes my back might look a little bent when I walk, but itâs not because of age. Itâs just a natural reaction to hunger. When I said âthirty-odd-years,â I was talking about my brother. My brother is always using that expression, see, and I just sort of picked it up. Expressions can be contagious, right? You know how it is, kid.â
Heâs so flustered that heâs gone and called her âkid.â
âI see.â The rabbit remains cool. âBut I never knew you had an older brother. In fact, I remember you saying, âOh, Iâm so lonely, Iâm so alone, I have no parents or brothers or sisters.â Those were your exact words. You told me I had no idea what it felt like to be all on your own. So?â
âRight. Thatâs right.â Not even the tanuki knows what heâs trying to say now. âThatâs why everything is so complicated in this world. Nothing is black or white. Sometimes you might have a brother and sometimes you might not.â
âThat doesnât even make any sense,â the rabbit says disparagingly. âItâs just crazy talk.â
âYeah, no, the truth is, I do have one brother. I hate even to say it, but heâs a drunkard and a layabout and just a complete embarrassment, and Iâm really ashamed of him, but for thirty-some-odd yearsâIâm talking about my brother nowâheâs been a burden to me. Ever since he was born.â