was happily chanting a Chinese poem, eyes cast down toward the drill ground, when a deck officer accosted him. âStop pining for the outside world!â the officer quipped, and struck him twice. Wakatsuki returned to the barracks wearing a stupefied look. He had thought he had been displaying his true Japanese spirit.
March 19
The weather is utterly changeable. The night before last was awfully hot and humid, and we all broke out in a greasy sweat as we slept. I rose in the middle of the night and removed my shirt and drawers. Then last night, abruptly, we had a snowstorm. Flakes blew in through gaps in the windows, piling up inside the barracks. We got twelve centimeters in total, but today the sun shone. Mt. Tsukuba was all white.
A number of packages arrived yesterday and today, but most of the contents were confiscated. Hardly anything made its way to us. I received a package too, and I found myself presented with a pair of woolen socks. But everything else was seized.
Akame, the assistant division officer, failed to turn up at dinner. It was Fujikuraâs turn to serve the meal, so he carried the officerâs dinner to his room. There, Fujikura beheld on the desk a mountain of confiscated treatsânavel oranges, jellied bean paste, rice crackers, chocolates, and cans of fruit cocktail. No wonder the man hadnât come to dinner. âIt sure looked good,â Fujikura reported.
Yesterday, Wakatsuki was made to open his parcel in front of the assistant officer. He cut the string and out spilled roasted peanuts, all over the floor. âThrow those away,â the officer ordered. Wakatsuki swept the peanuts into a dustpan, but on his way to the incinerator he managed to wolf them all down, together with their fresh coating of dirt. No doubt that accounts for the severe diarrhea he has been experiencing all day. A copy of the Weekly Asahi was sent for N., but that, too, was confiscated. Only the wrapper made its way to the addressee. I donât see why they should seize a magazine like the Asahi. Someday I will enter the teaching profession, and the way these instructors behave, including Akame, gives me food for thought.
In the afternoon they passed out cards on which we were to indicate whether we prefer to train for piloting or reconnaissance. Without hesitation I put myself down for piloting. Fujikura and Sakai did the same. I expected Fujikura to go for reconnaissance, judging from his words and deeds, because it carries a somewhat lower risk, but I was wrong. We are to take a Morse code test from 1730 to 1840 tomorrow, the results of which will figure into the decision as to who is assigned to the flight group and who to the recon group.
I also filed an application to buy a sword. With any luck I should be able to get a stainless steel Kamakura or Kikusui sword.
It seems like the date for our departure is finally drawing near, though the talk about our leaving the base at the end of March was nothing but a groundless rumor after all. I saw the calendar in the instructorsâ room. The schedule is chock full through the whole month of April.
March 26
At 8:30, we fell in for an outing. Those who hadnât pressed their pants under the bedding, or whose socks were dirty, or who hadnât shaved or polished the heels of their shoes, were ordered to take a step forward. Each received a blow of correction from the division officer.
At quarter past nine, we were finally granted liberty. We passed through the gate and walked, one by one, for four kilometers along the Navy Road to the railroad station. They say that if you go up to the rooftop of the administration building on a liberty day, you can see a line of navy-blue military uniforms strung out from the base to the town like a procession of ants. Enlisted men gave me crisp salutes, and I acknowledged them with stiff ones of my own, feeling like an officer for the first time. We are commanded, most sternly, to preserve our honor as