Chapter 1 - Jiji greets the world
KIKI WALKED slowly home from school. A dozen paces ahead,
classmates giggled and laughed as they waited to cross the street. Kiki
slowed down. She didn't want to talk to anyone. An old woman with hair
almost purple approached. A beagle puppy dragged her forward, straining
at its leash. Kiki smiled as the puppy leaped and sniffed and licked at
her shoes.
"Hey!'' Kiki laughed, as the dog jumped into her arms. She scratched it behind the ears. "Nice doggie, nice doggie.''
"I'm so sorry,'' the woman said, but she was smiling, too.
"That's OK. How old is she?''
"Three months, but she's big for her age.'' The old lady looked at Kiki more closely. "She's a lot like you, I guess."
Kiki looked down, embarrassed. She was big for her age, taller than
all the girls and most of the boys in her class. She didn't like to
think about it, and certainly didn't want to talk about it. If the
woman said anything about her big feet, she would run away, puppy or no
puppy.
Just in time, the beagle kissed Kiki on the lips, changing the subject. "I think she's beautiful,'' she said.
The woman leaned down and asked, ``Do you have a dog? Kiki set the
pup down and shook her head, "No. My dad says our apartment is too
small.'' She sighed as the woman and her puppy set off; she waved but
they didn't see.
Kiki stumbled at the entrance to her apartment
building. She looked down to see what had tripped her up. Nothing.
She'd tripped over her own feet. "Why me?'' she whispered. Being ten
years old was too hard! She'd grown so fast over the past year, she
could barely recognize herself.
She let herself in her apartment
near and settled in with her favorite video game but she couldn't
concentrate. The sun sparkled on the Edogawa river, a wide expanse of
slow moving water that cut the eastern suburbs off from Tokyo. The
river was almost in her backyard.
Kiki liked to imagine that
if she traveled far enough down the wide river, somewhere, at a village
or town, her mother would be waiting for her. She shook her head. It
wasn't true. Her mother disappeared when she was just a baby and she
wasn't waiting for her anywhere. Her father said he didn't know where
she was and Kiki believed him.
He was a good father and she knew
he wouldn't lie to her. He was less certain when she asked why her
mother left. "It's always difficult to know what another person is
thinking, but I believe your mother
was more interested in the
idea of marriage, than marriage itself. She liked all the attention and
all the parties. After the wedding, people went back to their own
lives, they didn't seem as interested in her.''
"But what about me?'' Kiki asked.
Her father hugged her and stroked her hair. "I guess it was the same
thing. Maybe she saw having a baby as another way of being popular. It
worked for a while, of course, but after you were born she found out
that a baby was hard work. It wasn't her fault that she couldn't do
it, and it wasn't your fault either.''
Kiki gave up on the video
game and watched the boats going back and forth on the river. It
wasspring; the water was flat and blue. The little boats with their
shiny paint sounded cheerful, their engines chug-chugging as they
worked.
Kiki wished she were a boat. She was lonely and wanted to sail away.
Far away, far across the island that was Honshu, there was a village.
At the back of an old house, in a yard with a white fence, Jiji was
very scared. Something big was happening, something huge. She couldn't
see, of course, but she could feel her brothers and sisters wiggling,
trying to get a good place in line. Jiji stayed in the back. They
wanted to come out; she wanted to stay.
It was nice where she
was. Warm and dark. There was no danger and she was never hungry. The
line moved forward. Jiji had no choice; she couldn't swim against the
tide and the approaching, unfamiliar light.
Plop! Jiji was born. She was the last to meet the world.
"Oh, it's so small,'' a voice exclaimed.
"It's no bigger than a mouse,'' a louder voice replied.
A huge, rough thing licked at Jiji's fur. A second later she tasted
air for the first time. It wasn't so bad and she relaxed a little.
"Don't get too fond of it,'' the loud voice warned. "It's weak and will certainly die.''









