Poinko vs. the Volcano

I stared blankly at my watch. After one. In all the excitement of spilling Manhattans across my notebook and quietly hoping I had missed the last train, I had missed the last train. I stepped out into the brisk air, a solid four hours to fill before the trains resumed. Though the arcades had ceased hosting half the planet, there was more life in the streets than I had expected. Maybe a picaresque journey through the wee hours was not such a ridiculous prospect. I paused on a bridge, gripping its chilly railing. Blunt boots, black jacket, wind-tousled hair, I lingered for some time, the canal strolling impassively beneath me, before I arrived, as if by divine providence, at the idea of trying another bar.

Following some cursory research I set myself up in what transpired to be a dreary approximation of an American sports bar. Its sole plus was its span of hours; if I held out here until closing, there would be a negligible wait for the first train. Nestled in a booth with a mug of beer and a basket of all-batter fries, I surveyed the bar's collection of untiring youth and found myself wincing at their gaiety. Old fool. Had I not semi-willed this eventuality, I could have been blissfully face-down on a futon, or greedily consuming umeboshi over the sink at my accommodation. Instead, I was licking grease from my fingertips and glaring at strangers for failing to exalt my existence.

I lasted an hour. The walk isn't all that far, I reasoned, ascending to street level. But it had begun to rain. I trudged with my umbrella to the outskirts of the city, frequently having to duck under shelter to plot my path. The rain grew heavier and my progress slowed. Looking out from under an awning, I ground my imperfect teeth at fate. I had missed the last train in Osaka and not a single thing had happened that would fuel even the dullest of anecdotes, let alone several drawn-out paragraphs. Granted, my strategy for adventure boiled down to sitting on my own in bars and rendering my beer mugs in Biro, but sometimes that was enough.

I set out once more, feeling the cold touch from the darkened bottoms of my trouser legs. Then I stopped. A warm orange light in a second-floor window had caught my eye; in fact, both of them. I could make out a middle-aged woman polishing a glass in a narrow lamplit room and a couple of figures seated at a counter. An external stairway led up to a door, beside which I could see a small sign with a picture of a flamingo on it. Whatever it was, it looked achingly cosy. Well, of course it was a bar. It has probably become obvious at this point that I am essentially just "cataloging the world's seedy bars so as to deliver a user's guide to the bewildered and bemused", as my father puts it. But through the world's seedy bars the cosmos opens up and all of creation is revealed, hunched over and half-drunk and desperately sad.

I considered not going in. Wouldn't I be a conspicuous, unwelcome interloper among regulars? But the deadening rain convinced me. I deposited my umbrella into a pot by the entrance and slipped nervously inside. The room held little more than a counter and a few tables by the window, but the limited space was enlivened by an eclectic selection of pop culture artefacts, some familiar, many obscure. The woman I had seen from the street welcomed me with a kindly smile and gestured towards the vacant seats. As I took up a spot at the counter, I noticed a vintage Yoda figurine hanging in its packet beside the till, giving me the once-over.

I ordered a bottle of Asahi, the only beer they offered, and began my customary sketch. When, a few minutes later, I had completed my masterpiece, a compact young woman on the next seat decided to engage me—as if it had been a viable strategy after all. So rescued from artistic exile, I began conversing in an easy manner I hadn't realised I possessed, even, at one point, pretending I could solve a Rubik's Cube behind my back—and I had to concede that this reality was preferable to the one in which I caught the last train, gorged myself on salt plums and passed out. I failed to record the names of the woman and the bartender, but I do recall that the former's meant 'love child' and the latter's meant 'wings'. Love Child worked at a market stall in town and had not long finished for the day. Wings, I was surprised to learn, had only opened up at 10 pm that night. Guess this was the place to be.

An unshaven man in a narrow-brimmed hat entered part way through my second bottle. He had a wild smile and apparently some familiarity with Love Child and Wings. Ordering a whisky and joining us at the counter, it wasn't long before he took an interest in my presence. I quickly dispensed the usual bits of biography and shifted the questioning to him, asking first his profession.
"I am Poinko," he said.
I was understandably puzzled.
"Er, what's a Poinko?"
He apologised for his limited English and beckoned me to wait. For a time he looked as if he were attempting to conjure the right words through sheer intensity. Though it is true that most people in Japan are not fluent in English, I have been consistently impressed by the efforts people made to communicate with me, whatever their proficiency. Certainly no one's English was as poor as my Japanese.
"You know Docomo?" he said finally.
"The phone company?"
"Yes! I am Poinko for Docomo."
Love Child leaned in to show me her phone, amusement dividing her face. I observed what I can only describe as a mad-looking chicken puppet thing. It had googly eyes and red circles for cheeks and a goofy, gaping beak, and it stood before a Docomo logo.
"I am Poinko," said the man again, grinning.
Due to communication difficulties, I was regrettably never quite able to determine if this man had created Poinko, operated Poinko or merely thought he was Poinko. If he hasn't succeeded in dying and I happen to meet him again, I will get to the bottom of it.

More details emerged, often in unexpected bursts. He had recently turned 60. He was a Yakuza. No; he had a Yakuza face. Then he began to describe an island. Its name was unfamiliar to me but from his attempts to detail its location I placed it somewhere in Southeast Asia. He said he wanted to go to a particular volcano there, a volcano that was still very much active. A hiking pack fixed to his back, he would trek across the dark grey earth, climbing through streaks of hot smoke until he reached the crumbling lip. And he would stand there, somehow numb to the bludgeoning heat, and he would jump. No; this was not suicide. He would not jump. He would take out a 1-litre bottle of sake from his hiking pack and he would begin to drink from it. And he would drink until he could no longer keep his balance. With enough momentum he might penetrate the lava. More probably he would dent its surface and remain buoyant, his yellow feathers bursting into searing flame, his goofy plastic features blazing off his face.

He explained that he was 60 years old and it was time for him to cease being an annoyance to others; indeed, to cease being. A return to nature, he called it. He spoke with disarming geniality and not a hint of self-pity.
"I am crazy!" he announced suddenly. He laughed and threw back his glass.
"I'm crazy too," I said, raising my bottle.
"Me too," said Love Child.
"Me too," said Wings.
Though we diverged when it came to volcanoes.

In fact, the volcano idea turned out to be Plan B. Plan A was less poetic: euthanasia in Washington, D.C. under the Death with Dignity Act. Based on a quick review, I can not see how he could possibly qualify. But he would always have the volcano to fall back on.

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The Rape of the Lock

The door might have been green. I didn't record the colour at the time, didn't think to, but that's how it appears in my memory when I call it up. A green door. Scratch marks, loose flakes of paint at its right edge from my fingernails and a thin makeshift drain cover I found nearby. A sliding door, gliding easily back and forth along its little metal track, one way open, one way closed. It might have been green. I'm holding thirty rooms, people will be anxious to get out before the traffic gets heavy: flat Dublin voices in a hotel bar, midday tea to my midday stout.

Halfway down the far side, a keyhole set in a square of steel and a furrow for purchase. I obtained the key from a combination box on the wall. Advertised as an 'entire home'—a steal!—the reality was a futon, an unplugged fridge, a sink and an electric kettle: everything you need to sleep and heat water. The bathroom facilities were shared in a room down a concrete corridor. Squat toilet, shower with bung door, washer hooked up to nothing. Thematically unified by mould and cracked tiles. But I can unburden, see Osaka and worry later.

At some point I had locked the door from the inside. A clockwise turn unlocked it, loosed the latch. I slid open the door and stepped into the corridor, sliding the door closed behind me. I am alone now but for the woman tending the bar. No music, only traffic and gulls, soft lamplight. I carefully inserted the key and twisted my wrist but the lock didn't give. Funny. I tried to slide the door back open but it was firmly stuck in its place, as if it had already been locked. Passport, medication, clothes— Thinking it jammed, I made an effort to force the thing with my fingers and a drain cover I initially took for a doormat until I saw, upon lifting it, that it covered a man-sized drain at the foot of another guest's door. No avail.

I took a train to a phone box. Blue, I think. Emerged unsuper, flustered. Finally a response: this has never happened with previous guests. How exactly does imparting that piece of information help matters? My host resolved the issue, at cost, and explained that the latch mechanism must have stuck shut as I had failed to fully unlock it before closing the door. Give me five stars, he joked, seriously. You can have four, you fucker, and a mixed review. His public review of me is here replicated in its entirely: "He caused a trouble but it was ok".

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Joy in the Evening

It was dim and drizzly and probably Friday. Stepping off at Kichijōji, I had no plans beyond welcoming in the evening with a drink of some description. I would have been well served parking myself in some tiny inlet of Harmonica Alley, perhaps the very spot my brother and I enjoyed shōchū and complimentary bar snacks on my second trip to Tokyo, but instead I was lured inside a nearby HUB by the prospect of Happy Hour prices. It took one brief pan to realise I had chosen poorly. Designed to resemble a British pub, the place had all the charm of somewhere designed to resemble a British pub. But—and this is crucial—it did appear to offer liquid with alcohol in it. There was nothing for it, then, but to follow my right foot in and ride the thing out.

When one bounces between bits of the world, having a coffee here, a beer there, and perhaps a light lunch over there, the act of ordering and paying, so intuitive in the homeland, quickly becomes something of a quagmire; having witnessed every conceivable variation, one is left milling about awkwardly at the threshold, unsure of how to proceed. In this particular instance, my customary milling was cut short by lurking floor staff and I was promptly escorted to a table in the non-smoking section, very much like you wouldn't be in your average British pub. A brief survey of the drinks menu revealed only cocktails were priced in the spirit of the hour, none of which sang off the page, so I resigned myself to the least exorbitant beer and awaited the server's return.

Five minutes elapsed before a Good Samaritan in a baseball cap leaned over from an adjacent table and told me I would need to order at the bar if I actually wanted anything. Slightly embarrassed, I thanked him and rose to do just that, knocking over a menu stand with my grossly overstuffed backpack as I did so. True to form, the Samaritan again intervened, springing from his seat and waving me on my way with a reassuring smile. Not wishing to put him out, however, I decided to tend to the matter myself. In respect of the stand, the operation could be considered a success, for I managed, with no great exertion, to restore the thing to an upright posture. In respect of the contents, on the other hand, I must confess to coming up short, in as much as their ideal placement is inside the stand from whence they came and not scattered about the floor. Now looking a touch exacerbated, the Samaritan stooped to collect the stray menus while I flashed crimson and vanished around the corner to obtain a much-needed tonic.

I had in mind to take my drink to a different table, out of sight of anyone who had witnessed the previous scene, but, alas, nowhere suitable was available, and I was forced to negotiate my way back to my initial spot under the television. Having done so, and completed three eager sips, I was approached by a member of staff and asked if I wouldn't be so kind as to move tables to allow for a party of more than one. I did not actually understand any of the words, mind you, as none of them happened to be 'movie' or 'pencil' or 'train station', but the context was clear enough and I dutifully rose to find another seat. Dumbly scouring the room, I noticed I was being beckoned to occupy the spare spot at the Samaritan's table.

Up close the Samaritan revealed himself to be the person I had seen earlier, only closer. Beneath his propped cap was a broad pockmarked face whose textured appearance added character to the whole, somewhat in the manner of Edward James Olmos. Opposite him was a tall gentleman with prominent incisors and a sense of humour perpetually visible in his eyes; to his right, a man with a wave of orange-dyed hair and a scribbled-on moustache. One married, one divorced, one single, they had the makings of a terrible sitcom. They were here, it transpired, to meet girls. I must have been something of a disappointment in that regard.

Upon discovering I had not seen Tokyo Tower (in truth because I hadn't wanted to, but I didn't say that), I was whisked away to visit the thing, all expenses shouted. Now I'm afraid I will have to leave it there, as the evening proceeded pleasantly and without incident.

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