I am not leaving
As my plane traced its trajectory from
On the train from
And now, in
I’m traveling with two friends, but we’re not particularly friendly anymore at this point; relations are strained to say the least. Nonetheless they are following biddably, this has in fact been part of the problem as they blindly trust my notes and research. On the one hand, this means they don’t know when I screw up and get on the wrong train or get lost, they think I’m infallible. On the other hand, this means they can’t get us onto the right train or un-lost if I screw up, and I have slowly come to feel that I am a tour guide not a friend.
This tour guide has a dislike of buses, so I didn’t even tell them that there’s a direct bus from the Shinjuku station to the 5th station on
We are firmly directed to a different platform than my itinerary indicated, told that this is really where we want to be. We follow instructions but once we get there and our smiling guide leaves us, I backtrack. This isn’t right and I know it’s not, but I don’t know what is. We go back to the man with the train bible, he’s surprised to see us again but amiably turns to help us. Again. We go over the plan again, we are going to Otsuki and then on to Fujiyoshida. “Otsuki!” He exclaims. “Not Atsikki?” or something like that. Turns out the transcription from kanji to roman characters is a little flexible, and we had indeed narrowly avoided going in exactly the wrong direction.
Now we’re on the right track, but it’s taken us almost an hour and we’re still in
Next transfer, and we’re getting close. The air is thick and opaque out the window, a storm front moving in. We board the Fuji Express, and there’s nothing express about it; the ride is about 45 minutes and really we probably could have walked faster. I am castigating myself internally, but the other two haven’t caught on yet that I’ve made this way more difficult than it had to be. It’s easier to hide it, too, because we’re not really speaking to each other; I’m angry at them and they know it, and also know how dependent they are on me right now since they have no idea where they’re going and I do.
Staring out the window of this train that’s a joke really, not even a commuter train, it’s like a train in Dollywood or the monorail in Disney World. If we’d taken the bus from Shinjuku we would’ve been there an hour ago. I’m still keeping silent on that one.
Arrival at last, we pile out at the Fujiyoshida station. It’s cold here, about 20 degrees colder than in
“Where is the mountain?”
She points directly behind me. I turn, and see just that solid field of opaque air. “It’s snowing,” she explains.
I am not leaving
She helpfully hands me a sketched tourist map of the town, indicating that since we’re here we can at least go check out the shrine. We’re nearly shrined out from
Snowflakes are starting to swirl around us, we’re ill-garbed for this weather and shivering. We’re the only people on the sidewalk, or in the street; the town, we have learned, pretty much shutters up from October to April, it’s role as jumping off point for
All the way through town, and we find the shrine. The snow isn’t really coming down yet, it’s just thinking about it, a few flirty flakes that dissolve before they hit the ground. This temple is where the Fuji Fire Ceremony will start in the spring, and it’s all but abandoned now, just one young woman staffing the souvenir booth who seems as surprised to see us as everyone else has been, and limply gestures that we are free to look around as much as we like. It’s best to give crazy people their way as long as it doesn’t harm anyone.
Through the temple grounds and one of those iconic orange gates, that’s the trailhead. There are nine stations on the way to the summit, and I know we won’t get there for a few reasons, the snow but also the altitude, it’s too high for me and I won’t be able to breathe. I start up the trailhead anyway, I can’t see the mountain but at least I can stand on it. Up a slowly curving path, a rather mild ascent as such things go. I am pushing through this white air that wants to be snow but isn’t quite yet there. Trudging, and we pass a small shrine to the left, maybe that’s the first station? Or maybe the second, maybe the temple was the first, we didn’t ask and it doesn’t seem to matter that much. Another ten minutes and the ascent is steeper, and now I’m gasping for air, we’re not anywhere near the top yet but we’ve gone high enough that the altitude is starting to slow me down.
I stop and sit on a fence post. Debi and Chris join me, worried expressions creasing their faces, they knew this was going to happen, I warned them about it. They gently suggest that we turn back. Panting, my face flushed, I look up the path into that wall of snow, I can see the ground rising, going up to that peak I can’t see. They’re right, it’s time to turn back, we need to start our slow way back to
When we leave
My seat is on the right.
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