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      “My husband and father will be attending,” Eiko responded. “I will be home with Hiro.”

      “Are you going to the meeting, Auntie Sadie?” Michiko asked, pulling up her socks.

      Sadie held a small black oval-shaped mirror up to her face as she applied her lipstick. “Of course, all of the teachers want to hear what it is about.”

      “Why don’t you come back to the orchard with me?” asked Kiko. “You can go home with your father.”

      They both looked at Michiko’s mother in anticipation. She nodded in agreement.

      Michiko and Kiko ran down the rutted dirt road, hand in hand.

      “Ara!” Kiko yelled as she danced into the field. “Watch out for cow pies.”

      “What’s a cow pie?” Michiko asked.

      “You know, it’s what cows leave behind in the field.” She pointed to the numerous cow droppings that dotted the field like large brown pancakes.

      Several cows stood in the shade of the apple trees. Their dark tails swished back and forth, disturbing the flies trying to settle. The two girls skipped their way across the field. Kiko made Michiko laugh, telling her how the orchard ladies scared the cows away by opening and closing umbrellas in their big black and white faces.

      Stooping to pick buttercups and Queen Anne’s lace, they heard the crack of a baseball bat and saw a ball soar skyward.

      “Someone’s playing baseball,” Kiko yelled as they ran the rest of the way.

      The girls watched the man in a red-and-white baseball cap jammed low across his forehead. He kept two, sometimes three, balls in the air at a time. He drove them easily to right field, then centre, then left. Racing after the balls, the boys from the orchard skidded and slipped in the dirt.

      “It looks like Mr. Katsumoto,” Michiko exclaimed. “I didn’t know he lived in the orchard. I thought he lived up at the Bachelor House.”

      “He just moved in,” Kiko replied. “Mr. Yama asked him to join his family so they could get a bigger house.”

      “That’s good thinking,” Michiko said.

      “That’s great thinking,” Kiko replied. “Mr. Yama and his family will live at the other end of the orchard. I won’t have to listen to him talk about my mother.”

      Michiko looked at her friend’s face. She knew how much she missed her father when he was away. She couldn’t imagine not having her mother with her. “You know what?” she said. “I think you are the bravest girl in the world.”

      Kiko studied Michiko’s face before she replied. “I think you are brave too,” she said. “I don’t have hakujin friends.”

      Chapter Seven

      THE MEETING

      Everyone crowded into the long tarpaper building used as the meeting hall. Some people stood with their arms folded, spitting out Japanese fast and loud. Others talked in English about what had once been theirs, bristling with suspicion and anger.

      Kiko and Michiko darted in and around them, listening to bits of conversation. The plank walkway was wide enough for two, but if you didn’t watch where you were going your foot could slip off into the mud.

      Kaz Katsumoto was also big news.

      “I was only nine when I lived near Athletic Park,” Kaz told the crowd of men that surrounded him. “I started off as a bat boy. I guess the rest is history.”

      “You were the youngest to join the Asahi,” one of the men said. “I saw you play for the first time.” He turned to tell the rest of the crowd, “As soon as the baseball left the pitcher’s hand, Katsumoto was running from third to home plate.”

      None of the kids in Michiko’s class planned to listen to what the visiting reverend had to say. They all wanted to investigate the fort one of the boys had built in an apple tree. Kiko couldn’t; she had to stay close by just in case her father needed something from the house. Michiko remained at her side. She hadn’t yet located her father or grandfather.

      The security truck rumbled down the rutted road and stopped. Michiko recognized Sadie among the group of teachers that got out. She put her two beautiful manicured hands to her chest and breathed in deeply. “I miss the smell of all that grass,” she said to Michiko.

      “I don’t miss the wolves,” Michiko said in response. She would never forget the night the hungry animals left the mountains and came right up to the farmhouse porch.

      As Sadie and Michiko walked through the crowd they heard a long low whistle. “Looks like there still are a few wolves around,” Sadie whispered in her ear. Then she put her hand up to pat the twist of hair at the nape of her neck. She was dressed in a wide-banded pink-and-white-striped cotton skirt and a sleeveless white blouse. Her perfume filled Michiko’s nose, reminding her of the wild pink roses that grew along the roadside.

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