He carried only one camper-style bag, the kind meant for movement, not comfort. It rested near his feet like a declaration of intent. There was something brave and vulnerable about travelling so far, so young and alone. Exciting, surely, but frightening too. Still, he ate everything offered to him, nodded often, and smiled with an openness that invited conversation. The more I watched him, the more curious I became about his past travels. At one point, I saw him writing, maybe in a journal. Every so often, he looked up from the page, glanced around the coach, and then gazed out the window at the passing fields, houses, and trees. He wrote purely in Japanese. The characters were neat and steady, even though the train made his lines waver slightly. From fragments of conversation, he held his pen loosely but with confidence, as if he knew just what he wanted to write down. I wondered which details he chose to remember. Which moments would he keep, and which would he leave out?