ROBERT GARDNER -- The Verdict
This paper recently ran two very nice stories about Soto Nishikawa,
who, before World War II, operated a curio shop at the corner of Main
Street and Bay Avenue on Balboa Peninsula. I wish to add two postscripts
-- one funny, one not so funny.
Before World War II, there was something called a “Delimitation
Agreement,” by which matters of espionage, sabotage and subversion were
divided between the FBI and the Office of Naval Intelligence. The FBI
handled all cases involving civilians, except for the Japanese ones,
which belonged to Office of Naval Intelligence. I was the Orange County
representative of the Office of Naval Intelligence.
And so it was that one fine day a whole carload of very large FBI
agents came to my home on the peninsula. They said they had information
that Soto Nishikawa had a stash of machine guns in his curio shop. I
expressed some disbelief. “That’s a bunch of hysterical crap,” I think I
said, but I agreed to go along with them. We arrived at Soto’s shop, and
the FBI agents became increasingly tense.
Unconcerned, I asked Soto if he had any machine guns. To my surprise,
but validating FBI suspicions, he confessed he had lots of them. The FBI
agents immediately pulled their guns. However, just before they killed
the poor guy in a fusillade of gunfire, something occurred to me. I asked
Soto if we could see the guns.
So, surrounded by FBI agents with drawn pistols, Soto reached into a
large box and pulled out a toy machine gun, with which he shot down all
the FBI agents with sparks to my ill-restrained glee.
So much for the funny part of the Soto story. Now to the unfunny part.
Come World War II, Soto went to a horrific relocation camp on the
Colorado River, near Poston, where the temperatures hovered around 110
degrees. I went overseas to the Pacific and almost single-handedly
brought the empire of Japan to its knees with my pencil. And so the war
came to an end. We won, by the way. I folded my uniform as a lieutenant
commander, USNR, and picked up the shambles of a career.
Then one night, I got a call from the Orange County Hospital. A
patient, one Soto Nishikawa, wanted to see me. I went to the hospital,
and there was Soto, very ill but looking to the future, asking for
information on the condition of his shop. I stalled and said I’d be back
in the morning when he wasn’t so tired. There ensued one of the longer
nights of my life because Soto’s shop no longer existed. The landlord had
leased the place to someone else. What should I tell him? I still wasn’t
sure when I arrived at the hospital, but fate and the passage of a few
hours bailed me out. Soto died during the night.
The end of a not very funny story.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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