Jlpt N1 Old Question [2027]

Last week, he had looked up the old cram school. It was a convenience store now. A quick search of Mr. Yamamoto’s name led to a funeral home’s online memorial registry. Sensei had passed away five years ago.

Kenji stared at the receipt. The debt was monetary, yes. But the real debt—the one he could never repay—was the opportunity to look Sensei in the eye and say, “I am no longer the man who stole.” jlpt n1 old question

He didn’t need to open it. He already knew what was inside: a receipt for ¥300,000, dated August 12, 1998. And a blank postcard. Last week, he had looked up the old cram school

Why? That was the question that haunted him as he held the envelope now, retired, his daughter grown. At first, it was poverty. Then, pride—he wanted to send ¥500,000, to prove he was more than his mistake. Then, the shame of the delay itself. Each passing year made the blank card heavier. A postcard that should have taken a year became a decade. A decade became a lifetime. Yamamoto’s name led to a funeral home’s online

He was caught the next day. The police were called. He was 22, his future reduced to a single, crushing sentence.

Sensei paid back the missing money from his own pension. He gave Kenji a receipt for the amount, and a blank postcard. "When you can repay the debt," he said, "write the date and the amount on this card. Then send it. Not before."