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“Under a whole different heading.”
“You mean you use a different part of your feelings?”
“That’s it. Even if I use the same body parts, I make a distinction in the feelings I
use. So it really doesn’t matter. I have the ability to do that as a mature woman. But
you’re not allowed to sleep with other girls and stuff.”
“I’m not doing that!” Tengo said.
“Even if you’re not having
sex with another girl, I would feel slighted just to think
such a possibility exists.”
“Just to think such a possibility exists?” Tengo asked, amazed.
“You don’t understand a woman’s feelings, do you? And you call yourself a
novelist!”
“This seems awfully unfair to me.”
“It may be unfair. But I’ll make it up to you,” she said. And she did.
Tengo was satisfied with this relationship with his older girlfriend. She was no
beauty, at least in the general sense. Her facial features were, if anything, rather
unusual. Some might even find her ugly. But Tengo had liked her looks from the start.
And as a sexual partner, she was beyond reproach. Her demands on him were few: to
meet her once a
week for three or four hours, to participate in attentive sex—twice, if
possible—and to keep away from other women. Basically, that was all she asked of
him. Home and family were very important to her, and she had no intention of
destroying them for Tengo. She simply did not have a satisfying sex life with her
husband. Her interests and Tengo’s were a perfect fit.
Tengo had no particular desire for other women. What he wanted most of all was
uninterrupted free time. If he could have sex on a regular basis, he had nothing more
to ask of a woman. He did not welcome the unavoidable responsibility that came with
dating
a woman his own age, falling in love, and having a sexual relationship. The
psychological stages through which one had to pass, the hints regarding various
possibilities, the unavoidable collisions of expectations: Tengo hoped to get by
without taking on such burdens.
The concept of duty always made Tengo cringe. He had lived his life thus far
skillfully avoiding any position that entailed responsibility, and to do so, he was
prepared to endure most forms of deprivation.
In order to flee from responsibility, Tengo learned early
on in life to make himself
inconspicuous. He worked hard to negate his presence by publicly displaying very
little of his true abilities, by keeping his opinions to himself, and by avoiding
situations that put him at the center of attention. He had to survive on his own,
without depending on others, from the time he was a child. But children have no real
power. And so, whenever a strong wind began to blow, he would have
to take shelter
and grab onto something to prevent himself from being blown away. It was necessary
for him to keep such contrivances in mind at all times, like the orphans in Dickens’s
novels.
But while it could be said that things had gone well for Tengo so far, several tears
had begun to appear in the fabric of his tranquil life since he first laid his hands on the
manuscript of Fuka-Eri’s
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