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somebody rewrite
Air Chrysalis
to get it into better shape? I couldn’t give her much
more than a rough idea on the phone and ask her
if she had any interest, assuming
we’d meet and talk over the details. I kept it sort of vague. If I got
too
direct about
stuff like this, I could put myself in an awkward position.”
“And so?”
“No answer.”
“No answer?”
Komatsu paused for effect. He put a cigarette between his lips and lit it with a
match. Hearing the sounds over the phone, Tengo could imagine the scene vividly.
Komatsu never used a lighter.
“Fuka-Eri says
she wants to meet you first,” Komatsu said, exhaling. “She didn’t
say whether or not she was interested in the plan, or whether or not she liked the idea.
I guess the main thing is to start by meeting you and talking about it face-to-face.
She’ll give me her answer after that, she says. The responsibility is all yours, don’t
you think?”
“And so?”
“Are you free tomorrow evening?”
His classes started in the morning and ended at four. Fortunately (or unfortunately)
he had nothing after that. “I’m free,” he said.
“Good. I want you to go to the Nakamuraya Café in Shinjuku at six o’clock. I’ll
reserve a table for you in the back where it’s quiet. It’ll be in my name and on the
company’s tab, so eat and drink as much as you like. The two of you can have a nice,
long talk.”
“Without you?”
“That’s the way Fuka-Eri wants it. She says there’s no point in meeting me yet.”
Tengo kept silent.
“So that’s how it is,” Komatsu said cheerily. “Give
it your best shot, Tengo.
You’re a big lug, but you make a good impression on people. And besides, you teach
at a cram school. You’re used to talking to these precocious high school girls. You’re
the right guy for the job, not me. Flash her a smile,
win her over, get her to trust you.
I’ll be looking forward to the good news.”
“Now, wait just a minute. This was all
your
idea. I still haven’t even told you if I’ll
do it. Like I said the other day, this is a tremendously risky plan, and I don’t see it
working all that well. It could turn into a real scandal. How am I supposed to
convince this girl I’ve never met to go along with it when I myself haven’t
decided to
take it on?”
Komatsu remained silent at his end. Then, after a moment’s pause, he said, “Now
listen, Tengo. We’ve already pulled out of the station. You can’t stop the train and get
off now. I’m totally committed. And you’re more than half committed, I’m sure. We
share the same fate.”
Tengo shook his head.
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