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was rearranging the items in the drawer, putting the paper clips where the eraser had
been, the pencil sharpener where the paper clips had been, and the eraser where the
pencil sharpener had been, exchanging one form of confusion for another.
After drinking a fresh cup of coffee, he went to the bathroom and shaved while
listening to a baroque music program on the FM radio: Telemann’s partitas for
various solo instruments. This was his normal routine: make
coffee in the kitchen,
drink it, and shave while listening to
Baroque Music for You
on the radio. Only the
musical selections changed each day. Yesterday it had almost certainly been
Rameau’s keyboard music.
The commentator was speaking.
Telemann won high praise throughout Europe in the early eighteenth century, but
came to be disdained as too prolific by people in the nineteenth century. This was no
fault of Telemann’s, however. The purposes for which music is composed underwent
great changes as the structure of European society changed,
leading to this reversal in
his reputation.
Is this the new world?
he wondered.
He took another look at his surroundings. Still there was no sign of change. For
now, there was no sign of disdainful people. In any case, what he had to do was
shave. Whether the world had changed or not, no one was going to shave for him. He
would have to do it himself.
When he was through shaving, he made some toast, buttered and ate it, and drank
another cup of coffee. He went into the bedroom to check on Fuka-Eri, but she was
still in a
very deep sleep, it seemed: she hadn’t moved at all. Her hair still formed the
same pattern on her cheek. Her breathing was as soft as before.
For the moment, he had nothing planned. He would not be teaching at the cram
school. No one would be coming to visit, nor did he have any intention of visiting
anyone. He could spend the day any way he liked. Tengo sat at the kitchen table and
continued writing his novel, filling in the little squares on the manuscript paper with a
fountain pen. As always, his attention became focused on his work. Switching
channels in his mind made everything else disappear from his field of vision.
. . .
It was just before nine when Fuka-Eri woke. She had taken off his pajamas and was
wearing one of Tengo’s T-shirts—the Jeff Beck Japan
Tour T-shirt he was wearing
when he visited his father in Chikura. Her nipples showed clearly through the shirt,
which could not help but revive in Tengo the feeling of last night’s ejaculation, the
way a certain date brings to mind related historical facts.
The FM radio was playing a Marcel Dupré organ piece. Tengo stopped writing and
fixed her breakfast. Fuka-Eri drank Earl Grey tea and ate strawberry jam on toast. She
devoted as much time and care to spreading the jam on the toast as Rembrandt had
when he painted the folds in a piece of clothing.
“I wonder how many copies your book has sold,” Tengo said.
“You mean
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