56
Come to think of it, what she was doing now was not substantially different from a
prostitute on the prowl.
As the time passed, the place gradually filled up. Before she knew it, Aomame was
surrounded by the buzz of conversation. But none of the customers had what she was
looking for. She drank another gin and tonic, ordered some crudités (she hadn’t eaten
dinner yet), and continued reading. Eventually a man came and sat a few seats away
from her at the bar. He was alone. Nicely tanned, he wore an expensively tailored
blue-gray suit. His taste in neckties was not bad, either—neither flashy nor plain. He
must have been around fifty, and his hair was more than a little thin.
He wore no
glasses. She guessed he was in Tokyo on business and, having finished the day’s
work, wanted a drink before going to bed. Like Aomame herself. The idea was to
calm the nerves by introducing a moderate amount of alcohol into the body.
Few men in Tokyo on business stayed in this kind of expensive hotel. Most chose a
cheap business hotel, one near a train station, where the bed nearly filled the room,
the only view from the window was the wall of the next building, and you couldn’t
take a shower without bumping your elbows twenty times. The corridor of each floor
had vending machines for drinks and toiletries. Either the company wouldn’t pay for
anything better, or the men were pocketing the travel money left over from staying in
such a cheap place. They would drink a beer from the local liquor store before going
to bed, and wolf down a bowl of rice and beef for breakfast at the eatery next door.
A different class of people stayed at this hotel. When these men came to Tokyo on
business, they never took anything but the bullet train’s luxury “green cars,” and they
stayed only in certain elite hotels.
Finishing a job, they would relax in the hotel bar
and drink expensive whiskey. Most held management positions in first-rank
corporations, or else they were independent businessmen or professionals such as
doctors or lawyers. They had reached middle age, and money was no problem for
them. They also knew more or less how to have a good time. This was the type that
Aomame had in mind.
Aomame herself did not know why, but ever since the time she was twenty, she
had been attracted to men with thinning hair. They should not be completely bald but
have something left on top. And thin hair was not all it took to please her. They had to
have well-shaped heads. Her ideal type was Sean Connery. His beautifully shaped
head was sexy. Looking at him was all it took to set her heart racing. The man now
sitting at the bar two seats away from her had a very well-shaped head—not as
perfect
as Sean Connery’s, of course, but attractive in its own way. His hairline had receded
from the forehead and his sparse remaining hair recalled a frosty meadow in late
autumn. Aomame raised her eyes a little from the pages of her book and admired his
head shape for a while. His facial features were nothing special. Though not fat, his
jowls were just beginning to sag, and he had a hint of bags under his eyes. He was the
kind of middle-aged man you see everywhere. But that head shape of his she found
very much to her liking.
When the bartender brought him a menu and a warm towel, the man ordered a
Scotch highball without looking at the menu. “Do you prefer a certain brand?” the
bartender asked. “Not really,” the man said. “Anything will be fine.” He had a calm,
quiet voice and spoke with a soft Kansai accent. Then, as if it had just occurred to
him, he asked if they had Cutty Sark. The bartender said they did.
Not bad
,
thought
57
Aomame. She liked the fact that he had not chosen Chivas Regal or some
sophisticated single malt. It was her personal view that people who are overly choosy
about the drinks they order in a bar tend to be sexually bland. She had no idea why
this should be so.
Aomame also had a taste for Kansai accents. She especially enjoyed the mismatch
between vocabulary and intonation when people born and raised in Kansai came up to
Tokyo and tried to use Tokyo words with Kansai pronunciation. She found that
special sound to be strangely calming. So now she made up her mind: she would go
for this man. She was dying to run her fingers through the few strands of hair he had
left. So when the bartender brought him his Cutty Sark highball, she said to the
bartender loudly enough so the man was sure to hear her, “Cutty Sark on the rocks,
please.” “Yes, ma’am, right away,” the bartender replied, his face a blank.
The man undid the top button of his
shirt and loosened his tie, which was a dark
blue with a fine-grained pattern. His suit was also dark blue. He wore a pale blue shirt
with a standard collar. She went on reading her book as she waited for her Cutty Sark
to come. Discreetly, she undid the top button of her blouse. The jazz duo played “It’s
Only a Paper Moon.” The pianist sang a single chorus. Her drink arrived, and she
took a sip. She sensed the man glancing in her direction. She raised her head and
looked at him. Casually, as if by chance. When their eyes met, she gave him a faint,
almost nonexistent smile, and then immediately
faced forward again, pretending to
look at the nighttime view.
It was the perfect moment for a man to approach a woman, and she had created it.
But this man said nothing.
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