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newest type, a very simple design yet very effective. With these two pieces of
equipment she would have no trouble keeping in shape.
A metal bat in a soft case was there as well. Aomame took it out of the case and
took a few swings. The shiny, new silver bat swished sharply through the air. The old
familiar heft of it calmed her. The feel of the bat in her hands brought back memories
of her teenage years, and the time she had spent with Tamaki Otsuka.
All seven volumes of
In Search of Lost Time
were piled up on the dining table.
They were not new copies, but they appeared to be unread.
Aomame flipped through
one. There were several magazines, too—weekly and monthly magazines—and five
brand-new videos, still in their plastic wrap. She had no idea who had chosen them,
but they were all new movies she had never seen. She was not in the habit of going to
movie theaters, so there were always a lot of new films that she missed.
There were three brand-new sweaters in a large department-store shopping bag, in
different thicknesses. There were two thick flannel shirts, and four long-sleeved T-
shirts. All of them were in plain fabric and simple designs. They were all the perfect
size. There were also some thick socks and tights. If she was going to be here until
December, she would need them. Her handlers knew what they were doing.
She took the clothes into the bedroom and folded them to store in drawers or hung
them on hangers in the closet. She had gone back to the kitchen and was drinking
coffee when the phone rang.
It rang three times, stopped, then rang again.
“Did you get everything?” Tamaru asked.
“Yes, thank you. I think I have everything I need now. The exercise equipment is
more than enough. Now I just have to crack open Proust.”
“If there is anything that we’ve overlooked, don’t hesitate to tell me.”
“I won’t,” Aomame said. “Though I don’t think it would be easy to find anything
you have overlooked.”
Tamaru cleared his throat. “This might not be my business, but do you mind if I
give you a warning?”
“Go right ahead.”
“Unless you have experienced it, being shut up in a small place by yourself, unable
to see or talk to anyone else, is not the easiest thing in the world. No matter how
tough
a person might be, eventually he is going to make a sound. Especially when
someone is after you.”
“I haven’t been living in very spacious places up till now.”
“That could be an advantage,” Tamaru said. “Still, I want you to be very careful. If
a person remains tense for a long time he might not notice it himself, but it’s like his
nerves are a piece of rubber that has been stretched out. It’s hard to go back to the
original shape.”
“I’ll be careful,” Aomame said.
“As I said before, you are a very cautious person. You’re practical and patient, not
overconfident. But no matter how careful a person might be,
once your concentration
slips, you will definitely make one or two mistakes. Loneliness becomes an acid that
eats away at you.”
“I don’t think I’m lonely,” Aomame declared. She said this half to Tamaru, and
half to herself. “I’m all alone, but I’m not lonely.”
539
There was silence on the other end of the phone, as if Tamaru were giving serious
thought to the difference between being alone and being lonely.
“At any rate I’ll be more cautious than I have been,” Aomame said. “Thank you
for the advice.”
“There is one thing I’d like you to understand,” Tamaru said. “We will do
whatever we can to protect you. But if some emergency situation arises—what that
might be, I don’t know—you may have to deal with it yourself. I can run over there as
fast as possible and still might not make it in time. Depending on the situation, I may
not be able to get there at all. For instance, if it is no longer desirable for us to have a
connection with you.”
“I understand completely. I plan to protect myself. With the bat, and with the
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