CHAPTER 3
Aomame
SOME CHANGED FACTS
Aomame climbed down the emergency stairway in her stocking feet. The wind
whistled past the stairway, which was open to the elements. Snug though her miniskirt
was, it filled like a sail with the occasional strong gust from below, providing enough
lift to make her steps unsteady. She kept a tight grip on the cold metal pipe that served
as a handrail, lowering herself a step at a time, backward, and stopping now and then
to brush aside the stray hair hanging down her forehead and to adjust the position of
the shoulder bag slung diagonally across her chest.
She had a sweeping view of National Highway 246 running below. The din of the
city enveloped her: car engines, blaring horns, the scream of an automobile burglar
alarm, an old war song echoing from a right-wing sound truck, a sledgehammer
cracking concrete. Riding on the wind, the noise pressed in on her from all
directions—above, below, and 360 degrees around. Listening to the racket (not that
she wanted to listen, but she was in no position to be covering her ears), she began to
feel almost seasick.
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