329
his eyes. Even in the dark, she could see his warm eyes. She could look into them and
see the world as he saw it.
Aomame’s occasional overwhelming need to sleep with men came, perhaps, from
her wish to keep the Tengo she nurtured inside her as unsullied as possible. By
engaging in wild sex with unknown men, what she hoped to accomplish, surely, was
the liberation of her flesh from the desire that bound it. She wanted to spend time
alone with Tengo in the calm, quiet world that came to her after
the liberation, just the
two of them together, undisturbed. Surely that was what Aomame wanted.
Aomame spent several hours that afternoon thinking about Tengo. She sat on the
aluminum chair on her narrow balcony, looking up at the sky, listening to the roar of
the traffic, occasionally holding a leaf of her sad little rubber plant between her
fingers as she thought of him. There was still no moon to be seen in the afternoon sky.
That wouldn’t happen for some hours yet.
Where will I be at this time tomorrow?
Aomame wondered.
I have no idea. But that’s a minor matter compared with the fact
that Tengo exists in this world
.
Aomame gave her rubber plant its last watering, and then she put Janá
č
ek’s
Sinfonietta
on the record player. It was the only record she had kept after getting rid
of all the others. She closed her
eyes and listened to the music, imagining the
windswept fields of Bohemia. How wonderful it would be to walk with Tengo in such
a place! They would be holding hands, of course. The breeze would sweep past,
soundlessly swaying the soft green grass. Aomame could feel the warmth of Tengo’s
hand in hers. The scene would gradually fade like a movie’s happy ending.
Aomame then lay down on her bed and slept for thirty minutes, curled up in a ball.
She did not dream. It was a sleep that required no dreaming. When she woke, the
hands of the clock were pointing to four thirty. Using the food still left in the
refrigerator, she made herself some ham and eggs. She drank orange juice straight
from the carton. The silence after her nap was strangely heavy.
She turned on the FM
radio to find Vivaldi’s Concerto for Woodwinds playing. The piccolo was trilling
away like the chirping of a little bird. To Aomame, this sounded like music intended
to emphasize the unreality of her present reality.
After clearing the dishes from the table, Aomame took a shower and changed into
the outfit she had prepared weeks ago for this day—simple clothes that made for easy
movement: pale blue cotton pants and a white short-sleeved blouse free of
ornamentation. She gathered her hair in a bun and put it up, holding it in place with a
comb. No accessories. Instead of putting the clothes she
had been wearing into the
hamper, she stuffed them into a black plastic garbage bag for Tamaru to get rid of.
She trimmed her fingernails and took time brushing her teeth. She also cleaned her
ears. Then she trimmed her eyebrows, spread a thin layer of cream over her face, and
put a tiny dab of cologne on the back of her neck. She inspected the details of her face
from every angle in the mirror to be sure there were no problems, and then, picking
up a vinyl gym bag with a Nike logo, she left the room.
Standing by the front door, she turned for one last look,
aware that she would
never be coming back. The thought made the apartment appear unbelievably shabby,
like a prison that only locked from the inside, bereft of any picture or vase. The only