First Person Singular Haruki Murakami (good book recommendations .TXT) đ
- Author: Haruki Murakami
Book online «First Person Singular Haruki Murakami (good book recommendations .TXT) đ». Author Haruki Murakami
âExcuse me,â he said. He had an unmistakable Kansai intonation. I stopped, turned around, and saw a man I didnât recognize. He looked a little older than me, and a tad taller. He had on a thick gray tweed jacket, a crew-neck, cream-colored cashmere sweater, and brown chinos. His hair was short, and he had the taut build of an athlete and a deep tan (a golf tan, it looked like). His features were unrefined, yet still attractive. Handsome, I suppose. I got the sense that this was a man who was pleased with his life. A well-bred person, was my guess.
âI donât recall your name, but werenât you my younger sisterâs boyfriend for a while?â he said.
I studied his face again. But I had no memory of it.
âYour younger sister?â
âSayoko,â he said. âI think you guys were in the same class in high school.â
My eyes came to rest on a small tomato-sauce stain on the front of his cream-colored sweater. He was neatly dressed, and that one tiny stain struck me as out of place. And then it hit meâthe twenty-one-year old brother with sleepy eyes and a loose-necked navy-blue sweater sprinkled with bread crumbs. Old habits die hard. Those kinds of inclinations, or habits, donât seem to ever change.
âI remember now,â I said. âYouâre Sayokoâs older brother. We met one time at your home, didnât we?â
âRight you are. You read Akutagawaâs âSpinning Gearsâ to me.â
I laughed. âBut Iâm surprised you could pick me out in this crowd. We only met once, and it was so long ago.â
âIâm not sure why, but I never forget a face. Plus, you donât seem to have changed at all.â
âBut youâve changed quite a lot,â I said. âYou look so different now.â
âWellâa lot of water under the bridge,â he said, smiling. âAs you know, things were pretty complicated for me for a while.â
âHow is Sayoko doing?â I asked.
He cast a troubled look to one side, breathed in slowly, then exhaled. As if measuring the density of the air around him.
âInstead of standing here in the street, why donât we go somewhere where we can sit down and talk? If youâre not busy, that is,â he said.
âI have nothing pressing,â I told him.
â
âSayoko passed away,â he said quietly. We were in a nearby coffee shop, seated across a plastic table from each other.
âPassed away?â
âShe died. Three years ago.â
I was speechless. I felt as if my tongue were swelling up inside my mouth. I tried to swallow the saliva that had built up, but couldnât.
The last time Iâd seen Sayoko she was twenty and had just gotten her driverâs license, and she drove the two of us to the top of Mt. Rokko, in Kobe, in a white Toyota Crown hardtop that belonged to her father. Her driving was still a bit awkward, but she looked elated as she drove. Predictably, the radio was playing a Beatles song. I remember it well. âHello, Goodbye.â You say goodbye, and I say hello. As I said before, their music was everywhere then, surrounding us like wallpaper.
I couldnât grasp the fact that sheâd died and no longer existed in this world. Iâm not sure how to put itâit seemed so surreal.
âHow did sheâŠdie?â I asked, my mouth dry.
âShe committed suicide,â he said, as if carefully picking his words. âWhen she was twenty-six she married a colleague at the insurance company she worked at, then had two children, then took her life. She was just thirty-two.â
âShe left behind children?â
My former girlfriendâs brother nodded. âThe older one is a boy, the younger a girl. Her husbandâs taking care of them. I visit them every once in a while. Great kids.â
I still had trouble following the reality of it all. My former girlfriend had killed herself, leaving behind two small children?
âWhy did she do it?â
He shook his head. âNobody knows why. She didnât act like she was troubled or depressed. Her health was good, things seemed good between her and her husband, and she loved her kids. And she didnât leave behind a note or anything. Her doctor had prescribed sleeping pills, and she saved them up and took them all at once. So it does seem as though she was planning to kill herself. She wanted to die, and for six months she stashed away the medicine bit by bit. It wasnât just a sudden impulse.â
I was silent for quite a while. And so was he. Each of us lost in our own thoughts.
On that day, in a café at the top of Mt. Rokko, my girlfriend and I broke up. I was going to a college in Tokyo and had fallen in love with a girl there. I came right out and confessed all this, and she, saying barely a word, grabbed her handbag, stood up, and hurried out of the café, without so much as a glance back.
I had to take the cable car down the mountain alone. She must have driven that white Toyota Crown home. It was a gorgeous, sunny day, and I remember I could see all of Kobe through the window of the gondola. It was an amazing view. But this was no longer the city I used to know so well.
That was the last time I ever saw Sayoko. She went on to college, got a job at a major insurance company, married one of her colleagues, had two children, saved up sleeping pills, and took her own life.
I would have broken up with her sooner or later. But, still, I have very fond memories of the years we spent together. She was my first girlfriend, and I liked her a lot. She was the person who taught me about the female body. We experienced all sorts of new things together, and shared some wonderful times, the kind that are possible only when youâre in your teens.
Itâs hard for me to say this now, but she never rang that special bell inside
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