Pinball, 1973

Pinball, 1973 Read Online Free PDF

Book: Pinball, 1973 Read Online Free PDF
Author: Haruki Murakami
waiting.
    “It’ll start jumping, just you wait,” the Rat consoled J. “You’ll be so busy you’ll curse your luck.”
    “Think so, eh?” J voiced dubiously as he plopped down on a barstool he’d commandeered behind the counter and began scraping away with an ice pick at the butter that had dropped on the toaster.
    Nobody knew what to expect from there on in.
    So the Rat went on thumbing through the pages of his book, while J, between polishing the liquor bottles, would take puffs on the filterless cigarette protruding from his stubby fingers.
    * * *
    For the Rat, some three years before, the passage of time had begun little by little to lose its evenness. In the spring he quit the university.
    Of course, the Rat had any number of reasons for dropping out. The wiring to those reasons had gotten impossibly tangled up, and when things heated up past a critical point, the fuse blew with a bang. Some stayed with him, some were blown clear away, some things bit the dust.
    He never explained to anyone why he quit school. It would have taken him five hours to put the pieces in place. And if he told one person, then everyone else would want to hear. Pretty soon he’d be in a real fix, and have to explain it to the whole world. The very prospect was enough to plunge the Rat into a state of depression.
    “They didn’t like the way I mowed the grass in the courtyard,” he’d say whenever further explanation became unavoidable. One coed actually went so far as to go check out the courtyard lawn. “You didn’t do such a bad job,” she told him when she came back. “Maybe some bits of paper here and there, but...” “A matter of taste,” was all the Rat said.
    Or when he was in a fairly good mood, he might say, “We just couldn’t get along, the university and me,” and leave it at that.
    But that’s three whole years ago now.
    Everything passed unbelievably quickly. Until at some point, the entire palette of built-up emotions lost all its color, fading to the meaninglessness of old dreams.
    * * *
    The Rat left home the year he entered university and moved into a penthouse apartment his father had once used as a study. His parents didn’t oppose the move. After all, they’d bought the place figuring to hand it over to their son by and by. Plus they had no real objection to him struggling along on his own for a while.
    Nevertheless, no one would have ever said he was struggling, no matter how they looked at it. A melon just doesn’t look like a rutabaga. The place, you see, was a truly spacious two-room, living-dining-kitchen layout, complete with air-conditioning, telephone, a 17-inch color TV, bath-and-shower unit, an underground parking space set up with a Triumph, and to top it off, the ideal veranda for sunbathing in style. From his top-floor southeast corner window, he could gaze down on a magnificent view of the city and sea. Open the side windows and the rich scent of trees and the sound of birds chirping wafted in.
    The Rat spent leisurely afternoons in the comfort of a rattan chaise lounge. Lazily closing his eyes, he’d feel the gentle current of time flow through his body like a stream of water. Hours, days, weeks, the Rat spent like that.
    Occasionally, though, tiny ripples of emotion would be set off, as if to remind him. At times like that, the Rat simply closed his eyes, sealed off his mind, and sat tight until the ripples subsided. By then it would already be getting a little dark, toward early evening. The ripples gone, that same hushed tranquillity would come over him again, as if nothing had happened.

Chapter 3
    Except for newspaper salesmen, no one ever knocked at my door. So if there was a knock, I never opened the door, never even acknowledged them.
    But that Sunday morning the caller kept right on knocking, thirty-five times. Eventually I gave in, dragged myself out of bed with eyes still half-closed, stumbled to the door, and opened it a crack. Standing in the hall was a fortyish man in
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