Ring
air. He climbed the stairs to the street. With the green of the palace grounds in front of him, the exhaust fumes generated from the confluence of the No. 5 Expressway and the Ring Road didn't seem so noxious. The brightening sky shone in the cool of the morning.
    Asakawa was physically fatigued from having worked all night, but he wasn't especially sleepy.
     
    The fact that he'd completed his article stimulated him and kept his brain cells active. He hadn't taken a day off for two weeks, and planned to spend today and tomorrow at home, resting up. He was just going to take it easy-on orders from the editor-in-chief.
    He saw an empty taxi coming from the direction of Kudanshita, and he instinctively raised his hand. Two days ago his subway commuter pass from Takebashi to Shinbaba had expired, and he hadn't bought a new one yet. It cost four hundred yen to get to his condominium in Kita Shinagawa from here by subway, while it cost nearly two thousand yen to go by cab. He hated to waste over fifteen hundred yen, but when he thought of the three transfers he'd have to make on the subway, and the fact that he'd just gotten paid, he decided he could splurge just this once.
    Asakawa's decision to take a taxi on this day and at this spot was nothing more than a whim, the outcome of a series of innocuous impulses. He hadn't emerged from the subway with the intention of hailing a cab. He'd been seduced by the outside air at the very moment that a taxi had approached with its red "vacant" lamp lit, and in that instant the thought of buying a ticket and transferring through three separate stations seemed like more effort than he could stand. If he had taken the subway home, however, a cer-tain pair of incidents would almost certainly never have been connected. Of course, a story always begins with such a coincidence.
    The taxi pulled to a hesitant stop in front of the Palaceside Building. The driver was a small man of about forty, and it looked like he too had been up all night, his eyes were so red. There was a color mug shot on the dashboard with the driver's name, Mikio Kimura, written beside it.
    "Kita Shinagawa, please."
    Hearing the destination, Kimura felt like doing a little dance. Kita Shinagawa was just past his company's garage in Higashi Gotanda, and since it was the end of his shift, he was planning to go in that direction anyway. Moments like this, when he guessed right and things went his way, reminded him that he liked driving a cab. Suddenly he felt like talking.
    "You covering a story?"
    His eyes bloodshot with fatigue, Asakawa was looking out the window and letting his mind drift when the driver asked this.
    "Eh?" he replied, suddenly alert, wondering how the cabby knew his profession.
    "You're a reporter, right? For a newspaper."
    "Yeah. Their weekly magazine, actually. But how did you know?"
    Kimura had been driving a taxi for nearly twenty years and he could pretty much guess a fare's occupation depending on where he picked him up, what he was wearing, and how he talked. If the person had a glamorous job and was proud of it, he was always ready to talk about it.
    "It must be hard having to be at work this early in the morning."
    "No, just the opposite. I'm on my way home to sleep."
    "Well, you're just like me then."
    Asakawa usually didn't feel much pride in his work. But this morning he was feeling the same satisfaction he'd felt the first time he'd seen an article of his appear in print. He'd finally finished a series he'd been working on, and it had drawn quite a reaction.
    "Is your work interesting?"
    "Yeah, I guess so," said Asakawa, noncommit-tally. Sometimes it was interesting and sometimes it wasn't, but right now he couldn't be bothered to go into it in detail. He still hadn't forgotten his disastrous failure of two years ago. He could clearly remember the title of the article he'd been working on:
    "The New Gods of Modernity."
    In his mind's eye he could still picture the wretched figure he had cut as

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