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for 15 minutes. How can Shīno stand it? Selling and buying stuff like this every |
day? He’s got some nerves. Half appalled and half impressed, Kazutaka thought |
of Shīno’s straight A student-like looks. Shīno was the owner of a jewelry store |
that generated millions in annual revenue. He has to have some major balls. Do |
people get used to such huge figures when they handle super expensive goods |
all the time? This sort of business is definitely not for me, Kazutaka thought. |
Taking out his cell phone from his chest pocket, Kazutaka looked at the |
display. There weren't any messages or calls received. The security company’s |
car seemed to block all transmissions and the vehicle had no antenna attached. |
The time read 9:58 p.m. It had only been a scant five minutes since Kazutaka |
left Shīno Jewelry. Only ten more minutes to get to the police station. Since the |
car didn’t have any windows, Kazutaka couldn't even tell where they were. |
“We’re almost there, Yui-san,” the driver informed him through the intercom. |
“There’s no traffic this time of the day so we’ll be at the police headquarters in |
about five minutes or so.” |
“Ah, that’s great. Thank you.” |
“Once you deliver the goods to headquarters, I’ll drive you home,” the driver |
reassured in a gentle tone and turned off the intercom. He must have been |
trying to ease Kazutaka’s tension. Kazutaka had a thing about gentle voices. |
Normally he was surrounded by people with high-pitched voices, obnoxious |
voices, and threatening tones, so Kazutaka felt relieved when hearing caring, |
gentle tones. |
I should eat that Cup-o-Noodles when I get home. I've already poured in the |
hot water. It will have gone all soggy by now. Oh well. I can dump it into a pot, |
add some more water, and heat it up. I'll just shove it into my mouth and go to |
bed straight after. I’m so tired; it’s been an exhausting day today. This has got |
to be the most tiring Sunday I have had in several years. |
Kazutaka removed the watch from his handcuffed left wrist and checked the |
time, 9:59 p.m. Two hours remaining until the end came at last to this tiring |
Sunday. |
At 9:00 p.m. sharp, Ren turned off the power on the grinding machine. The |
cutting machine on another row over also stopped with a hissing sound. |
“I'm going home for the day, boss,” his employee informed him. The young |
man had just started working at this factory after graduating from a technical |
high school last year. |
“Thank you for staying so late on a Sunday,” Ren replied and the young man |
smiled. |
“Oh, this is fun for me. It gives me more chances to handle the machines.” |
His face was dirty with machine oil, but he still had a dazzling smile. Atobe |
Manufacturing was a small family run operation consisting only of the owner |
and one employee. Machines and tools do not smile. Ren, the owner, seldom |
smiled. The smiles from the barely 19 year old worker were the only sparks of |
cheer around the place. |
Ren turned off the factory's main power, saw the worker off, locked up, and |
then went into the small room he used as living quarters. |
Ren Atobe’s late night snack for the past year invariably had been Cup-o- |
Noodles soup. He took out a package of the instant noodle soup from the |
cupboard and poured in some hot water. He then set a timer for three minutes |
before taking off his overalls to take a shower. When Ren came back from the |
shower, drying his body with a towel, the timer went off, telling him that the |
noodle soup was ready. He sat at his desk and put his hands together. Before |
picking up a pair of disposable chopsticks, Ren politely bowed, giving thanks for |
the meal. |
Ren’s father had passed away the previous year. His father had been very |
strict about etiquette and matters of politeness. Even after Ren had turned 20, |
his father had been known to throw a punch if he did not approve of his son’s |
table manners. Ren’s father, in other words, was almost like a stereotypical, |
mean old mother-in-law. Humph, old man. I hope you kick the bucket soon. Ren |
used to secretly think that and he thought that maybe his wish had been |
granted by some mean-spirited deity. One morning, Ren found his father’s body |
rigid as if he were at attention. His father was staring up at the ceiling and |
already cold. It had been such a sudden death. |
I’m sorry, Dad, Ren had apologized countless times since. It’s all because of |
my stupid wish, I’m sorry. Please rest peacefully in heaven, Ren would think as |
he bowed over the Buddhist altar over and over. |
Ren may have inherited machines and a business, but his life was lacking any |
sense of joy and fulfillment. Although he did not need anyone else to keep the |
business running, Ren decided to hire an employee to try and change things. |
That was how Ren came to find the boy, who was happy so far as he was |
handling machines all day, from a local technical high school. |
Ren’s business was making machine parts. It was a small-scale factory but had |
a very good reputation for accuracy and a low defect rate. His authoritarian |
father had trained Ren well while building up his business, which was based on |
trust. |
His father was not smiling in the picture on the Buddhist altar. The funeral |
director had asked in vain for a nicer picture. |
"Don’t you have at least one picture of your father with a smile on his face?" |
he'd asked since in the picture Ren’s father was glaring at the world, looking |
stern and dignified. He was the very persona of a highly disciplined man. "If you |
can do it today, do not wait until tomorrow." That was one of his father’s |
teachings. A small factory like this one had to be tough on itself in order to |
survive. It wouldn't have very many clients otherwise. First comes work, second |
comes trust. Sincerity, friendliness, etiquette, etc. came third or fourth. Ren |
didn’t remember the exact order of importance. Even his late father had |
sometimes gotten the order mixed up, so Ren had decided that they were |
probably equally important. |
Ren scanned an industrial magazine as he slurped up his soup. He didn't take |
on jobs for mass produced parts. Most of his clients were research and |
development departments that would order one-of-a-kind parts for precision |
instruments. From research and development to commercialization, the |
industrial world always looked for new technology. No matter what kind of part |
Subsets and Splits