8
Our viewpoint has
returned to Eri Asai's room. Aquick scan reveals nothing changed.
The night has deepened with the passage of time, however, and the
silence is one degree heavier.
No, something has
changed. Greatly.
The change is immediately obvious. The bed is
empty. Eri Asai is gone. The bedding is undisturbed, but it is not
as if she woke up and left while we were away. The bed is so
perfectly made, there is no sign she was sleeping in it until a few
moments before. This is strange. What could have
happened?
We look around.
The TV is still on. It displays the same room
it was showing before. A large, unfurnished room. Ordinary
fluorescent lights. Linoleum floor. The picture, however, has
stabilised, almost to the point of unrecognisability. The static is
gone, and instead of bleeding into each other, the images have
clear, sharp outlines. The channel connection—wherever it might be
tuned in to—is steady. Like the light of the full moon pouring down
on an uninhabited grassland, the TV's bright screen illuminates the
room. Everything in the room, without exception, is more or less
under the influence of the magnetic force emitted by the television
set.
The TV screen. The Man with No Face is still
sitting in the chair. Brown suit, black shoes, white dust, glossy
mask adhering to his face. His posture, too, is unchanged since we
last saw him. Back straight, hands on knees, face angled slightly
downwards, he stares at something straight ahead of him. His eyes
are hidden by the mask, but we can tell they are locked on
something. What could he be staring at with such intensity? As if
responding to our thoughts, the TV camera begins to move along his
line of vision. At the point of focus stands a bed, a single bed
made of unadorned wood, and in it sleeps Eri Asai.
We look at the empty bed in this room and at
the bed on the TV screen. We compare them in detail. The conclusion
is inescapable: they are the exact same bed. The covers are exactly
the same. But one bed is on the TV screen and the other is in this
room. And in the TV bed, Eri Asai lies asleep.
We suppose that the other one is the real
bed. It was transported, with Eri, to the other side while we were
looking elsewhere (over two hours have passed since we left this
room). All we have here is a substitute that was left in place of
the real bed—perhaps as a sign intended to fill the empty space
that should be here.
In the bed in that other world, Eri continues
sleeping soundly, as she did when she was in this room—just as
beautifully, just as deeply. She is not aware that some hand has
carried her (or perhaps we should say her body) into the TV screen.
The blinding glare of the ceiling's fluorescent lamps does not
penetrate to the bottom of the sea trench in which she
sleeps.
The Man with No Face is watching over Eri
with eyes that are themselves hidden from view behind their shroud.
He aims hidden ears towards her with unwavering attention. Both Eri
and the Man with No Face intently maintain their respective poses.
Like animals hiding in camouflage, they curtail their breathing,
lower their body temperature, maintain total silence, hold their
muscles in check, and block out their portals of awareness. We seem
to be looking at a picture that has been paused, which is not in
fact the case. This is a live image being sent to us in real time.
In both that room and this room, time is passing at the same
uniform rate. Both are immersed in the same temporality. We know
this from the occasional slow rising and falling of the man's
shoulders. Wherever the intention of each might lie, we are
together being carried along at the same speed down the same river
of time.