A Fine Day for Kangarooing
The Vampire Cabbie
The Vampire Cabbie
by MURAKAMI Haruki
Translated by Kiki
Sometimes bad things and bad luck pile up. But that is just a
generalization. However, if bad things keep happening to the same
person, if they keep piling up, then that isn’t a generalization
anymore.It has become personal. In that case thinking in terms of a
generalization doesn’t help because one wants sympathy. Consider all
of these things that happened to me today: I missed the woman I was
waiting for. I lost a button on my jacket. I met somebody on the
train that I didn’t want to meet.I felt the first twinge of a
toothache. And now it’s raining and I’m trapped in a cab, stuck in
traffic because of an accident. If anybody says these are just
general things then I’ll going to belt him. Don’t you agree?
So that is why getting along with others is so difficult. Sometimes
I imagine life as a welcome mat, spending all my time just lying at
the door in the entranceway. But probably in the doormat world one
can generalize too. Doormats have their own problems too, I suppose,
their own ups and downs.What are we to do? Maybe it doesn’t really
matter.
Anyway I was riding in a taxi, feeling trapped and stuck. A fall
rain was beating on the roof of the cab. I could hear the periodic
click of the meter. The pounding of the rain on the roof of the cab
pierced my brain like a machine gun.
Complicating matters was that I just quit smoking three days ago. I
tried to pass the time but nothing came to mind. So I started to
ponder the proper sequence for undressing a woman: First the
glasses, and then the wristwatch. Next the bracelet with its soft
metallic sound. After that. ..
“Excuse me,” asked the taxi driver, diverting my attention from the
first button of the blouse. “Do you think that vampires really
exist?”
“Vampires”? I repeated, dumbfounded.I glanced at the driver in the
rearview mirror. He looked back at me in the rearview mirror.
“By vampires you mean creatures that suck blood . . .“
“Yeah.Do you think that they exist?”
“Not vampires in the movies or flying bats, but the real thing?”
“Of course, of course,” he answered. The cab crept forward a couple
of feet.
“I don’t know.”I told him. “I have no idea.”
“That’s not an answer. Do you believe or don’t you? Just give me an
answer.”
“I don’t believe in vampires.”
“So you don’t believe that vampires exist, right?”
“I don’t believe in vampires.” I reached into my pocket and pulled
out a cigarette and popped it into my mouth.I left it unlit.
-“What about ghosts?Do you believe in ghosts?”
“I have a feeling that ghosts exist.”
“I didn’t ask about your feeling, I asked whether you think they
exist. Just give me a yes or a no.”
“Yes,” I blurted out, “I believe in ghosts.”
“However you don’t believe in vampires.”
“No, I don’t.”
“Well, what in the world is the difference between ghosts and
vampires?”
“Ghosts are the antithesis of the physical world,” I mumbled. That’s
just nonsense I thought to myself.But spouting such nonsense is one
of my strengths.
“Hmm.”
“But vampires, they are a corruption of our physical existence. They
change what it means to be physical.”
“Ok, if I accept that ghosts are the antithesis of the world, then
how can I buy your notion that vampires corrupt that same existence?
I can buy your antithetical argument, but I’m not sure about the
corruption part.”
“Hmm, that’s a good question. And after all it does open up an
endless can of worms.”
The cab driver smiled at me. “You’re pretty smart, you know that.”
“I don’t know about that.I graduated from college seven years ago.”
The driver continued to inch the cab forward into traffic. He put a
thin cigarette into his mouth and lit it, looking at the cars in
front of us. A hint of mint floated through the cab.
“But if vampires really exist, then what?”
“That would be something to worry about, wouldn’t it?”
“Do you think that’s enough?”
“No, probably not.”
“You’re right. Yet consider faith. It’s really sublime. It can move
mountains, you know. If you believe in a mountain it exists. If you
don’t, then it doesn’t.”
For some reason that reminded me of an old Donovan song.
“Is that right?”
“That’s right.”
I took a deep sigh. The unlit cigarette remained in my mouth. “Say,
do you believe in vampires?”
“Yes, I do.”
“Why?”
“Why? I just do.”
“Can you prove it?”
“There’s no connection between faith and evidence.”
“If you say so.”I returned to the buttons on the woman’s blouse:one,
two, three….
“But I can prove it,” the cabbie said.
“Really?”
“Really.”
“How?”
“Because I’m a vampire.”
We were quiet for a while. The cab barely moved more than fifteen
feet. The rain continued to beat on the roof. The meter showed more
than 1500 yen.
“Say, could I borrow your lighter?”
“Sure, no problem.”
I lit my cigarette with his white bic and fed my lungs with nicotine
for the first time in three days.
“We’ve really been stuck here for a long time, haven’t we?”
“That’s for sure,” I answered.“Speaking of vampires…”
“Yeah.”
“Are you really a vampire?”
“Yes I am. That’s not something I’d lie about, is it?”
“I guess not. How long have you been a vampire?”
“More than ten years now. Back to about the time of the Munich
Olympics, I think.”
“ I remember them.Mark Spitz and Olga Korbut. And weren’t some
Israelis killed?”
“Yeah, I think so.
“Do you mind if I ask another question?”
“Fire away.”
“Why are you driving a cab?”
“Well I don’t want to be just another stereotyped vampire who wears
a cape and rides in a carriage, or one of those vampires living in a
castle. That’s bullshit.I’m just like you. We aren’t really all that
different. I pay taxes. My hanko-stamp is registered with the city
just like yours. I go to discos and play pachinko. Do you think
that’s strange?”
“No, not really.But we aren’t really the same, are we?”
“What’s the matter, don’t you believe me?”
“Of course I believe you,” I said quickly. “If you believe in a
mountain then it exists.”
“Ok then.”
“So sometimes you drink blood.”
“Of course, I’m a vampire after all.”
“Say, does some blood taste better than others?”
“Yes, of course.For example, your blood is no good because you smoke
too much.”
“But I did quit for a little while, but I suppose that doesn’t
really matter.”
“Speaking of drinking blood, I have to admit that I prefer the blood
of women.I really do.”
“That makes sense.By the way, which actresses do you think have
delicious blood?”
“Well, I’d love to sink my teeth into Kayoko Kishimoto. And Kimie
Shingyoji’s blood looks really delicious too. But I don’t have any
interest in Kaori Momoi. She’s too independent for me.”
“It’s good to drink blood?”
“Yeah, for me.”
We separated about fifteen minutes later. I entered my apartment,
turned on the light and grabbed a beer from the refrigerator. After
that I called the woman that I had missed earlier in the afternoon.
I was calling simply because we had missed each other earlier in the
day.
“Say, for the time being, it might be a good idea not to ride in any
black-lacquered cabs with downtown plates. Ok?”
“Why not?”
“Because the cabbie is a vampire.”
“Really?”
“Really.”
“Should I be worried?”
“Of course.”
“So I shouldn’t take any black-lacquered cabs with downtown plates,
right?”
“Yeah.”
“Thank you.”
“You’re welcome.”
“Good night.”
“You too.”