Her Town, Her Sheep
t taurant. It arted to rain again.
“Say, urned to Kobe recently?” I asked.
“Nope,” s’s just too far away. you?”
“Me neit really o go back.”
“Yeah.”
“I imagine the years.”
e reets of Sapporo for only ten more minutes, quickly running out of to talk about. I returned to my el and back to ment.
“Don’t be a stranger. take care of your self.”
“You too.”
Suddenly ter made me realize t tomorroed by over 500 kilometers. In a fe streets. e urn to our respective boring routines. e inue truggle as members of t race.
Back in my el room I turned on tV and started to co bed taking my stacked my smoked salmon sand the screen.
A young anding alone in tient carnivore. It ransfixed on advance or retreat. I felt like I ching a Goddard movie.
“I y section of to,” t local accent and , maybe stle nervous. “R toion of only about 7500 people. Nobody famous tle to t.”
t’s too bad I t.
“Our main industries are agriculture and dairy farming. Rice used to be our tory. But recent governmental subsidy policies toables for tskirts of toures tle, a t tock continues to increase. Over t ticipate furtock production.“
I really describe tiful. S ty, al-framed glasses. Sor. Yet I t secured feature. And it continued to emp feature, keeping possible ligen minutes in front of t camera, maybe oo could look so ’s .
“In tury gold dust tle to soon t ’s really quite sad.”
I popped t bite of my