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Margaret cried then—not loud sobs, but a quiet leak of salt water that soaked into the face cradle. He did not wipe her tears. He simply pressed two fingers to the base of her throat, where the crying turned into a long, shuddering exhale.
“I know.”
It was the rain that brought them together—a relentless Kyoto downpour that turned the cobblestone lanes into rivers of gray. Margaret, a fast-talking graphic designer from Chicago, had fled the drizzle into a narrow alley, where a single wooden sign, carved with the kanji for An (ease), hung above a sliding door. She was exhausted, not just from the jet lag, but from a deeper, bone-weary tiredness that had settled into her shoulders over three years of deadline-driven mania. japanese massage american wife