Garage

Chapter 431,178 wordsCompleted

Jimmy (now calling himself Snowman) lives a routine corporate life as a “word‑serf” for the self‑help firm AnooYoo. His once‑effortless physique now requires constant gym visits; he monitors his Joltbar (steroid) consumption and endures hair loss despite a six‑week AnooYoo follicle‑regrowth course that he himself marketed. He reflects bitterly on the scam nature of the product, noting his own role in creating its ad copy.

Jimmy’s thoughts drift to his former friend Crake, who graduated early, completed post‑graduate work, and currently resides at the powerful RejoovenEsense compound, climbing the corporate ladder swiftly. Their email contact has thinned; Crake vaguely mentions a mysterious “white‑hot” project with full corporate backing, and invites Jimmy to visit. Jimmy wonders about Crake’s hairline and his own dwindling relevance.

Crake informs Jimmy that Uncle Pete died suddenly from an unexplained virus. The death is described as rapid and catastrophic, with sabotage suspected but unproven. When Jimmy asks if anyone else was infected, Crake says no, leaving Jimmy uneasy.

Sexual restlessness persists for Jimmy; intimacy no longer satisfies, and he feels driven by a compulsive need for physical release. On evenings when his lovers cannot meet, he goes to a mall cinema or watches the news to feel part of a crowd. The news cycle repeats familiar catastrophes—plagues, famines, floods, wars—and sensational sex scandals.

Jimmy becomes fixated on a recurring story about “girls locked in garages.” The reports claim the girls are “practically” adopted maids, some allegedly abused, others apparently content with their confinement. Details vary: some girls are said to have been drugged, forced into obscene performances, smuggled across oceans, or made to commit sacrilegious acts with reptiles; others describe the garages as comfortable, with regular meals and no overt mistreatment, though the girls receive no pay and cannot leave.

One specific account follows a girl rescued from a locked garage in San Francisco belonging to a wealthy pharmacist. She tells a grateful, almost naïve story of being sold to a “Mister,” rescued after being seen online, flown abroad, and promised schooling once her English improves. She claims she studies English, watches TV, and wants to study child psychology. The prosecution fails to discredit her testimony; the man receives a light sentence with a requirement to send her to school.

Jimmy recognizes a striking similarity between the girl in the news broadcast and a photograph he has kept since he was fourteen, tucked among his Martha Graham Academy transcripts. The older photo shows an eight‑year‑old girl; the news subject appears younger but shares the same blend of innocence, contempt, and understanding. The uncanny likeness makes Jimmy feel light‑headed, as if standing on a cliff edge, and unsettles him deeply.