“When I was young,” he said, “you had to walk through the city to become lonely. Now loneliness arrives automatically.”… The old pimp’s name was Kido, though nobody knew if that was real or inherited like a shop sign. He worked the eastern side of Kabukichō, near the convenience store with the broken LED panel and the alley where the tourists stopped taking photographs. At sixty-two, he still wore polished leather shoes even in the rain. He claimed shoes were the first test of a man’s discipline. “You can tell everything from the walk,” he said, warming canned coffee between his palms. “The eyes are second. The wallet is third.” The younger men laughed at him because they thought the trade had become digital. In a sense, they were right. Most customers no longer wandered drunk through neon streets looking for introductions. They arrived through encrypted Telegram channels, disappearing Instagram stories, Chinese-language concierge ...