Sun Suhe wondered if he had heard something wrong.
"Ah, I said it..."
The girl murmured softly in an inaudible voice. Her face turned even redder in an instant, and even her ears seemed to be stained with red clouds. Before she finished speaking, she had already bowed slightly to Sun Suhe, and then walked all the way.
Trotting, disappearing at the end of the passage as quickly as a shy little sparrow.
It's strange. Judging from the appearance of this girl, she should still be in school. She seems to be a little younger than Cheng Zitong. It's not a holiday today. Why did she come to the chess court? She spoke pure Mandarin and actually said that she was here to play.
? Sun Suhe couldn't help but be very curious about the girl he met by chance, but now was not the time to care about it. He suppressed the urge to catch up and ask, turned around and rushed into the bathroom in a hurry. It was better to deal with urgent matters first.
When Sun Suhe returned to the lobby on the first floor, in addition to Mr. Akutagawa, Mr. Akiyuki Owada, who had come with him, had also parked his car and was waiting there. Owada is a senior consultant at Hanzawa Office and is a project team serving "sunalice Co., Ltd."
As a member of Sun Suhe's team in Tokyo, he is responsible for all matters related to Sun Suhe in Tokyo.
Nippon Chess Academy is open all year round except around New Year's Day. The Go Palace Museum on the b1 floor is open to the public every day; the exhibition hall and Go popularization classroom on the first floor; as well as the Go Academy customer service, Go theme store and matchmaking for Go enthusiasts on the second floor.
Bureau lobby.
The third floor and above are the game rooms and the office floors of the Nippon Chess Academy. On days when there are no games, these game rooms will also be rented to chess fans. There is only one game room exception, which is the highest level game room.
"Yugen Room" is the highest stage of Japanese Go. Even professional chess players rarely have the opportunity to play in Yugen Room in their lifetime.
Owada had obviously done a lot of homework in advance. He suggested that if President Sun was interested, he might as well start at the Go Hall Library on the B1 floor. He would then go to the Go Academy customer service to coordinate and arrange a visit to the third floor or above. Sun Suhe naturally had no objections.
Together with Akutagawa Ryuya, we happily headed to the B1 floor.
Every year, the Go Palace Museum nominates seniors who have made great contributions to Go to enter the Go "Hall of Fame" here. It is said that the selection criteria are extremely strict. So far, only more than ten people, including Wu Qingyuan's 9th Dan, are qualified to stay here.
statue.
In addition, a huge amount of precious information and Go cultural relics are also displayed here. Pictures of chessboards unearthed from ancient tombs of the Eastern Han Dynasty, the origins of elegant names such as "Shou Tan" and "Wangyou" in Chinese, accurately reproduced Dunhuang, ancient Song Dynasty
Chess records...the carefully arranged exhibition outlines the origin and evolution of Go in China.
The Japanese Go part uses the restored model of the castle chess game, the allusion of Erchi's famous game, Hidetoshi's undefeated chess record, etc. It tells the story of the four major families headed by the Honinbo family, the Yasui family, the Inoue family, and the Hayashi family surrounding the "celebrities".
"Qi Suo" launched a century-old struggle. Until the twentieth century, Sun Su
He stopped in front of the display cabinet and looked at the book 2. written by Wu Qingyuan 9th Dan and Koutani Minoru 9th Dan. On the yellowed cover were written in ink "Go Revolution", "New Stone Laying Method", "Star·San々·Use of Tianyuan"
". It was this thin book that set off a wave of revolution in Go in the 20th century.
While walking around, it seemed as if there was a rich history written in thick ink and color, and Sun Suhe even had a strange feeling. He seemed to be able to touch the strong emotions that countless chess players in the past and present poured into the chessboard. But this feeling
Just like clouds and smoke, people can't tell whether it is a real existence or an illusion caused by excitement.
Sun Suhe savored the feeling for a long time and felt slightly disappointed. He was still not sure whether this wonderful feeling was real, but what was certain was that it was definitely not the effect of Taoist magic. He had been feeling this since he entered the Japanese Chess Academy.
I have been keeping an eye out secretly, hoping to find some traces of foreign interference, but so far I have found nothing.
After leaving the Go Hall Museum, Sun Suhe and Akutagawa Ryuya walked around leisurely from bottom to top. In addition to the exhibition hall as soon as they entered the door, there was also a Go popularization classroom on the first floor. Sun Suhe looked at it for a while and then flipped through it.
There was nothing noteworthy about the promotional materials, so it didn’t bother them.
The second floor is the most lively. Even if it is not a holiday, the game hall here is still full of chess players. In addition to chess boards, chess pieces, and game records, the Go-themed store next to it also has folding fans signed by famous chess players and many other peripherals.
Product. Sun Suhe picked up a folding fan signed by Zhang Xu with nine sections, and saw that instead of the common mottos and mottos on the fan, there was a question of life and death ingeniously drawn on it.
Sun Suhe was about to try to explain it when Owada came over with a smile and said that he had already communicated with the customer service of the chess academy. He heard that he was a guest of Director Hirano. The lady at the customer service was very enthusiastic and said that he could visit as much as possible, even between Yugen
You can also open it for a look.
Sun Suhe closed the folding fan and clapped his palms: "Okay."
Everyone went up. There was no competition in the game room on the third floor today. Several Go research groups were in class. The fourth floor was the office floor of the Chess Academy. The general affairs and personnel department, the chess game planning department, the finance department and other offices were here. Sun Suhe
While listening to the customer service lady's explanation, I observed quietly, but I never found any traces of Taoist magic.
Going up to the fifth floor, you can faintly smell the smell of wood in the air. Here are the only five Japanese chess game rooms in the Japanese chess academy. The chess players here do not sit on chairs to play chess, but follow the tradition and play on the cushions.
Play the game in a sitting posture.
Each of the five game rooms has an elegant name, namely: Xingyun, Liushui, Jingguang, Qingfeng, and the highest level Yugen. The Yugen room is named after Kawabata Yasunari, Japan's first Nobel Prize winner for literature, customer service
After the lady pushed open the wooden door, Sun Suhe saw the famous four-character "Profound and Mysterious" banner hanging on the wall that he had inscribed in his own hand.
The customer service lady said enthusiastically: "President Sun, if you are interested, you can go in and sit for a while."
"Is it okay?" Sun Suhe was of course very interested.
There are no gorgeous decorations inside Yugenma. Because there is no competition, there is not even a chessboard, only two cushions placed opposite each other. However, this ordinary-looking Japanese room is the pinnacle of Japanese chess, and has been passed down from generation to generation.
A generation of chess players devoted their most intense emotions to this goal, and displayed their most outstanding wisdom. They used victory or defeat, honor and disgrace, and everything in life as bets, and they galloped persistently between the black and white squares and circles.
When you are here, even a layperson cannot help feeling it. Sun Suhe was respectful and sat down on one of the cushions in an upright posture. He then closed his eyes slightly and held the imaginary chess piece in his hand and dropped it to the imaginary chessboard. The chess piece struck the chessboard.
There was a silent crisp sound on his face. At that moment, Sun Suhe had a real and unreal feeling, an elegant question and an iron horse fighting, which was the spirit of a chess player in this mysterious place.
The flash came on with a click, and Owada held up his mobile phone to take a picture of Sun Suhe's movements. "President Sun really has the grace of a celebrity."
Without Mr. Akutagawa's translation, Sun Suhe could roughly guess what Owada was talking about. He raised the corner of his mouth and smiled, but felt helpless in his heart. Before he had time to explore the wonderful feeling just now, he was disturbed by the flash. Just now
That feeling is hard to get back for a while.
Sun Suhe was bored, so he got up and continued to visit the game rooms and offices on the sixth, seventh, and eighth floors. After walking up and down, Sun Suhe didn't find the clues he wanted. At this time, he left the appointment at three o'clock to meet.
It was still early, and it was not convenient for him to directly ask the staff of the chess academy if anything strange had happened recently. He remembered the little girl he met earlier who claimed to be here to play. Why not talk to her? Maybe he could find out something.
.
Sun Suhe then returned to the chess game hall on the second floor to search carefully, and sure enough, he found the girl in a corner by the window. He saw her sitting alone in front of the chessboard, with a Japanese chess master spread out next to it.
Zhang Xu’s 9th Dan 3.
She held the mobile phone in her right hand and stared at the screen intently. She frowned slightly from time to time, showing that she was thinking seriously. She grabbed a few chess pieces in her left hand and played with them casually. Occasionally, she looked away from the mobile phone screen and placed a few chess shapes on the chessboard.
It seems like he is solving a life-or-death problem.
"Hello, can I sit here?" Sun Suhe walked closer and asked with a smile.
The girl looked up, her expression a little complicated. She put down her mobile phone and chess pieces, sat upright, nodded and replied, "Okay."
Sun Suhe took out the chair opposite her and sat down. He saw that she no longer played with her mobile phone or played chess. She sat upright like a primary school student and looked at him seriously with her eyes wide open. This serious politeness made Sun Suhe feel a little bit.
Sorry: "Will it bother you?"
"Yes, you are disturbing me." The girl replied bluntly.
Sun Suhe suddenly felt embarrassed.
"Ah, I said it again..." The girl blushed and muttered softly.
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