{"id":"01KG074Y29FNAVTBJ1FB8W227N","cid":"bafkreieuie5iesss57ihze7y7ok4yky4jdmxe6svgmfubycetfivc7wbqi","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":495,"extracted_at":"2026-01-27T17:13:25.099Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 3","source_file":"01KFYTG9MG93RTB6YAW34V48XG","start_line":446,"text":"   427\tI'd want to call up, that's all. I'd rather call old Thomas Hardy up. I like that Eustacia Vye.\n   428\tAnyway, I put on my new hat and sat down and started reading that book Out of\n   429\tAfrica. I'd read it already, but I wanted to read certain parts over again. I'd only read\n   430\tabout three pages, though, when I heard somebody coming through the shower curtains.\n   431\tEven without looking up, I knew right away who it was. It was Robert Ackley, this guy\n   432\tthat roomed right next to me. There was a shower right between every two rooms in our\n   433\twing, and about eighty-five times a day old Ackley barged in on me. He was probably the\n   434\tonly guy in the whole dorm, besides me, that wasn't down at the game. He hardly ever\n   435\twent anywhere. He was a very peculiar guy. He was a senior, and he'd been at Pencey the\n   436\twhole four years and all, but nobody ever called him anything except \"Ackley.\" Not even\n   437\tHerb Gale, his own roommate, ever called him \"Bob\" or even \"Ack.\" If he ever gets\n   438\tmarried, his own wife'll probably call him \"Ackley.\" He was one of these very, very tall,\n   439\tround-shouldered guys--he was about six four--with lousy teeth. The whole time he\n\n<!-- [Page 11](arke:01KFYTAC71H5Y7P7MRNDP6FCCJ) -->\n   440\troomed next to me, I never even once saw him brush his teeth. They always looked\n   441\tmossy and awful, and he damn near made you sick if you saw him in the dining room\n   442\twith his mouth full of mashed potatoes and peas or something. Besides that, he had a lot\n   443\tof pimples. Not just on his forehead or his chin, like most guys, but all over his whole\n   444\tface. And not only that, he had a terrible personality. He was also sort of a nasty guy. I\n   445\twasn't too crazy about him, to tell you the truth.\n   446\tI could feel him standing on the shower ledge, right behind my chair, taking a\n   447\tlook to see if Stradlater was around. He hated Stradlater's guts and he never came in the\n   448\troom if Stradlater was around. He hated everybody's guts, damn near.\n   449\tHe came down off the shower ledge and came in the room. \"Hi,\" he said. He\n   450\talways said it like he was terrifically bored or terrifically tired. He didn't want you to\n   451\tthink he was visiting you or anything. He wanted you to think he'd come in by mistake,\n   452\tfor God's sake.\n   453\t\"Hi,\" I said, but I didn't look up from my book. With a guy like Ackley, if you\n   454\tlooked up from your book you were a goner. You were a goner anyway, but not as quick\n   455\tif you didn't look up right away.\n   456\tHe started walking around the room, very slow and all, the way he always did,\n   457\tpicking up your personal stuff off your desk and chiffonier. He always picked up your\n   458\tpersonal stuff and looked at it. Boy, could he get on your nerves sometimes. \"How was\n   459\tthe fencing?\" he said. He just wanted me to quit reading and enjoying myself. He didn't\n   460\tgive a damn about the fencing. \"We win, or what?\" he said.\n   461\t\"Nobody won,\" I said. Without looking up, though.\n   462\t\"What?\" he said. He always made you say everything twice.\n   463\t\"Nobody won,\" I said. I sneaked a look to see what he was fiddling around with\n   464\ton my chiffonier. He was looking at this picture of this girl I used to go around with in\n   465\tNew York, Sally Hayes. He must've picked up that goddam picture and looked at it at\n   466\tleast five thousand times since I got it. He always put it back in the wrong place, too,\n   467\twhen he was finished. He did it on purpose. You could tell.\n   468\t\"Nobody won,\" he said. \"How come?\"\n   469\t\"I left the goddam foils and stuff on the subway.\" I still didn't look up at him.\n   470\t\"On the subway, for Chrissake! Ya lost them, ya mean?\"\n   471\t\"We got on the wrong subway. I had to keep getting up to look at a goddam map\n   472\ton the wall.\"\n   473\tHe came over and stood right in my light. \"Hey,\" I said. \"I've read this same\n   474\tsentence about twenty times since you came in.\"","title":"Chunk 3"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG07254JZXN86D2AB3BGJCF6","peer_label":"3","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KFXT0KM64XT6K8W52TDEE0YS","peer_label":"More Classics","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"}],"ver":1,"created_at":"2026-01-27T17:13:48.102Z","ts":"2026-01-27T17:13:48.102Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}