“Your friends have been causing us trouble.”
“My…?”
“The 47 Ronin,” he said sourly. Someone snorted at the name, only to apologise before the old man could turn to see who it might be.
“You know about this, of course.”
Did he? Kit nodded. “Someone destroyed their bar,” he said. “My bar. Then Tamagusuku-san tried to steal my land. The bozozoku occupied the site to stop the developers moving in.”
“It’s not…”
Osamu Nakamura held up one hand to still Mr. Tamagusuku’s protest. “So,” said the old man, “you organised this protest.”
Kit shook his head. “I didn’t even know it was happening.”
Mr. Tamagusuku snorted.
“That’s what this is about?” said Kit. “A bunch of bikers who want their bar back? That’s why you’ve brought me here?”
“No one brought you here,” said Mr. Nureki, glancing at Nakamura-san to check he was authorised to speak. “As I understand it, you wanted to visit my niece Yuko. When she refused, you said the meeting could be anywhere she chose, that she could bring anyone she trusted. Well, she trusts me. And I trust this council.”
“You present a problem,” said the old man. “This does not make us happy.”
No shit, Kit wanted to say.
“The choice is yours. You can be the solution or remain the problem. Either way, this matter will be solved.”
“Let me guess,” said Kit. “You want me to stand down the 47 Ronin, tell them all to go home?”
The man nodded.
“And why would I do that?” asked Kit. “Even if I could stand them down, which is doubtful. These people are a law unto themselves.”
Like you, he thought.
“Because this situation is not good for any of us,” Mr. Oniji said. His glance at the kumicho was part apology, part unspoken plea—Let me handle this. “You know how these things work,” said Mr. Oniji. “Tokyo is bidding for the Olympics. This kind of conflict is bad for everybody.”
“It’s the camera crews,” said Kit, realising the obvious. “So long as they remain you can’t move the Ronin.”
“The press won’t remain forever,” said Yuko’s husband, his voice hard.
“But until they leave,” Kit said, “you’re fucked.” Looking round the low ryokan he saw impassive faces stare back. “Where’s Yuko?” he demanded.
“Why?”
“Because I came here to talk to her.”
“You can talk to me,” said Mr. Tamagusuku. “If you say anything of interest I’ll be sure to tell my wife.”
There was one door into the inn and an internal door to the kitchens. That made two ways out at the most, in a room full of hardcore Yakuza, all of whom he could assume were armed.
“You’re smiling again,” said the kumicho.
“Just thinking,” Kit said.
“About what?” Nakamura-san seemed genuinely interested.
“Among one’s affairs should be no more than two or three matters of what one calls great concern…”
The old man smiled.
“Hagakure,” said Mr. Oniji; he sounded surprised.
“This,” Kit said, “is one of those matters. There are things my wife would want her sister to know.”
“She’s not your wife,” said Mr. Tamagusuku. “Under Japanese law unregistered marriages are invalid.”
“You were married?” asked Mr. Nakamura.
“In San Francisco,” Kit said. “Fifty-five dollars, cash in advance. It worked for us.”
“But Yoshi Tanaka never registered it here?”
“So I gather.”
“And this is what you wanted to tell Yuko?” The kumicho sounded puzzled. “That you were married to her sister?”
“No,” said Kit. “Yuko knows that already. I mean to tell her who really murdered my wife.”
A dozen people started talking at once and fell silent the moment Osamu Nakamura slammed his hands together, the clap beginning in noise and ending in total silence. “There was no murder,” he said. “A gas canister exploded.”
“It was a bomb,” said Kit.
The old man shook his head, though when he spoke his voice was softer, almost regretful. “No one doubts that you loved Yoshi.” Glancing at Mr. Tamagusuku, he dared the younger man to disagree. “But there was no bomb.”
“Mr. Oniji knows it was a bomb.”
“No bomb,” said Mr. Oniji.
“You told me it was.”
Mr. Oniji shook his head. “I made an error,” he said. “An antiquated heating system exploded. It was an accident. I’ve seen the final report.”
“May I sit?” Kit asked.
Win first, fight later.
He took the stool indicated and buried his head in his hands, trying to arrange his thoughts. When he looked up, the whole room was watching him. Without knowing it, certainly without intending to, he’d got their total attention. He also had his final answer.
“Mr. Tamagusuku tried to have me killed,” said Kit, his voice calm. “When that failed, he planted a bomb.”
“Enough,” said Yuko’s husband, pushing back his own chair.
“Sit down.” The old man’s voice filled the room. Tamagusuku-san ignored him, and Kit caught the exact moment Mr. Oniji and Mr. Nureki exchanged glances. Not clever, thought Kit, watching Mr. Tamagusuku stand alone, his hands bunched into fists.
“I couldn’t work out how he could bring himself to murder Yoshi,” said Kit. “Even if that meant getting rid of me. Only Yoshi’s death was a mistake, wasn’t it? You believed Yoshi was with Yuko. So when the first attempt failed…”
“What attempt?” asked the kumicho.
“He sent a hit man.”
Mr. Tamagusuku’s first blow caught Kit in the shoulder, freezing his arm. The second just missed his throat and would have landed, if the kumicho’s bodyguards had not dragged Tamagusuku-san off in time.
“I…know…nothing…about…a…hit man.”
“What about a bomb?” asked Mr. Oniji, shrugging when everyone in the room turned to look at him. “Just asking,” he said.
“Well?” demanded the old man.
Mr. Tamagusuku hesitated.
It was enough.
Stepping forward, Kit kicked Tamagusuku-san hard between the legs, and would have kicked again, if not for the bodyguards. When they yanked Kit away from Mr. Tamagusuku, they were less gentle than when it was the other way round.
“Take him outside,” said the kumicho.
And as fingers locked onto his elbow, Kit realised the old man had been talking about him. “Wait,” he said. “Please let me say something first.”
“No.” The kumicho’s voice was firm. “This is not about you anymore. You will wait outside while we make our decision.”
“One moment, if I may?” said Mr. Oniji. He turned to Kit. “How many people have you told about this?”
It was a question with only wrong answers.
“None,” Kit said, and watched Mr. Oniji smile.
The last of the black-eared, high-circling kites had abandoned its kingdom to the stillness of the coming storm. Shingle shifted slightly as it was lapped by waves, and the Nureki boys looked at anything and everything except the man they were meant to be guarding.
It was hot, because Tokyo Bay in July was always hot, so the boys pulled at their shirt collars and played with their ties. After a while they held an intense and private discussion that resulted in them both removing their jackets. And through all of this the two boys clutched their guns clumsily, sometimes forgetting to keep the muzzles trained on Kit at all.
He was grateful for that.
Having sunk towards the Izo headlands, the sun vanished behind Fuji-Hakone, and Kit sighed and smiled. Staring at an unseen mountain, while thinking precisely nothing, Yoshi would have been proud of him.