“Sorry. Occupational habit. So what’s your next move?”
“I’m not sure. I can’t see Bobby going to Japan after everything he’s been through in the last three weeks. Not on skimpy evidence. Not when this whole thing could turn out to be a hoax. And he needs to get back to school. He needs to return to normal life.”
“I hear you. And you can’t go either.”
“Why do you say that?”
“You can’t leave him alone. He was on meds in jail for the claustrophobia. He got beaten up. He had a rough ride. You say he needs to return to normal life? You need to be there.”
Nadia wanted to argue but saw his point. The sound of traffic subsided as though Johnny had pulled into a garage.
“There’s too much unknown for either of you to go,” Johnny said.
“What do you suggest? We try to change the agenda and get them here? I doubt that’s going to work—”
“I’m going,” Johnny said.
“Oh, right. Sorry. You must have court. Will you have any time later this morning?”
“No. You don’t understand. I’m going to Tokyo. Instead of you.”
It was preposterous, but the offer soothed Nadia’s soul. “Johnny, you’re the nicest guy ever to pass the bar and the best friend a person could have, but there’s no way you’re going in my place.”
“The only other person who could do this is your brother. But he just spent a week in Eastern Europe with you and he has a business to take care of. I’m your man.”
Nadia already felt indebted to Johnny for all he’d done for Bobby and her. So much so she could never repay him. This would only increase her debt. “Johnny, this is way beyond the call of friendship.”
“You mean as opposed to getting kidnapped and interrogated by Victor Bodnar, and listening to him murder two men while I sat chained to a chair in a meat locker?”
Victor Bodnar was one of the mobsters who had chased Nadia from New York to Eastern Europe and back in pursuit of the formula. After they returned to New York, he’d kidnapped Johnny to coerce information about Nadia and the locket. Johnny had stood up to him, and had seen to it that she’d never hear from the old man again.
“I see your point,” Nadia said. “But that’s all the more reason I can’t let you do it.”
“I was an exchange student in Tokyo during college for a year. Granted, it was a long time ago and I’ve forgotten all of the language I knew. But I still know how to say hello, bow properly, and act less like a gaijin.”
“Gaijin?”
“A foreigner. An outsider who doesn’t belong.”
“What about your court cases? You’re probably juggling several.”
“Two. I’m wrapping up an immigration case this afternoon. And I can ask another associate to cover for me on the burglary. I’ve covered for her multiple times. She owes me.”
Nadia protested. The more she did so, the more Johnny insisted he was going.
“Even if your associate covers for you,” Nadia said, “what explanation will you give your boss for leaving in the middle of the week?”
“I’ll tell him it’s a family matter.”
“Aw, Johnny. You’re so sweet. But seriously. You can’t lie to your boss.”
“Maybe it’s not a lie. I don’t have any family. Which makes you guys the closest thing I got. Maybe that’s saying too much. But that’s what it is.”
Johnny was counselor, confidante, and friend, but she had no romantic feelings for him. None whatsoever. He wore a ponytail, drove a muscle car, and loved the spotlight. Nadia preferred understated men. And yet his words struck deep in her heart and left a mark.
“You’re too much, Johnny Tanner.”
“Good. It’s settled. Forward me the e-mails. Should we send a new e-mail and be up front that you’re sending a delegate?”
Nadia pondered the question. “Yes. We should be honest.”
“Good. The fewer lies, the better.”
“My motto exactly.”
“I’ll get a phone that works in Japan. You should give them my number and get one from them. And try to get a description of this friend I’m supposed to meet with.”
“They’ll probably ask for the same.”
“A six-foot-two, two-hundred-ten-pound gaijin with a ponytail is probably going to stand out in Tokyo.”
“Nice image. Thanks for that. I’ll arrange for the hotel and plane ticket, pay for your expenses.”
“Including the hostess at the Turkish bathhouse?”
“How quickly they fall off their pedestals.”
“It was inevitable.” A car door slammed shut. “The guy on the pedestal has nowhere to go but down.”
CHAPTER 3
Johnny landed at Tokyo’s Narita Airport at 9:05 p.m. on Saturday. He took the Narita Express to central Tokyo and caught a taxi to the Hotel Century Southern Tower in the Shibuya district. After checking into his room, he called Nadia to let her know he’d arrived, ate some sushi, and went to sleep.
On Sunday he enjoyed a breakfast of steamed rice, grilled fish, rolled omelet, seaweed, and pickled vegetables. Afterwards he spent the morning reacquainting himself with the city. Shibuya was the western hub of Central Tokyo. Young people partied in Shibuya. Older people tended to avoid this part of town. The roads were not as pristine, the storefronts not as elegant as in other parts of the city. Cheap restaurants, karaoke bars, and nightclubs crammed the streets. It was Johnny’s kind of place.
He’d studied at Tokyo’s Sophia University eighteen years ago as an exchange student from Seton Hall. His return was no different than his first visit. The crowds, noises, and smells overwhelmed his senses. The sheer mass of humanity moving along sidewalks and climbing onto subways made New York City seem small. The cacophony of sounds hurt his eardrums. Buses, cars, and trains. The ring of a thousand pinball machines hitting their targets simultaneously in Japan’s popular pachinko parlors. It was urban chaos and Johnny loved it.
The smell of fish mixed with exhaust to form a uniquely Tokyo scent. This smell, in turn, stirred memories. The stress of nightly language memorization. The rock star status that resulted from him being tall, young, and American. Cute college girls dying to practice their English with him at all hours of the night. And that little guy in pink tights who pressed his thigh against Johnny’s leg on a crowded subway bench. Eighteen years ago the experience had nauseated him. Now it made him laugh.
He visited the Shibuya train station twice. First in the morning, as soon as he left the hotel at 7:30 a.m. Genesis II had picked the perfect location to put them both at ease. On a weekday, two and a half million people used the station each day. Even on a Sunday morning, it was so crowded there was simply no way to create a trap. There were literally hundreds of witnesses walking by the mural every minute. The only people who weren’t moving were the cops watching the turnstiles and a gaunt man loitering by the side door of the main entrance. He was disheveled with flecks of gray in his shoulder-length hair, a lost look in his eyes, and a begging bowl in his hand. A homeless man was an embarrassment to himself and the community. Hence, everyone pretended he wasn’t there to save face.
Johnny returned to the station a second time at 11:45, fifteen minutes before the meet. He stood in the corner against the wall opposite the mural and waited. He tried to study the faces of the people walking by but there were too many of them. The exercise left him dizzy.
“Mr. Johnny Tanner?” A young man’s voice, Japanese accent, high-pitched.
Johnny turned. A boy had snuck up to his side. Carrot-colored hair with black roots covered his ears. He was dressed in a black t-shirt and leather jacket with designer jeans. He looked like a Japanese punk rock version of Bobby.