Floating City (66 page)

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Authors: Eric Van Lustbader

BOOK: Floating City
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Quidquid luce fruit, tenebris agit,
Mick thought between mouthfuls of dusky flesh. Whatever is started in the light continues in the dark. It was one of Nietzsche’s favorite sayings, and his as well. How true it had proved itself in his life!

He pushed her roughly against the wall – just
here
– where he had made the first thrust with the push dagger, where the arrogance on Kurtz’s face had been supplanted by disbelief and, then, fear. Oh, the ecstasy of it! He, the true Nietzschean superman, bringing down the Aryan prey.

He was grunting now, not with the effort but with the images flooding his mind. Giai licked his ear and hunched frantically against him. While his body worked, his mind sang! Of course Kurtz was tormented, of course he beat his wife regularly. There are countless dark bodies that must be
inferred
to lie near the sun; we shall never be able to see them, Nietzsche had written. Kurtz was one of them. Obviously, in marrying Giai he had crossed the line. Dissolution, the base shuttling and rearranging of the races, was intolerable to the proud and pure Aryan in him. Yet he would not leave her. So he beat her, punishing her for the sin he dare not admit to himself he had committed.

Giai was soon to reach her pinnacle. She groaned, her eyes rolling, her belly rippling, the muscles of her thighs and buttocks clenching furiously. And, like a house plucked up by a tornado, he was brought along with her. She stroked the nape of his neck, his damp hair, crooning wordlessly like a child in delirium.

It was Mick’s firm and abiding belief that morality was merely timidity tricked out in a philosophical overcoat. Even if he had not read this in
Beyond Good and Evil,
his own experiences in the war in Vietnam would have taught him the same thing. As it was, they merely made Nietzsche’s words resonate in his mind all the louder.
And like all men of prey,
he thought,
I am misunderstood.
What was morality but a recipe against passion, an attempt to castrate the dangerousness in which man lives with himself?

‘Yes,’ Giai breathed. ‘Oh, yes!’

He held her, light as a feather, as she shivered and moaned, trembled and clung in great gasping sighs, then started all over again as he put his head down, his white teeth sinking into the tender flesh of her shoulder as he skewered her – once, twice, three times – gushing as he thought of life – Kurtz’s life – bleeding away in a mass of stinking, steaming innards.

He opened his eyes. Giai was staring at him.

‘I’m free, aren’t I?’

He could feel her hot fluids – and his, too, perhaps – sticky on his thighs.

‘Had enough?’

‘No,’ she cried. ‘No, no, no!’

Of course not. It was part of their game.

Before his erection could subside he rubbed cocaine into the reddened skin. He felt the familiar tingling, then the curious numbness through which only sexual desire could burn like a beacon in dense fog. Then he entered her again, walking her across the room, her heels bouncing against the tops of his buttocks.

Giai, always wild with him, was particularly frenzied. In fact, her freedom, as she called it, had made her almost insatiable, and for once Mick thanked the lucky star under which he had been born for the cocaine-induced numbness. Otherwise, even he would not have been able to last.

He had her on Kurtz’s dining room table, a polished teak affair from Thailand, on Kurtz’s desk, the cordless phone clattering to the floor, on Kurtz’s prize Isfahan rug, in Kurtz’s bed, and finally in Kurtz’s shower. And after Giai thought it was over, he did what he had wanted to do all along: he took her from behind.

She wanted to sleep after all that exertion, but he was still wired. The cocaine, he told her, urging her to dress quickly while he struck a match and lighted his cigar. So instead of crawling between Kurtz’s silk sheets, they returned to the rainy, neon-lighted Tokyo night.

The taxi he had called was waiting for them. It was after midnight and they made the trip to the warehouse district of Shibaura in short order. They emerged into Kaigan-dōri, and Mick told the taxi to pull over. He paid the fare and they got out, heading for Mūdra, one of the many hip dance clubs that had bloomed here like weeds in the early nineties.

They had not walked more than a block when a black Mercedes rounded a corner behind them, heading along Kaigan-dōri. Mick glanced over his shoulder and saw it coming up behind them, swerving dangerously up onto the sidewalk, sideswiping a couple of moonfaced bohemians, chicly garbed in grunge, purple-black hair in exaggerated Woody Woodpecker top knots, their lips glossed in black.

‘What is it?’ Giai asked.

Up ahead, two bikers in luminous trench coats and multiple nose rings sat astride luridly painted Suzukis, swigging beer and trading lewd stories of mutilated flesh. Incensed, Mick walked a couple of paces on, shouting at the drunken teenagers, while Giai stood waiting. He turned. ‘Morons,’ he said, but he was looking straight at the oncoming Mercedes, which, having cleared the cars ahead of it, now put on a last furious burst of speed.

Mick shouted something incoherent and Giai turned, her eyes opened wide, just as the front fender of the Mercedes plowed into her. Instantly, she was slammed backward with such force that when she landed her back broke. But by then she was drowning in her own blood.

The Mercedes had already taken off as people on line for the clubs came out of their shock and started to scream. There was a mad jostling, an almost carnivorous mass convulsing through which Mick slithered, heading up Kaigan-dōri, avoiding the jammed sidewalk, after the Mercedes. The familiar high-low police Klaxon could be heard, still some distance away but closing fast on the scene of panic behind him.

He saw the Mercedes swerve left at the last possible instant, into a narrow alley, and he followed, his legs churning easily, his heart racing nicely, his lungs pumping in exhilaration. He turned the corner, saw the black Mercedes had come to a stop, rocking on its heavy-duty shock absorbers. The alley was deserted; even its usual denizens had headed toward the site of the screams.

One of the black Mercedes’s rear doors flew open and he accelerated toward it, his heart singing. What was it Nietzsche had said? Ultimately one loves one’s desires, not the desired object.

Then he was there, slinging his body into the backseat, hearing the gears crash, the tires squeal, the car accelerating down the alley as he leaned over, slamming the door shut, and he said to the driver, ‘Jōchi, well done!’

Book I
Between Dog and Wolf

The best way to keep one’s word is not to give it.

Napoleon

1
Tokyo/New York

Nicholas Linnear looked out at Tokyo, its pink-and-acid-green neon signs creating an aurora that blocked the night. Far below, a soft parade of black umbrellas bobbed and weaved, filling the sidewalks of Shinjuku as the steady rain filled the gutters of the wide, traffic-clogged streets.

It was a familiar view from his corner office on the fifty-second floor of the Shinjuku Suiryu Building. But almost everything now seemed different.

It had been fifteen months since he had been in Tokyo, fifteen months since he had taken on
giri,
the debt he had promised his late father, Col. Denis Linnear, he would honor. Fifteen months since he had been contacted by a representative of Mikio Okami, his father’s closest friend and, as it turned out, the Kaisho, the
oyabun
of
oyabun
of all the clans of the Yakuza, the powerful Japanese underworld.

Okami had been in hiding in Venice, under a death threat from his closest allies within his inner circle of advisers. He had needed Nicholas’s help, so he had said, to protect him. Nicholas had his own very private reasons for hating the Yakuza and could have turned his back on Okami and his obligation to his late father. But that was not his way. Honor meant everything to him, but the irony of helping keep alive the living embodiment of the Yakuza was not lost on him. On the contrary, in pure Japanese style, it added to the poignancy of his mission.

Eventually, he had found and dispatched the would-be assassin, a particularly frightening Vietnamese named Do Duc Fujiro, along with the
oyabun
who had hired him. Now, with Tetsuo Akinaga, the only
oyabun
of the inner circle still alive, awaiting trial on charges of extortion and conspiracy to commit murder, Okami had returned to Tokyo, and Nicholas with him to face an entirely new threat.

Fifteen months and to Nicholas it seemed as if Tokyo had changed beyond recognition.

These changes revolved around the great Japanese depression that had begun in 1991 and showed little sign of lifting. Today, there were more homeless in the streets than ever before, every company’s profits were either sharply off or in negative figures. Layoffs – a hitherto unknown practice – had begun in earnest, and those remaining in jobs had not seen a pay raise in four years. On the way to Shinjuku this evening, Nicholas had seen outside food shops long lines made up of housewives who insisted on buying Japanese rice instead of the imported American variety.

The trade war with America was intensifying almost every day. In addition, there was an increasingly militant and belligerent North Korean regime to consider. Japan’s pachinko parlors, traditionally run by native Japanese, were now in the hands of Koreans, many of whom had ties to North Korea, and it was becoming an increasing source of embarrassment to the Japanese government to have these profits going directly to the dictatorial and paranoid regime that ruled the north.

For the first time since the advent of the great economic miracle in the early 1950s, Japan seemed on the brink of losing both momentum and purpose. People were dispirited and fed up, and the media, trained at birth to emphasize bad news while minimizing the good, could see only a dark, downward spiral.

Nicholas felt a hand softly stroking his back, and he saw Koei’s face reflected in the rain-streaked window. With her huge, liquid eyes, small mouth, and angular cheekbones, it was far from a classically beautiful face, but he loved it all the more for that. She was the daughter of a Yakuza
oyabun.
They had met in 1971 and had fallen madly, magically in love. And out of that mad love, Nicholas had killed the man who he thought had raped and tormented Koei, only to discover that the man was innocent. The miscreant was her father. Shame had caused her to lie, and this had forced Nicholas to walk away. He had not seen her until last year, when Okami had arranged for them to meet again so Nicholas could heal the rage he felt toward her and all Yakuza.

Over the years, she had turned her back on the world of the Yakuza, losing herself in the syncretic Shugendo Shinto sect in the mystical hills of Yoshino, where she might have remained but for a summons from her father. He needed to broker an alliance, and to seal it Koei was obliged to marry a man she had not met. After spending six months with the man she wanted out, but he was unwilling to let her go. In desperation, she turned to Mikio Okami, the Kaisho, the one man who had more power than this man and would be willing to stand up to him. Okami had spirited her away, sending her into the hinterlands of Vietnam where this man could not find her, though he tried hard enough. The man she had been with, whom she had been duty-bound to marry and had come to despise and fear, was Mick Leonforte.

‘Nangi-san isn’t here yet,’ she said, ‘and the dinner is scheduled to begin in ten minutes.’ Tanzan Nangi was the president of Sato International, the high-tech
keiretsu
– the Japanese-American conglomerate Nicholas owned with Tanzan Nangi – that had been created from the merger of Sato Petrochemicals with Tomkin Industries, the company Nicholas owned and ran. ‘I hope this won’t be too much for him.’ Six months ago he’d had a minor heart attack and, since then, had become somewhat more reclusive.

‘It had better not,’ Nicholas said, checking his tie in the mirror. ‘The Japanese launch of the TransRim CyberNet has been his dream ever since my people came up with the technology.’

Koei turned him around, worked on his tie herself. ‘The VIPs are arriving and Tōrin is getting nervous. He’s wondering why you’re not already down at Indigo to greet them.’

‘I’ve still got to make a last check at research and development on the fortieth floor.’ Nicholas kissed her lightly. ‘The proprietary CyberNet data are being transferred to the central computer.’

The CyberNet, a multimedia highway for trading and instantaneous communication throughout Southeast Asia, had the potential to lift Sato International out of its recessionary spiral and return it to profitability. But if anything went wrong with the CyberNet – if it crashed and burned – Sato International was sure to follow it down. The unique combination of Nangi’s calculating mind and Nicholas’s brilliant leaps of intuitive ingenuity had been the main reason for Sato’s success. But these days Sato, like all Japanese
keiretsu,
had been undergoing a painful restructuring.

Keiretsu
– holdovers from the prewar family-run
zaibatsu
– were groups of interlinked industrial companies composed around a central bank. In boom times this gave each
keiretsu
the major advantage of being able to lend itself money for expansion and research and development at highly competitive rates. But during a recession – as now – when banks ran into the twin difficulties of deflated values on their real estate portfolios and rising yen rates, they became a major liability to the
keiretsu.
Lately, it had been up to Nicholas’s American arm to provide the R&D for new Sato products like the supersecret CyberNet technology. Despite this revolutionary breakthrough he was racked by guilt. If he had not been with Mikio Okami these past fifteen months, he might have helped his company avoid the worst ravages of the deep recession. Instead, he had insisted that Sato International be at the forefront of fiber-optic telecommunications, and to that end, the vast majority of the
keiretsu’s
capital reserves had gone into expansion into not only Southeast Asia and China, but also South America. This was the smart long-term bet of the visionary, but it had created a short-term crunch that the recession had exacerbated almost beyond Sato’s tolerance. Now the company was forced to rise or fall on the success of the CyberNet, and Nicholas knew it was his doing.

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