Secrets of the Apple (47 page)

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Authors: Paula Hiatt

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Tears began to roll down his mother’s cheeks and she pulled a handkerchief from her pocket. “At thirteen, your father made a decision that turned him into the man I wanted to marry, despite our differences. Your grandmother was the price I had to pay for my husband. I’d gladly pay it again if I could have him back.”

Ryoki put his arms around his mother and tried to envision his father as a young boy hitting a ball, cheered on by Death dressed in a professor’s tweeds. But the image carried the sting of an onion and he repelled it with a shove.

Chapter Twenty-eight

O
n his first day at work as President Tanaka, both Kate and his mother walked him to his car, like a boy leaving for his first day of school. Both women waved as the driver pulled away, his mother’s face a heartbreaking mixture of grief and pride. But Kate’s expression troubled him even more, a smile more brave than hearty, her gaze abruptly disconnecting, shifting to the west like Mary Poppins feeling a change in the wind.

The day was a busy one, ludicrously crammed with meetings, greetings and congratulations. In the roughly fifteen minutes he had to himself, he sat at his desk in a stiff new chair that still trailed a few wispy remnants of the protective plastic covering. He felt a midget headache begging hospitality, a byproduct of the odiferous coat of fresh queasy green paint undoubtedly intended to bring peace and renewal to his father’s old office. His crisply efficient new assistant poked her head in, a lovely smile, Japanese, former Miss Something, quick to do his bidding, bow here, dip of the head there, handled the phone without batting an eye and commanded the respect due to the daughter of a high government official. Full board in five minutes, she advised before hurrying off.

Ryoki picked up the receiver and called home under some flimsy pretense, worried Kate might be packing. He’d emailed her a sheaf of documents with a request for her personal opinion, a tacit reminder that she was still bound by ethical contract, though, strictly speaking, she did not yet possess a Japanese work permit. But even as he clicked Send, he knew it would take more to occupy such a gifted mind. He thought of the look on her face that morning. She knew she’d been nudged out of the wild, spiraling inner circle of the office without even a husband or child as an excuse, exactly as Montgomery predicted—probably played into her fears of oppressive Japanese men.

He sat in his brand-new chair in the office he’d coveted his entire life and rubbed his forehead, wishing himself at home. Again his assistant poked her head in. “They’re ready for you.” He took a deep breath and stood.

By the time he made it home, dinner had to be reheated and his mother had generated a rat-a-tat of questions about his day. Kate sat listening in silence, already taking the part of an outsider. Ryoki went to bed uneasy and dreamed he was back in his Business Law class the day Dr. Morgan had gotten sidetracked, waxing large on what he called the “George Washington Effect.” His academic detachment had disintegrated at the feet of his personal passion as history came alive in his mouth, zapping Ryoki with goose bumps that bubbled again, even in his sleep.

“For the first time, ruling power was willingly passed from one man to the next, without regard to bloodline or necessity of bloodshed. The first time!
That, ladies and gentlemen, was the shot heard round the world,
” the dream professor boomed in his giant dream voice, gesturing to a massive glass wall behind the lecture podium that hadn’t existed in real life. Beyond the glass stood the Washington Monument, a colossal white rook glittering outside the classroom. In the background Ryoki heard the round authoritative clip of Kate’s heels as she entered the lecture hall, striding down the raked rows of seats and resplendent in her university robe and queen’s crown, prepared to take over the lecture. But his mother and grandmother leapt from the aisle seats and began handing her chess pieces—bulky, heavy family heirlooms, pawn after pawn carved like children with curly black hair, slick with blood and sweat. Juggling the pawns she dropped her chalk which snapped in half, rocketing off in two directions—one piece rolling under a desk, the other bouncing into a grate with a fading
tunk, plunk, tink.
The class began to mumble its disapproval of the delay: Unprofessional—Dim-witted—Quit wasting our time—

The professor, now wearing a bishop’s mitre, tried shooing her from the classroom, but Montgomery blocked his advance, one hand brandishing a medieval sword and the other shaking a pompom as he cheered on, “Dump ‘em, Kate! Show ‘em what you got!”

Ryoki heard the jeers of the spectators and noticed Kate’s hands trembling with the weight of the ungainly pawns that bore his eyes. He leaped up to rush to her side, but his arm was pinned under a solid gold scepter, and his ermine-trimmed, red-velvet robe had caught on a nail, choking him as he tried to rise.

Ryoki awoke in a cold sweat that drove him to Kate’s room, only to find her sleeping peacefully, her lamp still burning, one hand clutching a leaky pink fountain pen atop a half-filled five-subject notebook. Blinking and bewildered, he made his way across the room, gently plucking the pen from her hand and picking up the notebook. The open page was covered in Kate’s fastest scrawl, as though she couldn’t expel her ideas fast enough. He closed the cover quick before temptation hit, laying notebook and pen neatly on the night table, then switched off the lamp and slunk silently back to his bed to count the long dark hours until morning.

The next evening he sat next to her at her computer, his elbow on her desk, acutely curious about the five-subject notebook, his head so full of things to say he didn’t know where to begin. Her fingers still bore traces of pink ink. He sat up and took a deep breath. “Kate—”

The door creaked and a maid quietly entered bearing a late delivery: Two dozen roses in a vase, “Come Home” written in English on the front of the envelope tucked into the spray. It looked like a feminine hand, probably a teleflorist who may or may not have understood what she was copying down. Kate plucked the card from the bouquet and gave the flowers to the maid who had seen the look on her master’s face and hastily retreated before the fat pink buds could be fed to the shredder.

Keeping his cool, Ryoki watched to see if Kate would toss the card contemptuously in the trash. Instead she dropped it unopened on the desk and turned back to her computer. Ryoki leaned forward, diligently studying the spreadsheet on her screen, but the far corner of his left eye could just catch the pale green of the envelope. Though he never turned his head, his eyes shifted of their own accord, the green blooming steadily larger and larger until it pulsed with the same erratic buzz as a neon sign on a flop hotel.

“How did Montgomery get this address?” he asked, taking a full second to realize the question had come from his own mouth.

“Oh, he’s been emailing,” she said offhandedly, jamming her right ring finger on the backspace and accidentally deleting an entire cell from the spreadsheet.

“So, did the two of you make up?” Tokyo was supposed to be “Base,” no blonds allowed. For the first time in his life he wished communication had not advanced beyond the tin can and string.

“We’ve been talking about Lucas. He said he’s been too judgmental and too jealous. Lots of things,” she said, waving her hand to indicate so on and so forth. “And he also mentioned that there’s an opening in the New York office and he’s considering applying.”

New York? Putting Montgomery within striking distance of Kate and her new job. If she had raked her fingernails across his face, she could not have hurt him more, but he plowed forward, pretending carelessness. “Mother’s been after me to meet Lucas, and this morning I promised him a ticket if he’d come visit. But he sounded pretty reluctant. Cecelia says he needs to stick to with his tutor for now. I think she’s just afraid we won’t bring him back.” This was a fear Ryoki considered entirely justified, though he smiled as if the notion were ridiculous. “She also said Nakamura started moving into that house yesterday. Apparently he and Lucas went out to the garden and kicked a football for half an hour. Lucas has practically slept with his football ever since he got accepted at that boarding school. He even quit complaining about the uniform when he heard about the junior team.”

“Oh, he’ll complain again when the new term starts and he actually has to put on that tie,” Kate said with a wry smile, which reminded Ryoki of Cecilia’s last bit of news.

“Speaking of uncomfortable ties, Mariko and Mr. Nishimura are attending a concert tomorrow,” he added with a significant look.

“Finally,” she said, rolling her eyes and leaning back to stretch her legs. “Did you remember that the Arimas got in from São Paulo last night? I invited them to dinner tomorrow, and I completely forgot to ask your mother first.”

“I doubt she’d care.”

“She doesn’t, but the housekeeper’s mad that I breached protocol. For lunch I
accidentally
got cold miso soup with a side of oct-o-pus. Maybe I should fix her up with your gardener,” she gave him the crooked-mouth-raised-eyebrow look that always made him laugh, then threw a sucker punch that knocked him sideways: “Ryoki, you don’t need me here.”

“That’s not true.” He blurted the standard response in all its photocopied glory, then sat frantically searching three languages for a meaningful addendum. He wanted to tell her that buttons made death itself easier to bear. But he knew it sounded stupid, so he kept it to himself.

“We both know this is busy work,” she said, tapping the spreadsheet on her screen.

“Think of it as a paid vacation until we get your visa sorted,” he said.

“What visa? Right now this is just me living off you.” The word
mistress
wafted through the air, but she did not speak it.

“We have a contract through December. I’m holding you to it,” he said, his heart sinking with every word.

“Ryoki, be logical for—”

“Are you really so eager to run back to him?” He hoped his voice came out manly and deep instead of needy, but he could hear the single plaintive string quivering in the orchestra. He swallowed hard. “Quit pretending this is all about business. I told you I love you and you didn’t even act surprised.”

Kate kept silent, clasping her hands in a feeble attempt to hide their shaking.

“How long have you known?” he asked.

“I suspected, when you ran off to Rio,” she said, almost whispering. “I panicked and decided to go home then. I left behind everything you bought me and after I packed it still looked like someone lived there.” Her voice grew stronger, but she kept her eyes on her hands. “I went to Buenos Aires to take advantage of a cheap flight to the States, but the trip gave me time to think. In the end I rationalized that you went to Rio to clear your head, which meant you didn’t want to do anything crazy either.”

He reached out to touch her face, but she turned her head, nervously running her thumb across the thickness of her notebook. “We’re long past crazy,” he said, inching closer. Still she wouldn’t look at him. “Kate,” he murmured, gently lifting her chin.

Her eyes wired pure alarm, bleeding the fizzy energy of a spooked deer. Slowly he grazed his fingers across her cheek and down her neck, threading his hand into her hair as little by little he leaned forward, his mouth pausing just short of her lips, breath caressing breath. He moved again, speaking just above her ear. “I think you love me back and it has you scared half out of your mind.”

Abruptly the mesmer snapped and she pulled away, settling back in her chair, a miniature escape that somehow folded a universe between them. “You look at me just like my husband used to
before
we got married.”

“Kate, you know what I’m going to ask—”

She put a finger to his lips. “Don’t,” she said. “Please don’t.”

Ryoki settled back to give her space, the
tick tick tick
of the clock marking the silence, one second, two … ten … twenty …

“Kathryn, you are a house divided,” he said.

“Don’t be ridiculous.”

“So how does a traditional woman survive in the modern world? That’s what Montgomery was asking, but you never really answered.”

“Ryoki don’t do this, please don’t do—”

“I know you,” he said. “I’d bet a million yen that right this minute you’re thinking you don’t need us, that you could just go out on your own. Am I right?” Kate blinked long and slow, finally nodding without looking at him.

“I read your journal—” Her head jerked up, the blush spreading almost instantly. He knew it was a risk scratching a transgression newly sutured, but he pushed forward. “I’m not proud of it, but I did it, and now I probably know more about your marriage than you’ve told your sisters.” The blush deepened to crimson and he drew closer, gently taking her hand. “I saw how alone you were, how you sacrificed in your marriage because at bottom, you value family above all else. You survived by insulating yourself, because you had to.”

She took a long, deep breath and pulled her hand away. “I thought I’d become immune, which is ultimately why I risked going to São Paulo with you.”

“And in São Paulo you reconnected with a friend from your old life, a handsome blond who looks enough like your husband to be his brother. Maybe husband 2.0—a kinder, more user-friendly edition who’s closer to seeing your worth. You’re comfortable with this type of man, and after your first experience you’d substitute kindness for complete acceptance, if you had to make a choice. Your first husband awoke you to the safety of an independent life. You and Montgomery might be halfway down the aisle even now, except I was also in São Paulo, the inconvenient man who wants just what you want, but who comes at a high price.” Ryoki pulled the scarf from her neck and traced the bruises, now faded to a light tan. “I should warn you, speaking from experience, sleeping with blonds is a lonely business.”

Chapter Twenty-nine

A
s per their agreement, Kate remained in Tokyo, and every day Ryoki looked for clues that proved she secretly stayed by choice rather than obligation. She telecommuted about two hours a day, occasionally went shopping with his mother or traipsed through the city like a tourist. Most of the time, though, she filled notebooks, notebooks and notebooks, blotching her fingers pink, blue and red. Ryoki guessed what she was up to and wondered why she didn’t work directly on her laptop, though he said nothing, thinking it wiser to let her bring it up when she was ready. The notebooks disappeared the day her new employment papers arrived, bundled with a thick packet of mail forwarded by her family. The ink began to fade from her hands.

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