Tokyo Year Zero (19 page)

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Authors: David Peace

BOOK: Tokyo Year Zero
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The three women shake their heads.

‘Do you know anyone who has ever worked there?’

The three women shake their heads again.

‘Anyone who might have left here to work there?’

‘I am sorry,’ says Kato, the president in her bright kimono. ‘But nobody really talks about what they did before they came here or what they will do after they leave here. It is much better for us not to think or talk about the world outside of here…’

‘But you were a geisha. She was a typist. She was a dancer.’

‘Maybe we were,’ she smiles. ‘No one remembers.’

I don’t want to remember. In the half-light

‘But what about new recruits?’ I ask. ‘Don’t you interview them? Don’t you ask them about their previous work?’

‘There are no interviews here,’ she laughs. ‘Only medicals.’

The chairs and the tiny curtains. Their concealed faces and their open legs. The two shallow pools. Every other day

I ask all three, ‘How long have you been here, then?’

‘We all came in December last year,’ says Kato.

‘And how much do you owe the company?’

‘About five thousand yen each,’ she says.

‘And do you have any savings at all?’

‘Of course not,’ she laughs. ‘We have to buy our food and pay for our own medical expenses and then there are the new clothes and the cosmetics we need for our work.’

‘But how much do you earn?’

‘Before we were placed off-limits, we each had fifteen customers a day,’ she says. ‘Each customer paid fifty yen and half of that went to the manager and half to us.’

‘That’s almost four hundred yen a day,’ says Nishi, suddenly.

‘Almost four hundred,’ says Kato. ‘But that was before.’

‘And how many customers were coming a day?’

‘Almost four thousand a day back then.’

‘How many girls were there?’

‘Three hundred.’

‘That’s one hundred thousand yen a day for the company,’ exclaims Nishi. ‘One hundred thousand yen a day!’

‘But that was before,’ repeats Kato. ‘That was before we were placed off-limits to the soldiers.’

‘And now?’ I ask her. ‘How many come now?’

‘Maybe ten,’ she says. ‘Twenty at the most.’

I ask her, ‘Why do you have a union?’

‘To petition General MacArthur,’ smiles Kato. ‘The manager thought that if we wrote to General MacArthur as a union, asking him to let his lonely and homesick GIs come here, then the general would allow the International Palace to open again.’

I shake my head. We thank them –

They bow. We leave –

Leave. Leave

I want to leave this place.
This country
. I want to flee from this place.
This heart
. I want to find the driver.
Now

I walk back inside one of the barracks –

Nishi follows me. Up the stairs –

There is a girl in the corridor. There is a naked girl in the corridor. There is a naked girl in the corridor on all fours. There is a naked girl in the corridor on all fours, no older than fourteen. There is a naked girl in the corridor on all fours, no older than fourteen, being penetrated up her backside by a Victor as she stares down the long, long corridor at Nishi and I with tears running down her cheeks,
down her cheeks and into her mouth, saying, ‘Oh, very good Joe. Thank you, Joe. Oh, very good Joe. Thank you, Joe. Oh, oh, Joe…’

She is better off dead. I am better off dead

This is America. This is Japan. This is democracy. This is defeat.
I don’t have a country any more
. On her knees or on her back, blood and come down her thighs.
I don’t have a heart any more

Her legs apart, her cunt swollen with pricks and pus –

I don’t want a heart. I don’t want a heart

Thank you, Emperor MacArthur –

I don’t want a country

Dōmo
, Hirohito.

*

Nishi plays the good monkey all the way back to Tokyo as field becomes ruin and ruin becomes shack and shack becomes building and I sit and I watch him and wish I’d had the foresight and the guts to walk back, to walk back barefoot into Tokyo through field and through ruin and not to be sat back here in the Victors’ jeep listening to Nishi mix up his r’s and his l’s while the Victors laugh and throw him cigarettes and chewing gum as childish smiles light up his grateful face and so when we get out at Headquarters and we both bow down as low as we can and thank them a thousand times and they have driven off laughing and joking, throwing their cigarettes and chewing gum, and though I know tonight they’ll burn and they’ll itch and they’ll weep and they’ll scratch it’s no consolation, and so I turn and I slap Nishi hard across his face, so hard across his face that he falls over in the road and does not get back up again –

Because Nishi has no guts. No guts –

Because Nishi is gutless –

Gutless. Gutless

Just like me.

*

Back inside Headquarters, I go to where we keep the undead.
‘And we’ve both seen this before, detective. Remember?’
I go to where we keep the files of the cases we have not solved.
I don’t want to remember
. To the archives and the records of our defeats and our
failures.
But in the half-light, I can’t forget
. I ask the man on duty for one of our records of failure.
‘Did you find that file, inspector…?’

‘It would be the fifteenth of August,’ I tell him. ‘Last year.’

The officer disappears and then reappears, empty-handed –

‘Not there,’ he says. ‘Must have already been signed out.’

‘Really?’ I ask him. ‘Do you know who signed it out?’

The officer pulls out the tatty, old battered register –

‘Your Nishi of Room #2,’ laughs the officer.

‘You’re joking?’ I ask him. ‘When?’

‘Only yesterday,’ he says, still laughing at me.

*

Through the dirt and the dust. Through the shadows and the sweat.
Chiku-taku
. Down Sakurada-dōri to Atago I run. Through the doors and up the stairs.
Chiku-taku
. Detectives Kimura and Ishida sat in their shirtsleeves on their borrowed chairs at their borrowed desks; Kimura proud to have found Ishida; Ishida nervous and waiting –

I walk straight over. I ask them, ‘Where are the others?’

‘They’re not back from their rounds,’ says Kimura –

I am staring at Ishida. I am asking, ‘And Nishi?’

‘I thought he’d gone with you,’ says Kimura –

I’m still staring at Ishida, asking, ‘Fujita?’

They both shake their heads. Kimura says, ‘Not today.’

I reach down to Ishida. I grab Ishida. I pick him up. I kick away his borrowed chair. I say, ‘Where is Detective Fujita?’

‘I don’t know,’ flaps Ishida. ‘I really don’t know.’

I pull his face closer to mine by his shirt. There is sweat down his face. There is sweat down mine. There are tears in his eyes and there are tears in mine. ‘You’ve lied to me before. You’ve lied…’

‘No,’ squeals Ishida. ‘I haven’t lied to you. I haven’t…’

‘You’ve lied and you’ve lied and you’ve lied…’

‘No, no, no,’ cries Ishida. ‘I haven’t…’

‘You’ve lied to protect him…’

‘No, no, no. I haven’t…’

‘Lied to save him…’

‘No, no, no…’

‘Yes, you have,’ I hiss and I push him away from me. Back over his borrowed chair and back onto his borrowed desk. The sweat
down his face and the tears in his eyes –

‘I’m sorry. I’m sorry…’

‘Fujita’s finished,’ I tell him. ‘And you’ll be finished…’

‘I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I’m sorry. I’m sorry…’

‘If you don’t tell me where he is…’

‘I’m sorry. I’m sorry…’

‘Tell me! Quick!’

‘Detective Fujita will be in the Ginza tonight,’ sobs Ishida. ‘He’ll be at the New Oasis club. After nine o’clock.’

‘He was seen drinking with Nodera Tomiji at the New Oasis on the night of the Matsuda Giichi hit…’

‘The New Oasis? Why there?’

But Ishida looks at the floor –

Ishida shakes his head –

‘I don’t know…’

I take out my handkerchief. I wipe my face. I wipe my neck –

I lean over Ishida. I lift up his face. I dry his eyes –

I tell him, ‘You stay here with Kimura, OK?’

He buries his head again and he nods.

*

There were tea-shops and cafés here once where you could listen to a gramophone recording as you watched the latest fashions stroll past. Now I stand on the Ginza and I stare into the windows of the Victors’ Post Exchange. I stand and I stare with the hungry kids and teenage girls at the Victors’ brand-new clothes, at their bright white towels and their real leather shoes. I stand and I stare as the children and the girls swarm around Victors laden down with shopping bags, the children and the girls begging the Victors for gum and chocolate –

I walk away. I walk away. I walk away. I walk

Past the department stores, most still empty but some now opening on the lower floors, though these floors are covered with rubble and their showcases filled only with cheap junk. Past dead buildings still nothing but concrete frames, still black from the flames, along crumbling sidewalks and the endless piles of garbage –

I turn away. I turn away. I turn away. I turn

From the shoddy little mats along the old broken curbs with their harsh silk handkerchiefs and their coarse picture postcards, their
busted fountain pens and their flavoured cups of ice –

I look away. I look away. I look

But every single rag and every single morsel has a market value here, every single grain of rice from our one bowl a day when one cup of rice, three cigarettes and four matches are our ration, when a long-dead fish is a whole week’s wage –

I cannot run away. I cannot run

Now it’s time.
Chiku-taku

Now day is night.

*

Day is night. Night is day. Day is night. Night is day. Day is

I stand before the door. I read the sign above the door –

The New Oasis is a Korean-run shithole in the shadow of the original Oasis, down another Ginza backstreet, between another bombed-out shell and another mountain-range of garbage. The original Oasis was another gift to the Victors from the Recreation and Amusement Association, another International Palace. But the New Oasis is not for the white Victors. The New Oasis is for the yellow ones, the Koreans and the Chinese. The New Oasis is not run by the Recreation and Amusement Association. The New Oasis is not owned by Ando Akira. The New Oasis is owned by Mr. Machii –

Machii Hisayuki, a Korean-Japanese, the Bull of Ginza

I am itching and I am sweating and I am scared –

The old rival of Matsuda. The new enemy of Senju

If Fujita is here, then Fujita has crossed a line –

Hayashi Jo face down in the water

The door is closed. I open the door. I see a flight of steps down to another closed door. I walk down the steps. The door has a spyhole. I knock on the door. I know someone is staring at me through the spyhole. The handle turning now. The door opening –

‘What do you want?’ says a thickset Korean in a suit –

‘A drink,’ I tell him. ‘I’m here to meet a friend.’

‘This is a members’ club,’ he says –

‘Then I’d like to join,’ I say.

‘It’s one hundred yen.’

I curse. I curse

I take out my wallet. But not my
techō
. I open it. I have one
hundred yen in notes. But that is all I have. The thickset Korean takes the notes from me. The Korean puts them in his own pocket –

He laughs, ‘Welcome to the New Oasis club…’

The ceiling is low and the lights are dim.
If Fujita is here, then Fujita has crossed a line
. The bar is long and the staff Korean –

I see Fujita.
Fujita is here
. Fujita sees me.
Fujita has crossed the line
. I think he’ll run but he smiles.
Fujita smiling
. He is smiling as he stands and walks down the length of the bar towards me –

What if he has a gun? What if he pulls it here?

Down the length of the bar, still smiling –

Hayashi Jo face down in the water

Fujita bows and says, ‘Good evening.’

‘Hayashi Jo is dead,’ I say. ‘And Adachi is looking for you.’

‘Adachi knows nothing,’ he says. ‘But he says nothing and then lets you fill in the gaps for him. Congratulations, inspector –

‘He’s probably followed you all the way here…’

‘I told Adachi nothing,’ I say. ‘But he knows things.’

‘What does Adachi know? What is there to know?’

‘Adachi knows you went to the
Minpo
offices,’ I tell him. ‘He knows you went there to see Hayashi Jo…’

‘And so what of it?’ asks Fujita.

‘So they told Adachi that he was the third cop in the last three days to visit them and that you were the first…’

‘But that doesn’t mean I killed him,’ says Fujita. ‘Does it?’

‘But yours is the only name he’s mentioned,’ I tell him. ‘You’re the only person Adachi is looking for…’

‘I’m not afraid of Adachi,’ laughs Fujita. ‘The captain has his secrets, just like everyone else. Just like you.’

I curse him and now I curse myself

I ask, ‘Did you kill Hayashi Jo?’

‘Now that’s a very strange question to be asking me,’ says Detective Fujita. ‘Because I hardly knew Hayashi Jo at all and it wasn’t me who gave poor old Hayashi’s name to Senju Akira…’

Day is night. Night is day. Day is night. Night is day

Fujita smiles, ‘I thought that was you, corporal?’

Day is night. Night is day. Day is night

Fujita laughs, ‘That was you, wasn’t it?’

Night is day. Day is night. Day is

I start to speak but the lights go out –

Night. Night. Night. Night

There’s been another power cut –

Night. Night. Night

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