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Authors: Peter Tieryas

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Two tanks fired at her. The mecha took two blows to its flank, but focused on the tank beneath her, making sure to destroy it completely. The biomorphs prepared to shoot again. The
Harinezumi
stood up and lifted the tank corpse, using it as a shield. The artillery pounded the tank’s underbelly rather than her chest. Kujira threw the tank at the two of them and used her legs to swiftly get to her prey. She used the sword on one, sundering it into four pieces. She pounded its companion with her fists until the top caved in, crushing the biomorph pilot inside even as it continued to struggle.

Bullets hit the final tank from behind. American civilians on the ground were sniping at it.

“What are those idiots doing?” Kujira muttered. “They just realize they can’t control this thing?”

The biomorph, irked by the bullets ricocheting off its shell, turned its attention to them. With a blast from its cannon, it wiped out the resistance. It didn’t stop with the shooters, wreaking havoc on the rest of the area. Constant flatlines flashed on the display. Porticals took records of those who had identification on them, registering casualties. Though they were short blips, Wakana noted most of them were USJ citizens who had no idea what hit them. Ethnicities went across the board from Mexican, French, Brazilian, Chinese, Indian, Austrian, Australian, and more.

“Doesn’t she have orders to retreat?” Ben whispered to Wakana.


Tosuiken
,” Wakana replied, referring to independence of field command. “Aboard the mecha, she’s
daigensui
, or supreme commander.”

“Kill the tanks, we only leave the rebels alive until our soldiers kill them. Let that final tank go, and it does our soldiers’ work for them without putting them in harm’s way,” Kujira said, questioning herself, contemplating the horrible and more horrible she’d referred to earlier. “Either way, innocents won’t be spared, or will they? Will our soldiers be able to separate the dissidents from bystanders in a way the biomorphs can’t?”

“Are you asking me?” Wakana asked.

“It’s not like you can give me an answer,” Kujira replied, not as a rebuke, but matter of fact.

Kujira’s eyes went to the final tank. She swapped her sword for an artillery gun and fired a volley at the Panzer Maus IX. These attacks were much fiercer than anything the Americans could hurtle. The super tank turned and charged back at the mecha.

Kujira waited for the trajectory to line up. Red lines calculated the distance on the portical screen, beeping and alerting her when the angles matched. The target lock connected and the
Harinezumi
slashed the tank in half. Kujira did not wait for the biomorph to recover. The
Harinezumi
leaped forward, thrust its hands into innards of the tank, which was filled with the camo fluid they’d seen earlier. A human registered on the portical screen, though Wakana and Ben couldn’t see anyone through the liquid. Kujira crunched her fists and the monster within died. The biomorph melted into a reservoir of rancor and loathing.

Kujira put both her palms together and did a slight bow. “You all fought valiantly,” she said to honor the biomorphs. To Wakana, she said, “It’s fifteen minutes from here to Otay.”

“Will you be OK?”

“We’re alive, aren’t we?”

“I mean disregarding the orders.”

“If I’m not, I’m not.
Shikata ga nai
.”

“You don’t have to worry about the calls,” Ben said.

“What do you mean?”

“Just don’t worry about it,” Ben assured her. “I’ll take care of those for you so that there won’t be any record of it.”

Kujira looked to Wakana who shrugged. “He’s good,” Wakana confirmed.

“You’re that good with a portical?” Kujira asked.

“I can manage myself,” Ben replied modestly.

Wakana checked his portical, realized all external connections were cut off. “Is there an internal kikkai field?”

Kujira gave him the algorithms to connect. Wakana read the latest reports.

“There’s been thirty suicide attacks on military installations in the last hour,” he gloomily stated. His fingers nervously shifted along his belt. “Total annihilation of the civilian force is the only way this can end now. Under the circumstances, Lieutenant Colonel Mutsuraga will be promoted, as will Captain Yoshioka. The captain will be surprised to hear he is now considered a war hero and is up for the San Diego War Medal – the first
jugun kisho
of our fight.”

“Is Tokyo Command disappointed?”

“They will want this situation resolved as quickly as possible.” Wakana gripped his staff, wishing he could destroy it.

They arrived at Otay base without any further complications.

“Thanks again for the lift,” he said to Kujira.

“Go kick someone’s ass for this,” she replied.

“I’ll try.”

                              9:12PM

Wakana charged into Mutsuraga’s office. Mutsuraga was at his desk, holding a bottle of alcohol, the top of his uniform loosened.

“Are you happy now?” Wakana demanded.

“Watch your tone, major,” Mutsuraga replied.

“You got what you wanted,
sir
.”

“What’s that?”

“All-out war.”

“You’re blaming me for this?”

“I am.”

“You’ve lost your mind.”

“I know you sent Yoshioka! He was just bait for me to chase, wasn’t he, while you sent your real bomber? We could have had peace!”

“I lost my wife out there today!” Mutsuraga snapped. “Don’t you dare talk to me about peace now! I will hunt down all the GWs.”

“Why would a GW set off a bomb on his own people?”

“Because they’re stupid brutes!”

Two guards rushed in, looking to the lieutenant colonel to check if they should take the major away.

“I will expose you,” Major Wakana said. “You and your miserable jealousy that’s going to lead to the death of countless innocents. Don’t you have an ounce of humanity in you?”

“What are you talking about?”

“Your wife and Andrew Jackson!”

Mutsuraga snarled, stood up, and charged Wakana. Before they could exchange blows, the guards blocked the pair from each other.

“How dare you speak against my wife now of all times!” Mutsuraga shouted.

“Don’t act so righteous!” Wakana shouted back. “You think I don’t see right through you?”

Mutsuraga went for his sword, but the guards stopped him. Mutsuraga slapped the guard. Ben, who was behind, grabbed Wakana and dragged him out.

“You should have challenged Jackson to a duel yourself instead of sending a lackey to do your dirty work!” Wakana shouted.

Ben tugged and pulled while the guards shut the door as soon as Wakana was out.

“Major Wakana!” Ben yelled. “You need to calm down, sir.”

“That son of a bitch has plunged the Empire back into an unnecessary war and put our soldiers into harm’s way.”

“He just lost his wife.”

“You think his feelings matter when you compare it to all those who’ll suffer now? You saw how many were killed by those biomorphs. When things get–”

“What’s going on here?”

Both of them turned and saw a young teenage girl approach. Wakana recognized her as Mutsuraga’s daughter, Claire. He stepped aside and did not say anything. “Ben? What happened?” Claire asked. “They said something happened to Mom.”

“You should talk to your father,” Ben answered.

Claire approached her father’s office and entered. Mutsuraga was still angrily railing when he saw his daughter.

“Dad, where’s Mom?” she asked.

She shut the door behind her.

Wakana twirled his mustache. “Who won today?”

Ben shrugged. “I plugged in some new variables earlier. The simulation predicted two scenarios. The Empire will eventually prevail after a bloody series of battles, or the cost will be so severe, it will end in stalemate.”

Wakana looked at Ben. “I know you’re the one who really built the simulation. Part of why I was here was to expose Mutsuraga. But I don’t think that’ll do much good now.”

“I don’t know what you’re talking ab–”

“Don’t try to deny it, lieutenant. Enough lies for one day. Tomorrow, carry on your farce. But for today, give me the truth. Why did you do it for him?”

“Sir, I don’t know–”

“I deserve better than another lie. Just tell me why.”

Ben stared back at Wakana, assessing. “No one took anything I did seriously. No one trusted me. They thought I didn’t deserve to be there, and when I refused to kiss their asses and do my best to prove myself to them, they shut me out. I tried, I really did, but the other students and teachers at BEMAG ridiculed me and sabotaged my work. They felt I was a disgrace to the corps and had no idea what I was doing. All except Mutsuraga. He was an instructor and he made a deal with me. People would use my simulation and play my game, but he would get all the credit. It was either that, or have it buried forever.”

“Do you still do the programming?”

“I’ve trained others so that much of the day-to-day is done by them.”

“Why not you?”

“The lieutenant colonel doesn’t fully trust me either,” Ben replied.

“Does he have cause?”

“Does he have cause not to trust you either?”

Wakana’s eyes tightened. “I can help you get another position.”

“I like my job right now.”

“And what is your job right now?”

“Lazy dilettante in the middle of a war.”

“When this disaster is contained and if you survive, they’ll open up a gaming division. They will need people to run the censor’s office. I could put your name in for it.”

“Why would you do that for me?”

“You’re my former student, Ishimura. Anything amiss with me helping you?”

Silence slipped between them.

“I do enjoy being a censor,” Ben finally said.

“You’ll get to see the seeds of your creation grow.”

“To censor them?”

“To cultivate their growth,” Wakana said.

“Thank you, sir.”

“Life is all about lies. It’s about what you can stomach. If you hadn’t let Mutsuraga take the credit for your work, he would not be in this position of authority and today’s bombing would not have happened.” Ben was about to protest, but Wakana continued, not wanting to hear any defense. “The bigger capacity you have for tolerating deception, the higher up you can go. I don’t think I’ll go very far, especially as I will write the truth about Mutsuraga, even if my report gets ignored… Then again, it would be nice to call the shots rather than being at the whimsies of mad officers with more stars.
Sayonara
, lieutenant.”

Ben saluted as Wakana left.

                              11:41PM

It was late when Wakana finished up his report and returned to his private barracks. Right outside, there was a lineup of fifteen American prisoners. One tried to escape on foot and was shot. The others got rambunctious and were executed. The bullets echoed death’s siren muted by gunpowder dissipating into smoke. Wakana was about to enter his room when he remembered he forgot to bring one of the printed files he needed to transcribe into his portical. He went back to the office again and overheard voices arguing in the hall. It was Ben and Mutsuraga’s daughter, Claire.

“You’re not telling me the whole story,” she said.

“I’ve told you everything I know.”

“None of this makes any sense,” Claire protested. “I can tell Dad is lying, but I don’t know why. Just tell me what really happened.”

“You heard his story.”

“I’m always straight with you. You need to level with me.”

“I don’t know.”

“Don’t bullshit me.”

“I’m not.”

She sighed. “Mom was with the Americans, wasn’t she?”

“She was.”

“Was it a church event?”

“I don’t know.”

“What do you know?”

“That it’s an unforgivable event,” Ben said. “I’m sorry.”

Wakana grabbed his file and returned to his residence. His soundproof walls blocked off all noise of the battle raging throughout the city. A glance at his portical indicated total civilian casualties were high, as intended. Wakana turned off the light and lay down on the bed. He blinked several times and covered his head with a pillow, turned sideways in bed. He scratched his scalp, adjusted the position of the blanket so that none of it was under him. Clearing his mind was difficult and he tried not to think about Yoshioka or Andrew Jackson or Beniko Ishimura. He looked ahead, and for a moment, he saw someone that caused him to shudder.

He thought back to Vietnam, the order to burn down a village that was allegedly harboring terrorists. Even when he’d called back to tell Command that it was only women and children, that they should rethink their plan, they’d refused to rescind the order.

Wakana turned all the lights back on, got off the bed, and went to the sword. The edge of the blade was sharp and he slid his fingers along it until they were bleeding. The pain stung and distracted his mind. Wakana returned to bed, blood dripping from his hand. He wiped it over his forehead, hoping the crimson would wipe away his self-loathing. It stained his flesh, but didn’t make things any more pure; instead, dousing him in the bloody red of guilt.

                              PRESENT

                              LOS ANGELES

July 3, 1988

2:43am

Akiko hoped it was a dream. She thought she felt her fingers moving, swore her elbow was bending. But when she tried to turn on the light, the blunt end of her artificial limb knocked the lamp over. The medics had replaced both arms; one with a temporary prosthetic that could simulate the basic motions of a finger and looked almost normal with a glove on; the other with a flesh-colored tube that could be fitted with weapons, triggered by the muscles in the triceps or, alternately, by a lever to its side. The specialists were making a more accurate hand out of silicone based on previous bioscans, but the transradial half wouldn’t be ready for another week.

She missed Hideyoshi, wondered if she should call him. She thought about her parents, still not sure how she was going to tell them what happened. Her father worked as a foreman in construction so she’d seen her fair share of accidents, his co-workers having limbs crushed. The doctors had effective anesthetics in their arsenal, allowing most to live free of pain with their artificial parts. She remembered one of her father’s friends had both his legs mashed when a wall collapsed. He used to be such a cheery man. After the accident, he sulked, rarely spoke, and drank his woes away.

She thought of the reports she’d read about medical units in Vietnam that were aggressively stepping up their experimentation with limb regrowth, particularly considering that so many of their soldiers had their arms chopped off by the guerillas. The research had been progressing slowly and was nowhere near the point where they could consider full regeneration.

Two men entered her hospital room. She recognized them from the night before as agents of the Kempeitai. They’d questioned her about what had transpired after the GWs released her. Had it only been two days? She’d spent the majority of the previous day in surgery. Anesthetics kept her in a muzzled daze, neither awake nor sleeping.

The agents were twins, had black hair and stiff torsos filling out their wrinkle-free gray suits. They were the same height, had the same short haircut, and gesticulated the same annoying scowl. Agent #1 wore a red glove on his left hand and Agent #2 wore it on his right hand.

“We have a lot of questions for you,” Agent #1 said.

“Good. I have lots of questions too,” Akiko shot back.

“Who are you working for?” Agent #2 asked.

“For the Empire,” Akiko replied, indignant that it even needed to be asked. “My commander is General Wakana.”

“You started in the diplomatic corps?”

She shook her head. “They had a program with BEMAG to send us all over the world as part of their recruiting efforts, but I never actually joined.”

“Which cities did you travel to?”

“Beiping, Keijo, Berlin, Tojo City, and more,” Akiko said.

“You went to Hanoi?”

She looked at both agents, not liking the tone of their question. “It was before the second rebellion and only for two days.”

“How did you like your time in Indochina?”

Akiko took a moment to remember its old name before they’d cast it off and called themselves Vietnam in an act of independence. “The city was booming under Imperial rule.”

“The Empire instilled order after the
seisen
,” Agent #1 said, referring to the Holy War that united the world under the graces of the Emperor’s
hakko ichi’u.
“Our army built hospitals, revamped public transportation, made education completely free for everyone, and eliminated hunger. Why do you think Vietnam is resisting the Empire so long?”

“There’s reports that the Germans have secretly been fueling their discontent, encouraging them to separate,” Akiko said. “But I don’t know why anyone would resist the honor of being part of the Empire.”

“Do you agree with Tokyo Command that it’s important to preserve the pro-Empire faction against the independent rebels?”

“If it fell, it would result in a domino effect of unrest in the whole region,” Akiko replied.

“Do you speak Vietnamese?”

“No.”

“What languages are you fluent in?”

“German, Italian, Japanese, and English,” Akiko informed them. “Though I have problems writing in German.”

“What’s your primary language?”

“English.”

“Not Japanese?”

Akiko hesitated before answering truthfully, “Not Japanese.”

The two agents glanced at each other.

“Why didn’t you join the diplomatic corps?” #2 asked.

“I was willing to go wherever the Empire needed me and I felt Tokko was the best way I could serve.”

“One of the first reports you made in Tokko encouraged the Ministry of Education to teach the ‘real’ history of the Empire to key officers so they know what actually happened. Were you implying there’s a false history?”

“I was. A lot of it is propaganda and exaggerated bravado that makes Japan seem like a reluctant savior during the Holy War. The actual history is much more interesting and useful for us. We wanted to take charge and shape our own destiny. It’s deplorable that countless millions died during the war and those numbers shouldn’t be hidden so everyone can know how futile their resistance was,” Akiko affirmed, recalling the criticism she’d received for the implications of her paper. “People are much happier now than when they were being exploited under the old western forces.”

“And what was life like under the old Americans?” Agent #1 inquired.

“Their ‘freedom’ was a joke. People were controlled by a plutocracy and the poor were suppressed by the wealthy with the promise of the ‘American dream.’ Slavery drove their economy and most had miserable working conditions. Racial inequality makes a joke of the ideas of equality proposed by their old Constitution. In the Empire, everyone is a child of the Emperor and, as long as you are loyal, you will be treated with respect and honor. That’s also what distinguishes us from the Nazis.”

“What’s that?”

“They’ll kill anyone who doesn’t match their view of the ideal Aryan. Even after Hitler tried to redefine Aryanism, it wasn’t that much more inclusive,” she said, recalling the report about a group of German officers who attempted a coup, accusing the Fuhrer himself of not fitting the Aryan mold.

“You’re aware that the Nazis are our allies?”

“Of course I am. I’m also aware we need to be well-informed about who they really are and stay vigilant in our defenses.”

“Vigilance is an interesting word for you to use,” #2 said. “You said last night the George Washingtons cut your hands off. Why did they let you live?”

“I don’t know. Captain Ishimura suggested that the GWs felt it’d be more of a punishment to leave me alive than to kill me.”

“Do you agree?”

“You should ask them, not me.”

“Where is Captain Ishimura?” #1 inquired.

“I don’t know.”

Both twins squinted skeptically. “How could you lose him?”

“Because I was in surgery,” Akiko replied.

“We’ve received a disturbing report that you killed a man in Portical Valley.”

“I did,” Akiko affirmed.

“Were you aware that man was a war hero? Colonel Nishino, known as Koushou, was one of the most important technical investigators during San Diego.”

“Captain Ishimura alerted me to that fact.”

“Did he also tell you that he was a valuable asset to the military and provided important information as well as essential technology that we otherwise could not get hold of?”

“Captain Ishimura informed me that he was an important figure.”

“You knew this and yet you still killed him?” Agent #2 asked angrily.

“I did,” Akiko said, without blinking.

“Why?”

“Because of his inhuman behavior. He had a zoo of people that–”

“That’s his personal life. All of those people were contractually bound to him. The Empire respects the lifestyle choices its servants make. Was there another reason why you killed him?”

Why did she even need to explain herself to them? “He questioned the divinity of the Emperor,” she said, assuming that would end any further inquiry.

“Do you have proof of this?”

“Is my word not sufficient?”

“Not when you’re under suspicion.”

“Suspicion of what?”

“Whether you’re a traitor, or just incompetent.”

“Incompetent?” Akiko flared. “I’m a loyal servant of the Emperor.” Her mind suddenly went back to the interactions she’d had with many of those she’d interrogated.

“Neither of us understands how an agent of Tokko could allow herself to be captured,” #2 said.

“It’s a disgrace.”

“An ignoble disgrace.”

“Why are you still alive?”

“I told you, they let me live,” Akiko replied.

“I don’t think she understands the question,” #1 said to #2 in a condescending tone.

“Maybe she was so scared, she lost her wits and forgot her sense of honor.”

“Why am I being interrogated?” Akiko asked, still not sure what was going on.

“Because your story doesn’t add up.”

“What doesn’t add up? I was attacked by the George Washingtons.”

“But you’re still alive and Captain Ishimura is conveniently missing,” #1 said.

“Perhaps they’ve been conspiring together,” #2 proposed.

“Where is General Wakana?” Akiko asked, agitated by their suggestion. “He’ll explain everything.”

“General Wakana is not available at the moment,” #2 said.

“Don’t try to hide behind him,” #1 snapped.

“I’m not trying to hide. I–” Akiko began to explain herself.

“You are not being very cooperative.”

#2 held up a gun. “I know you’re inoculated against most of our diseases, but there are a few even you’re not protected against.”

“Are you threatening me?” Akiko asked, furious at the insinuation.

“We’re urging you to be more cooperative.”

“This would all go much easier for you if you confessed,” Agent #2 suggested.

“We could go back to the station, but then we’d have to hand you over to the Inquisitors.”

“You don’t want to think about what they’d to you.”

“She knows what Inquisitors do.”

“They’ll flay off your face to start with.”

“You don’t want that, do you?” Agent #1 asked.

“I didn’t do anything wrong,” Akiko defended herself, hiding a shudder. She’d worked closely with Inquisitors in the past and knew the way they treated human bodies as though they were chunks of meat. “I want an advocate here.”

“Why would you want an advocate if you’re not guilty?”

“She’s acting like she’s guilty, isn’t she?” Agent #2 posited.

“Why am I under suspicion? Look what they did to me. They sent me back to taunt me,” Akiko stated, glancing at her prosthetics, then back at the two agents.

Two indifferent faces confronted her.

“The GWs are tricky. They’ll send their own back under the plight of having been tortured to get us to trust them.”

“It’s an ancient Chinese ploy,” #1 added.

Akiko snorted, but #2 didn’t let her speak and said, “We see through those.”

“Who are you working for?”

“I already told you. The Empire,” Akiko repeated. “I’m an agent of the Tokko.”

“An agent who kills one of our most important resources, loses Captain Ishimura, gets captured by the GWs but inexplicably returns, and demands an advocate when we ask a few simple questions,” Agent #1 charged.

Akiko snorted again. “Circumstantial evidence. None of that is conclusive.”

“But the only person who could either support, or convict you, is missing. Did you kill Captain Beniko Ishimura?”

“What? Are you out of your mind?” Akiko flared back.

“Then where is he? The last person he was seen with was you.”

“I told you, I don’t know,” Akiko said. “Isn’t there portical footage of the hospital?”

“All of it has been scrambled,” #1 said.

“The tech told us there were irregular portical disruptions that ruined the recorded material for the past three days,” #2 explained.

“Weren’t you investigating him earlier this week?”

“Yes,” Akiko answered.

“Why?”

“Ishimura is known as one of the most loyal soldiers in the Empire,” #2 said.

“He reported his own parents when they were about to commit an act of perfidy.”

“Why were you investigating him?”

“Those were my orders,” Akiko replied.

“And now, a key censor of portical games in the USJ is missing on the eve of the anniversary, right when the Washingtons are trying to spread their insidious game.”

“Are you plotting something for the celebration tomorrow?” #2 inquired point blank.

“I’m not plotting anything!” she yelled, remembering how many times others had said the same to her.

“Why do we keep on hearing unusual rumors about your work habits?”

“Someone must be spreading lies,” Akiko replied. “I haven’t done anything wrong.”

“The only person lying in this room is you.”

She knew better than to get frustrated. They wanted to flummox her, make her lose her temper as part of their routine. But she couldn’t fathom how she was under suspicion. She’d been the one meting out justice before. She was one of the top agents in
Tokubetsu Koto Keisatsu.

“Are you listening to us?” Agent #1 demanded.

“If you don’t start cooperating quickly, we’ll take you to one of the Inquisitors.”

She couldn’t believe, just two days before, she’d been on the other side.

                              4:02AM

The questions from the twin Kempeitai agents kept on coming. The speed of their verbal assault was confusing her and she was flustered by their word games. They were trying to trap her in contradictions, implicating without directly accusing, trying to get her to hang herself verbally.

“There are reports you had a confrontation with one of our officers, Tiffany Kaneko,” Agent #1 said.

“Not a confrontation. She was angry she’d had her cover blown and we talked for a short time.”

“That’s not what we heard.”

“Then you heard wrong.”

“What do you think of the George Washingtons?” Agent #2 asked.

“I think they’re traitors that should be crushed.”

“Was General Wakana a GW sympathizer?” Agent #1 demanded.

“He’s one of the most loyal officers I know.”

“You said you were following his orders.”

“Yes.”

“Did he order you to execute Koushou?”

“General Wakana gave no orders to execute Koushou. That was my decision,” Akiko said.

“Why?”

“I told you. What he was doing was inhuman.”

“Did you know General Wakana has had his fair share of run-ins with Tokyo Command?”

“And USJ Command too,” #1 confirmed.

“Stop lying to us and tell us what Wakana really ordered!”

“I’m not lying!” Akiko shouted back.

“The relationship the military has with its veterans is very important. Why would you endanger that?” #2 asked.

“You’re a member of Tokko and we know your reputation for ruthlessness,” #1 stated. “You want us to believe you cared about Koushou’s personal habits enough to endanger the interests of the Empire?”

“Why would you kill a war hero?” #2 barked angrily.

“At least he kept his pets alive.”

“How many have you tortured to death?”

“Perhaps she’s having doubts,” #1 suggested.

“Doubts about her position?”

“Doubt about her loyalty to the Emperor.”

“There are no doubts,” Akiko stated, and repeated it internally to herself.

“Why is it your boyfriend said you were obsessed with the Americans?” #1 asked.

Akiko did her best to hide her shock. “Hideyoshi?”

“He has all sorts of problems with the Yakuza.”

“Got himself into a huge debt with his gaming addiction.”

The Yakuza? He’d never told her anything about being involved with any gangsters.

#1 consulted his portical. “He called you an authoritarian and a lousy lover.”

“He said that?” she asked, immediately regretting the pain in her voice. Of course they would try to use that against her, make up lies to strike at her vulnerabilities.

“Which part bothers you the most?” #1 asked, with a sadistic smirk.

“Why are you so concerned with what the Americans do?”

Her heartbeat accelerated. “They killed my brother,” she replied.

“According to Hideyoshi, you were worried because your brother deserted his post and went into enemy territory.”

“Hideyoshi was lying. My brother did no such thing.”

“He did. An internal investigation confirms that.”

“My brother was a patriot who went to investigate a fire, not realizing it was an ambush!” Akiko yelled, recalling all the nights she’d spent privately looking into the case.

“How do you know that?”

“There’s nothing about an ambush in the official report.”

“There seems to be a similar trend in the family, doesn’t there?”

“Was it incompetence, or traitorous behavior?”

“You can attack me all you want,” Akiko stated, seething. “But leave my brother out of this.”

“How can we?
You’d
do the same in our shoes,” #1 stated, with a no-nonsense inflection
.

“We need to look more into your brother’s portical records. Find out if there’s anything treasonous there.”

“Or are you trying to protect him?”

“Maybe siblings conspiring together?”

“Shut up,” Akiko said.

“Excuse me?”

“I said, SHUT UP!”

#1 slapped Akiko’s face. #2 poked her prosthetic hand. Akiko’s face turned pale and the indignity hurt more than the actual pain. Her fingers tried to clutch at weapons she didn’t have. “What are you going to do if we don’t?”

“I don’t think she takes us seriously.”

“Maybe she’ll take the Inquisitor seriously.”

Agent #1 grabbed her shoulder while #2 removed the intravenous needles. She knew if she struck either, there would be further charges and they’d have free rein to strike back. She didn’t resist, despite knowing that a meeting with the Inquisitor meant her life was over. These agents were still servants of the Emperor. Her primary concern went to the safety of her own parents. If she was falsely convicted, both of their lives would be in danger. For all she knew, her parents were already under arrest for the typical charge under these circumstances: “Parental malfeasance for raising a traitor.”

They forced her up from the bed and dragged her out. She wondered where General Wakana was.

                              4:59AM

It was cold inside their car and the city lights seemed foreign, auroras of despondency rotting in the leprous night. They tied her to the backseat and jumped in front. She wondered where Hideyoshi was, if he’d really betrayed her to these agents. She thought of her brother, the reports that he had actually left his post. No one knew why, but it had eventually been explained as him investigating an anomaly. The uncertainty of the situation left much open to misinterpretation, which had troubled her back then and bothered her even more now.

Agent #1 said, “I hate the night shift.”

“I love it,” Agent #2 replied. “I hate the sun.”

“The sun is good for your skin.”

“Forget your skin. You hear the real story about Barstow?”

“With what?”

“Ear Wax Brothers.”

“I don’t even know who they are.”

“The Teruos.”

“Golden boys.”

“About two years ago, they went to arrest a guy, but the portical screwed up the charges so they didn’t know what they were arresting him for.”

“Why didn’t they call Command?”

“They didn’t want to let Command know their porticals had been corrupted. So when they arrested him, they refused to tell him the charge. Turns out later, their porticals hadn’t been corrupted. They’d just arrested the wrong guy.”

“What happened?”

“They couldn’t let the guy walk ’cause that’d mean they’d be in trouble and it’d be a bureaucratic mess. So they let him stew, beat the crap out of him, and three days later, the guy confessed to a crime he wasn’t wanted for.”

“Sedition?”

“Murder of three USJ citizens. Was executed on the spot. Both Ear Waxes got commendations. Now, they just go around accusing random people of crimes without telling them what they did.”

“Brilliant.”

“The best part was those three USJ citizens the guy confessed to killing didn’t exist. Their names were from a cancelled portical show the Germans made.”

“What happened to the brothers?”

“They both got promotions ’cause if they got in trouble, so would their superiors.”

“Atrocious.”

Both agents chortled gleefully. Akiko recognized their flippancy as an attempt to inject an air of levity to confound her expectations. They wanted her to feel at ease, give her a false sense of hope, as if they were just oddballs making funny quips that could be reasoned with. When they returned to the station, they would humor her, tell her they were on her side if she would just be agreeable. If she refused, they’d inflict physical violence, a measure saved for the Inquisitor who was usually an excellent physiologist with a supreme understanding of anatomy. The whole act abhorred her because she knew it so well, and they knew she knew too.

“Our duty is to eliminate superstitions,” #1 said.

“You’re afraid of ghosts.”

“Ghosts aren’t a superstition. They’re real.”

“Don’t talk about that fire again,” #2 moaned.

“I know what I saw.”

“Three women walking around naked in a burning building? You were hallucinating from the smoke inhalation.”

“I don’t want to use dynamite to execute traitors anymore. It’s too risky, especially if you don’t time it right.”

“I always time it right. You’re just sloppy.”

Akiko wished they would shut up. They’d placed a rod on her back that pressed uncomfortably and made it difficult to sit. Bumps on the road exacerbated the pain with each tremor. It was still dark, so the pair of lights blinking outside caught her attention.

“Something’s wrong with the car,” #1 said.

“What do you mean?”

“It’s not responding to the wheel.”

“Our seatbelts came loose.”

“What?”

A truck drove straight at them. She wondered if she was dreaming the whole thing until the truck smashed into their vehicle, causing them to spiral out of control. Their vehicle crashed into the wall and her head smacked against the front seat, though her belt held her firmly. Aside from a nasty bruise and a headache, she was OK. The twins hadn’t fared as well. With their seat belts unbuckled, they’d been hurtled out the front of their car. The back door opened. She blinked, unable to believe her eyes, ignoring the smell of blood in her nose.

Ben unstrapped her and helped her out.

“W-what are you doing here?” she asked.

“I came to rescue you.”

“Why?”

Ben paused in place. “You saved my ass twice. I couldn’t just leave you to burn. Besides, we’re both servants of the Emperor, right?” he said, repeating back to her what she’d said to him earlier. “Do you have a portical?”

“Why?”

“I need to put an inhibitor on it so they don’t track us,” Ben explained.

“I left mine behind.”

He handed her a poncho to cover her hospital gowns. Ben was wearing khakis, a brown windbreaker, and a tie-scarf hybrid that was trendy among gamers.

He went to the two brothers and examined their necks.

“Are they alive?” she asked.

“Barely,” he answered, feeling their neck veins pumping blood.

Despite their Imperial service, she advised, “You should kill them.”

“They’re not waking up any time soon.”

“We can’t take any risks.”

“I know. But by the time they wake up, we’ll be long gone.”

She grimaced and examined the crashed vehicles. “This is very unlike you.”

“What’s unlike me?”

“Smashing a truck into a car in a rescue operation.”

“Thanks?” He lifted up his portical. “This thing did all the calculations and jammed the controls on their car. Hit it at a perfect angle so that it’d incapacitate them, but leave them alive and keep you safe.”

She stared at the bodies. “They accused me of being a traitor.”

“I know.”

“How?”

“I’ve been following the Kempei’s portical feed.”

“Where’s General Wakan–”

“General Wakana is dead. He was ordered to commit suicide last night,” Ben answered.

Akiko felt her face turn numb. “What for?”

“Incompetence. Failure of security under his watch. You would have received a similar order after you returned to base.”

“That’s impossible.”

“Is it?” He held up his portical and showed her the Kempeitai orders to the two brothers, ordering them to commence with torture for a full day before giving her the option of suicide. The next message had clearance from her Tokko supervisors to proceed.

“Bu-but… I’ve done nothing wrong.”

“In their eyes, you’ve done everything wrong, thanks in part to testimony from my former love, Tiffany Kaneko. Welcome.”

“To what?”

“To life as the rest of us.”

“What are you talking about?”

“The constant fear of being arrested and killed for crimes you didn’t even know you committed. We’re snails living on the razor’s edge.”

“Wh-why didn’t you just let me die? I-I have no future anymore.” Her voice was fractured.

He stared at her prosthetic arms. “You want to stay and give up?”

“It would have served your interests if you’d let me die,” Akiko said.

“I don’t think in terms of interests. And, like I said, I owed you.”

“I can’t believe they accused me of betraying the Emperor, after all I’ve done. They suspected me of being ideologically corrupt.”

“The one holding the gun can make up whatever accusations they see fit,” Ben said. “We need to hurry.”

“Where?”

“Long Beach.”

“Why Long Beach?”

“There’s only one way out for the both of us. Bring back Mutsuraga’s head,” Ben said. “Everything will be forgiven then. They might even exonerate Wakana after the fact.”

Akiko looked back at her two Kempei interrogators. “I don’t know how much help I can be to you.”

“I’m not expecting your help. I’m leaving you with a friend.”

“A friend?”

Ben glanced uneasily down the road as a car drove by. “We really need to get going.”

“Is Mutsuraga in Long Beach?”

Ben shook his head. “San Diego.”


Inside
San Diego?” she asked.

“Yeah.”

“How do you know that?”

“Martha Washington told me.”

“Why would she do that?”

“Because I made a deal with her,” Ben informed her.

“What kind of deal?”

“One that saved both our lives.”

“In exchange for?” she wanted to know, distressed by the idea of any kind of arrangement with the terrorists.

“Don’t ask.”

“San Diego is completely sealed. It’s hard to get in or out.”

“Hasn’t stopped the GWs.”

“Our defenses have a weakness,” Akiko surmised.

Ben checked the agents again. They were both unconscious. He took their porticals, programmed something. “It’s the western coast. USJ ships can’t fully cover the whole border.”

“What about our mechas guarding the coast?”

“Good question. I don’t know how they got past them.”

“How will
you
get past them?”

“I have a friend in Catalina who can help us,” Ben said, as he put the porticals back.

“Catalina, the prison?”

“Yeah. The Tokko and Kempei have been on my ass all day so it’s been hard. They’ll be after both of us when they find out what happened here.”

“But ho–”

“I’ll explain more on the way. We have to get out of here now.”

“Shouldn’t we hide them?” Akiko asked, looking at the unconscious agents.

“They need medical attention and there’s no way anyone can trace us anytime soon.”

She went over and kicked both of them in the face.

Ben walked to a car parked on the street and used the portical’s digital key to open the door.

“Let’s go.”

                              5:43AM

Akiko read the orders multiple times. “If Agent Tsukino is uncooperative, bring her back for direct questioning with the Inquisitors. Inflict physical and mental pain as needed for a day maximum. Encourage honorable end.”

“Honorable end” was a euphemism for
jigai
. She chilled at the thought of General Wakana committing
seppuku
with his guts spilling out of him.

“I just followed orders,” Akiko insisted. “How can I get in trouble for obeying what they told me to do?”

“They had to blame someone for the bombings. Wakana and you got the fall after Tiffany pointed the finger at the two of you.”

“But he didn’t set the bombs.”

“Incompetence under his supervision. One of the governor’s favorite aides was a victim. A vicious bastard they used to call the Tendon Breaker because he was so cruel during San Diego. Everyone killed two nights ago served in San Diego with me.”

“The George Washington’s vendetta against all of you?”

“Looks like it. Wakana was one of the few people in a position of power who stuck his neck out for peace. Even when we try to do the right thing, we can never escape our sins.”

“I don’t think any of us want to,” Akiko said.

“What do you mean?”

“We all want what we feel we deserve, even if we outwardly deny it.”

“What is it we deserve?”

“Everyone has their sins.”

“The whole concept of sinning is an illusion,” Ben stated.

“You don’t feel guilty about anything?”

“I try not to think about it.”

“Did Tiffany accuse you too?”

Ben shook his head. “I was left off her reports.”

Akiko thought about Hideyoshi’s words to the Kempei officers, at least what they’d told her he’d said. “Suffering isn’t an illusion. Neither is pain. As sadistic as Koushou was, maybe he was right and we’re just microorganisms inside a bigger being struggling for our place.”

“Microorganisms don’t kill each other.”

“They do all the time. Viruses ravage and devour mercilessly, even to the point of destroying the host. There are theories that say viruses evolved from bacteria, but viruses like bacteriophages specifically target bacteria.”

“Descendants killing their ancestors.”

“Almost all religions try to kill the faiths before them, even if they owe them an ideological debt. Shinto is one of the few that’s amenable to symbiosis.”

“You’re comparing Shinto to a virus?”

“A civilized one. That’s why we absorbed Buddhism and that’s why we incorporated parts of Christianity when we took over here.”

“What is it with you and diseases?”

“I’m fascinated by their effect.”

“Even if they kill?” Ben asked.

“Our scientists use bacteriophages to attack deadly bacteria and protect us from their effects.”

“What happens if a bacteriophage gets out of control and attacks the scientists?”

Akiko peered out the window. “Then the scientists die.”

Ben laughed. “Let’s hope it doesn’t come to that. You hungry at all?”

Akiko heard her stomach growling. “I’m starving.” They’d fed her intravenously to replenish her nutrients, but she craved hot sustenance.

“Any particular kind of food you feel like?”

“Anything as long as it’s cooked and not too sweet.”

“There’s a Mexican place in Long Beach I love right next to where we need to be. Only thing about their nachos is their beans make my shit hard and I get all constipated. Stop me from eating too much because I always overeat.”

“Thanks for letting me know that. You just made me lose my appetite.”

“Don’t tell me you’re squeamish about the scatological.”

“Of course not. Shit can say a lot about a person,” Akiko stated.

“Like?”

“Where they’ve been eating, who they’ve been consorting with, chemical composition, the–”

“Forget I asked.”

                              6:02AM

Long Beach was where trendy shopping stores blended into the seedy underpinnings of the red light district. Vendor-bots sold extra porticals, fruit juices, and companionship as they rolled through the streets with spinning lights. A colossal dome covered a large section of the love district with pectorals of light tensing from the fumed lust of strangers exerting more than their muscles. Butt clubs, exotic dancers with extra limbs, fetish recreation libraries, the biggest collection of dolls in the world, a Victorian-themed brothel, virility enhancement stores, and bondage baseball were some of the more extravagant set pieces of interest. Four prostitutes in translucent kimonos rode skateboards selling their services. Biker gang members were leaving after a night of debauchery. Bored housewives left the companionship of their boy toys for the night. Sushi and toast were being served on top of naked men and women for breakfast. Confederate flags were waving at the corners of buildings, some women clad only in southern colors. A string of love motels were painted a different color from their neighboring ones so that there was a stream of pink, verdant green, mauve, light purple, and pastel yellow rooms.

“Why are we here?” Akiko inquired.

“I need transportation,” Ben answered. “And the only ships allowed to Catalina that don’t check individual IDs are the ones sent by the Love Service Guild. I have a friend, Orochan, who owns one of the love boats.”

They parked in an eight-story tall lot. It was early morning so many of the stores were closing. Ben took her to the Mexican restaurant he’d mentioned. Two tired waitresses bowed and welcomed them. There was a stage, but no dancers. Some drunks were passed out in their seats. The jukebox was a cranky fortress of broken records. They were seated in a stall and Ben ordered, “Super nachos.”

Akiko selected the tostada.

When the waitress left, Akiko asked, “Has the death count from the GW attacks gone up?”

“Still a dozen. I was supposed to be lucky thirteen.”

“Did you know any of the victims well?”

“I knew them just enough to know I don’t regret their deaths,” Ben replied. “They were all butchers in San Diego.”

“You mean good soldiers.”

“The best. I almost feel honored I was targeted.”

The waitress brought the food. Ben ate without saying a word. Akiko didn’t try with the chopsticks and struggled with the spoon in her prosthetic hand. Ben, trying to be polite, focused on his own food. She lowered her mouth into the tostada and ate directly. She didn’t like the taste, but she was so hungry, she didn’t care. She swallowed the beef and lettuce, feeling it invigorate her. Ben chomped softly on his carne asada and chips.

“Why are you so quiet?” she asked between bites.

“I don’t want to bore you with ‘an exchange of useless information,’” he replied.

It took her a moment to recall her own words earlier in the week. “I didn’t know you were so sensitive,” Akiko said.

“Don’t want to offend.”

“I need some
useful
information.”

“Like?”

“Where can I find a gun to attach to my arm?”

“There might be dealers here. I’ll ask Orochan to help you after I leave.”

“You can’t be serious about leaving me behind.”

“I’m going to drop you off with her and–”

“I’m coming with you.”

“I’m going into San Diego,” Ben said. “You said yourself you wouldn’t be of much help.”

“You can’t survive by yourself.”

“I’ll do fine.”

“You failed your officer field training because you co–”

“I know why I failed.”

“You need me,” Akiko said, point blank.

“Why do I need you?”

“Because I’m not afraid to kill.”

“You think I don’t kill out of fear?” Ben asked.

“I don’t know why you don’t kill, but it’s a weakness that’s going to get
you
killed. It nearly got you kicked out of BEMAG.”

“That was a different situation.”

“You couldn’t chop a prisoner’s head off under orders. That’s pathetic.”

“And you think you with a gun arm is going to improve our chances?”

“Not think. I know.”

Ben chomped on a nacho. “I saved you because I owed you. But I think your fervor fringes on lunacy.”

“The Emperor is our god. Anything short of lunacy in our dedication is treason,” Akiko said.

“You feel that even now?”

“Absolutely,” she said, even though she knew her faith was wavering.

“That’s why I can’t take you with me.”

“What?”

“If someone insults the Emperor while we’re in San Diego, are you going to go ballistic on them? Can you even pretend to be a GW sympathizer?”

Akiko tried to wipe the meat off her lips. “What’s your plan?”

“Get Mutsuraga no matter what it takes, even if it means outwardly betraying the Emperor.”

“You tell me what really happened with him and his wife in San Diego, and I’ll play along.”

Ben scooped up the beans on his plate and began explaining the true history of Mutsuraga’s wife, Andrew Jackson, Wakana, and the whole bloody mess. He left out his own involvement concerning the actual programming of the simulation and the games.

“That explains why the whole matter is classified,” Akiko said, once he finished. “I didn’t know you and General Wakana served so closely together.”

“He’s the one who got me the job as a censor.”

“He supported my career as well,” Akiko said, plaintive at the thought of his loss. “What about his family?”

Ben shook his head. “I don’t know, but it can’t be good.”

Akiko remembered how much Wakana doted on his children.

“We can mourn him when this is all over,” Ben said, anticipating her thoughts. “There’s still a long way ahead for both of us.”

“Why is Mutsuraga in San Diego? Doesn’t he hate the GWs?”

“He knew they’d provide shelter as a defector and the creator of the
USA
,” Ben explained, licking the guacamole off his spoon. “He tells a very different version of what happened in San Diego to the GWs.”

“You told Martha Washington the truth?”

“That’s why she let us go and told me where he was.”

“Where is she heading?”

“She suggested it’s a one-way trip and doesn’t expect to come back. For all I know, she could already be dead.”

“What else did you tell her?” Akiko asked, in an apprehensive tone.

“Like I said before, I’ll do whatever it takes to get Mutsuraga.”

“You gave them passwords.”

“Nothing that won’t be changed automatically on the new shift.”

Akiko curbed her temper, knowing there was no point arguing. “How can you be so casual betraying the Empire?”

“Because I’m doing it for the greater good.”

She’d eaten the top layer of her tostada, but couldn’t go deeper without smearing her face in food.

“Do you need help?” Ben asked.

“No,” Akiko replied. She struggled to clamp the handle of her spoon, unused to the mechanics of her artificial hand. It took her a while, but she fed herself. That was when her stomach started growling. “I have to use the restroom.”

She headed for the lavatory, a private one with only an Eastern-styled toilet in the ground. The lock on the stall door was too hard for her to manipulate so she gave up and squatted above the toilet.

Twenty minutes later, she opened the door and called to Ben.

“You OK in there?” Ben asked.

“I’m fine,” she replied. “ I need some assistance.”

“What’s up?”

She looked at the tip of her prosthetic hand, covered in shit, toilet paper ripped to shreds. She was embarrassed, but defiant as well.

Ben saw the struggle in her face and asked, “Can I come in?”

“Yes.”

Ben did not flinch or make any overt reaction. He assisted her as best as he could.

They both washed at the sink.

“One of my commanding officers told me the best way to make a prisoner go crazy was leave them in a dark room and not clean up their shit,” Akiko explained. “We called it ‘excrement torture.’ I did it to a woman obsessed with cleanliness. Stuck her in a room for a month. Never let her shower or clean up her piss or shit.”

“What happened to her?” Ben asked, as he rinsed with soap.

“When we let her out, she wasn’t human anymore. I thought she was weak. But I know now I couldn’t have handled even a day of that.”

They dried off quietly.

                              7:44AM

Outside Orochan’s bar, two men and a woman stood threateningly, each holding clubs.

“It’s closed,” the woman with jewels all over her body said.

“I need to see Orochan,” Ben replied.

“Orochan hasn’t paid her dues, so she can’t see customers that haven’t been approved by the Mosquito.”

“Who’s the Mosquito?” Ben asked.

“Get out of here before I have to hurt you!” the tall male with the beard snarled. He had long boots, a leather jacket, and the tattoo of a lizard’s face covering part of his eyes.

Ben wasn’t sure what to do, but Akiko stepped in and said, “My name is Akiko Tsukino.”

“I don’t give a shit who you are.”

“I’m an agent of the Tokko,” she finished, and noticed their aggressive body postures wilt. “I know everything about each one of you and your families. Anything I don’t know, I’ll find out.” Akiko looked at the woman, spotted the ring on her wedding hand. “I’m aware of what you and your husband are doing. Don’t think it’s escaped our attention.” To the lizard face, “You think I don’t know about what you did to your friend?”

Lizard face asked, “What are you talking about?”

She recognized the tattoo. “Don’t play dumb unless you want me to humiliate you. I know you’ve had surgery done, but does your boss know why you really left the Tokage family?”

“H-how did yo–”

“Step aside before you get in trouble.”

“But Mosquito–”

“I’ll deal with him later!” Akiko snapped.

She led Ben in and they did not stop her. Instead, they were vexed, fearful of the implications of believing the Tokko was watching them.

                              7:52AM

Orochan was a big woman, more robust than heavyset. She wore a ceremonial robe on top with short shorts underneath, which buttressed her thick legs. Her purple mohawk complemented her purple-tinted contact lenses. She let out a gusty laugh before asking, “How did you get in here?”

“She was persuasive,” Ben said about Akiko.

“Must have been. What trouble have you gotten yourself into this time, Ishimura?”

“Who says I’m in trouble?”

“Why else would you be here so early in the morning?”

The bar had twenty posh leather couches surrounding marble tables and mahjong sets. The shelves on the walls were lined with wine and
sake
bottles. Eleven portical game stalls were in the corners, including a popular pinball title. There were no clients, though male and female prostitutes lingered on the bar with halos of perfume around them. A painting of the Emperor was displayed prominently at the front, a coterie of Buddha statues to either side of him. Ben handed Orochan a set of expensive chopsticks, finely carved and hand polished from rosewood.

“For me?” Orochan asked. “Very sweet of you.”

“Specially ordered from Italy.”

“Who’s your persuasive friend?”

“This is Akiko.”

Orochan’s eyes went to Akiko’s prosthetic arms. “She police?”

“Something like that,” Ben replied. “I need transportation.”

“Only place we go to is Catalina.”

“That’s where I need to get.”

She cast Ben an apprehensive glance. “What’s your business there?”

“Imperial business. You don’t want to know the details, do you? What’s your price?”

“There’s no price for you. But I’m having some problems, as you might have noticed.”

“What kind?”

“A local Yakuza thug, Mosquito, thinks he owns us and is only letting approved customers in. He’s causing a hell storm for my boys and girls. Already carved up three of their faces. Doug! Doug!” Doug was an effeminate male in his early twenties and had a boyish charm about him, if it wasn’t for the scar ripping across his face. “Doug used to be my most popular host, and now he washes dishes in the back because Mosquito wanted to make a point. Doug, where are your manners?” Doug bowed respectfully to both of them. “Go back to sleep.” He bowed again and left. “Mosquito is demanding a tax on every transaction and won’t let us go to sea unless we pay him boating fees. He’s taken our ship for personal purposes, trying to start a gaming deck inside.”

“What can I do?” Ben inquired.

“Nothing, unless you can help me get rid of him. But that’s pretty much impossible.”

“Why?”

“He has a group of ex-sumo wrestlers as bodyguards. No one’s getting through.”

“Is there some other way? Maybe we can make an arrangement with him?”

“He’s not making any arrangements. I’m sorry, Ben.”

Ben was unsure what step to take next.

“Do you have an extra gun arm?” Akiko interjected.

“I can get one,” Orochan answered.

“You get me a good one, and I’ll take care of your Mosquito.”

“Wait a se–” Ben tried to say.

Akiko fired a ferocious glower in his direction. “I’ll take care of this, understand?”

Orochan looked at Akiko. “This is different from those guards.”

“It doesn’t matter.”

“His personal bodyguards are professionals.”

“Do I look scared?”

Orochan laughed with a clap. “Reiko-chan.”


Hai
,” a young, petite woman replied with a short bow.

“Take care of Ben for a few minutes.”

“Where are you going?” Ben asked.

“I’m taking your friend to the storage room so we can check out some gun arms. I trust you won’t get into trouble without me?”

Orochan led Akiko through a room behind the bar into a dim corridor filled with bedrooms. The walls had European paintings of couples copulating in bizarre poses. Most of the doors were shut, though a few clients were enjoying a raucous soiree. Orochan led Akiko down the stairs into a sealed room filled with crates, sex toys, and guns.

“What did Ben tell you about me?” Orochan asked.

“Nothing.”

“You Kempeitai?”

“No, Tokko. How’d you–”

“It’s my job to know. I served with Ben in San Diego as a requisitions officer.”

“You supplied arms?” Akiko asked, as she looked at the assortment of items on display.

Orochan grinned. “They had me gather comfort companions for the soldiers.”

“Governor Ogasawara outlawe–”

“I know the law. But privately, those laws got thrown out the door. I was ordered to take the American prisoners and prostitute them for our soldiers. Most of the women had never even slept with a man. Strange religious belief that they shouldn’t have sex before marriage. I had to prepare those girls, mentally and physically. If one didn’t perform and some fancy officer was displeased, they’d shoot ’em. They sent us the dumbest and cruelest soldiers around. It was a helluva challenge, but I always protect my own. You come under my roof and there is no race.”

“I’ve studied San Diego and I’ve never heard of this.”

“Of course not. The scholars hid a lot of the terrible shit that happened,” Orochan said.

“Why?”

“You didn’t see San Diego. Children would approach officers and blow themselves up. Our soldiers killed civilians indiscriminately. Whole parts of town were wiped out. Whenever we took prisoners, they’d kill themselves.”

“They shouldn’t have rebelled.”

“We killed so many of them first.”

“You think we’re to blame?” Akiko asked, incensed by the suggestion.

“No. I’m just saying it’s a long and bloody history,” Orochan replied, preemptively trying to calm her. “Ben saved my ass twice.”

“How?”

“I don’t like dredging up the past. But if he’s in trouble, I’ll do anything to protect him.”

Akiko’s eyes went to a particularly lethal-looking cannon that was pitch black, a long corpulent barrel with grooves like fangs. “What’s that?”

“German prototype I scored a few years back from some arms dealers visiting from Rome.”

“What’s it do?”

“They called it the death ray. It uses crystals to power energy beams that are more deadly than bullets. Only problem is, it’s heavy and impractical as a gun arm. The recoil sucks even with the muzzle brakes. Hard to aim and balance.”

Akiko noted that it was made of alloy steel and had a revolving barrel that switched bullets with lasers. “Can I try?” she asked.

“I’ve tried to move this since I got it. It’ll screw up your shoulder and back. You should try this Type 22 light machine gun. They’re not too heavy, fire Arisaka cartridges, and–”

Akiko’s eyes were on the death ray. “Indulge me,” she said.

Orochan helped Akiko remove her prosthetic.

“Your scar is still fresh,” Orochan said, noticing the cuts and the wound. “You need more time.”

“I don’t have time.”

“This won’t hold long.”

“I don’t need long,” Akiko insisted. “Just a few days.”

Orochan had to use both arms to lift the death ray, screw in the rivets, connect the electric nerves, and calibrate the trigger. “This a five-axis swivel on the sock?” Akiko grunted in assent. “I’m using an amplified osseointegration process with this titanium bolt. This’ll sting, but it’ll attach the part to your bone with this abutment. These patches will accelerate the osseointegration, but if you’re not careful, it’ll rip out your bone.”

The integration felt like a hammer on her joints, a stabbing motion that jolted her entire body. Akiko clenched her teeth. The wires looked like cracks in a drought-ridden desert. Globules of fat and flesh surrounded the junction point. She felt as though she were being penetrated by a thousand needles, her skin imploding.

“Do you want me to take it out?”

Akiko shook her head.

“Give the microportical a chance to calibrate with the nerves in your arm,” Orochan said.

“How much longer?” Akiko asked, through bated breath.

“Soon.”

Her vision was blurry and her thoughts corroded. Beniko didn’t look like her brother; he was more confident, taller, and suave. And yet both had something about them that was nervous and uncomfortable. What had her brother been so afraid of? He used to brush the back of his uniform because he had so much dandruff and had been devastated by disapproving reviews from superior officers. He dreamt every night that his shadow fell in love with a woman and ran off without him. The world was untempered chaos, shadows consummating each other with the urges of night. Her thoughts were as cluttered as those dreams. There was a gigantic stomach on the ceiling. She could smell ground beef and stir-fried intestines pouring out its asshole. Jenna Fujimori invited her to dinner. “It’s very delish,” she said. They were inside her stomach and the pressure of congestion forced dissolution.

“You awake?” Orochan asked. “You knocked off.”

Akiko stared down at the cannon that was her arm. She forced it to move, though it was a struggle to keep it up.

“How does it work?” Akiko wanted to know.

“You can set the energy levels on that knob,” Orochan explained, pointing to a dial with numbers. “There’s the trigger or you can activate it with–”

Akiko set it to the lowest level and fired. A laser beam fired into a dildo, puncturing a hole that made the whole thing melt.

“The recoil isn’t too bad,” Akiko commented.

“That’s because it’s at the lowest level.”

“How does it recharge?”

“Solar powered. If the ray runs out, you can switch to the machine gun until it builds back up. You need to flip out the side barrel.”

Akiko played with both. “Do you have steroidal enhancers?” she asked, feeling the duress on her arm.

“Why?”

“Do you want me to take care of your problem or not?”

“I do.”

“Then give me enough enhancers to last a few days.”

“They’re upstairs.”

Akiko examined the gun arm again. “You don’t care if your Mosquito is dead or alive?”

“I’d prefer alive. But I’d also prefer if he can’t talk. I don’t want his cyborg Yakuza members to come after us.”

“You know where he’s at?”

“A hotel near Murder Alley. I’ll give you directions. You’ll also need to take a gift with you.”

“What kind of gift?”

“Civil War relics. The Yakuza have a fetish for American rebels and Robert E. Lee.”

They went back upstairs. Reiko was flirting with Ben, trying to kiss him, though he deftly avoided every foray, chuckling, amused by her flirty ways.

Orochan injected chemicals into the gun arm that, in turn, was connected intravenously with Akiko’s arm. She packed several capsules into a case, added an emergency syringe, and handed them to her.

“Let’s go,” Akiko ordered Ben.

“Where?” he asked, noticing the huge gun arm.

“We need to swat some mosquitoes.”

                              9:16AM

They walked towards Murder Alley.

“What are you going to do?” Ben asked.

“What do you think?”

“We have to be careful how we approach these cyber Yakuza.”

“Don’t you have any guts?” she asked. “I’ve never met such a timid officer, Ishimura. Is your animal spirit a chicken?”

“Our mission isn’t hunting Yakuza. It’s catching Mutsuraga.”

“And we aren’t going to get anywhere near Mutsuraga without getting to Catalina, right?”

“Let me talk to him a little, reason with him,” Ben said. “I know Orochan would like to start a turf war, but we’re not going to be the cause of that.”

“What’s the story between you two?”

“What’d she tell you?”

“She told me you saved her twice in SD.”

“What she means is, I staved off her court martial. Some colonel got mad at one of her girls and nearly beat her to death. Orochan cut off his
chinchin
. None of the soldiers got violent again. But she was brought up on charges.”

“How’d you get her off?”

“A few gifts, a few portical revelations with information some officials would rather not have disclosed.”

“Why’d you do it?”

“I have a soft spot for officers in trouble,” Ben said. “By the way, nice bluff with Mosquito’s guards earlier. I wasn’t sure it was going to work.”

“Low level Yakuza thugs only respond to strength. They weren’t too bright either.”

“What if they hadn’t fallen for it? Like what if the lady wasn’t married and that guy’s tattoo was just a mistake after a drunk outing.”

“The moment I saw the weakness in their eyes when I mentioned Tokko, I knew they would believe anything I said.”

“But the truth–”

“Doesn’t matter when you have a stronger will.” A sudden stench overwhelmed Akiko, a mix of vomit, feces, and rotten flesh. “What is that?”

“That’d be Murder Alley,” Ben answered.

“It smells terrible.”

“You go there and get murdered a hundred different ways. They bring you back to life for a price.”

“It’s a service?”

“An expensive one.”

She looked in the alley and it was dark, nothing visible from outside. “Why would anyone do it?”

“Boredom is the root of all trouble in the world.”

“There are so many enemies of the Emperor that need to be eliminated. I don’t understand how anyone could be bored.”

“Not everyone has the same cause to believe in.”

“Don’t you feel bad?” she asked.

“Why?”

“All you soldiers suffered so much in San Diego, and this is the world the survivors have created.”

“Never thought about it that way.”

“We have to make the USJ a better place.”

Ben laughed dubiously, thinking she was being ironic, but saw the seriousness in her expression. “Let’s deal with Mutsuraga first.”

                              9:42AM

The “mosquitoes” were four former sumo wrestlers, with bodies like blocks of concrete, no visible neck, and arms that were rectangles of fat and muscle. Their eyes disappeared into their round faces and their hair was tied into knots. They each had mechanical pinkies, a rite of passage for members of the Yakuza to sacrifice the least of their limbs. They were guarding room 301.

“We’re here to see Mosquito,” Akiko said. She opened up a case with two Derringer pocket guns. The first had a brass frame and a two-shot belt; the second, a tiny 0.4 inch caliber pistol.

One of the wrestlers took the case and went inside. He returned a few minutes later and grunted for them to come in.

They entered an enormous suite covered with Civil War antiques from uniforms to swords, flags, buckles, eagle-breasted plates, insignia, and guns. Ten Pomeranians circled them, barking cheerfully. They were adorably cute balls of hair and even Akiko, who didn’t like dogs, couldn’t help but smile.

“Genetically modified Pomeranians. When they smell blood, they’ll pounce. Why are you here with that huge gun on your arm?”

Mosquito wore a yellow leather jumpsuit, had on enormous sunglasses, a hat shaped like an alligator, and five gold necklaces. He was mid-height, Asian from his complexion, possibly a mix – it was hard to tell in the USJ without documentation, particularly with those from the underbelly of the Empire. His voice was strident and harsh in its accents.

“Because we wanted to bring you that gift,” Ben replied, referencing the pocket guns.

Mosquito lifted the tiny Derringer. “One of these killed their warlord, Lincoln. Now he was a conqueror, a man who drank the blood of his enemies and feasted on their corpses. The Americans made him out to be this genial buffoon, but he was a vindictive and fiendish tyrant who forced his will on the rebels. Isn’t it a masterful stroke of propaganda that they’ve made him out to be a bumbling leader? They even claim their last president was a cripple! The Americans have a fascination with the everyday man and will do anything to foster that lie when these rulers were the elite, the most ruthless patricians before their Republic crumbled.”

“We have a request to make,” Ben said.

“Of course you do. Who sent you?”

“Does it matter?”

“I guess not. You need to get to Catalina, Captain Ishimura,” Mosquito said.

How did he know?
Akiko wondered.

“We do,” Ben replied.

“I hear you’re quite a gamer.”

“Decent.”

“I have a match aboard my boat of the
USA
game. Every month, I hold a special tournament. Eight people play. Whoever wins the game lives. The others are killed. You survive, I give you a free ride to Catalina. You die, and it’s game over.”

“You can’t be serious.”

“I am.”

“No ride is worth risking my life over.”

“There’s no other ride to Catalina. And you,” he said to Akiko. “Even if you shoot me with that gun arm, it’s not gonna help you get to Catalina.”

“At least it’ll shut your mouth,” she replied.

Mosquito chortled. “I like your spirit. Your boyfriend’s too.”

“What?”

“You told my guards you were Akiko Tsukino. I had to look you up, but I knew I’d heard your name before. Hideyoshi used to brag about his police girlfriend before he ran up a big debt. He’s a gaming addict and he was bad enough to become my captive.”

Akiko was stunned, but also riled up. “You think you can threaten me? Hideyoshi is in another city.”

“You sure about that? Both him and Orochan will play in the death matches if you don’t,” Mosquito told Ben.

“Why Orochan?” Ben said back.

“She displeased me sending her with that big cannon. I can’t help but question her motives.”

Akiko raised her gun. “You release them or you die.”

“You kill me, and Hideyoshi will die for sure,” Mosquito retorted. “You play and you win, your prize will be their lives and a free trip to Catalina. What do you say?”

“Let me see Hideyoshi,” Akiko said.

Mosquito signaled one of his sumo guards. A side room opened and in came Hideyoshi. His hair was ruffled, he reeked of alcohol, and his face was heavily bruised. When he saw Akiko, he teared up. “They-they told me you were dead.”

“He’s not very good at games, but he’s always gambling and throwing his money away. You should spend that money on your girlfriend,” Mosquito chided him. “Before you get any ideas, look at his finger.”

Hideyoshi’s finger was a metallic pinky.

“Why is that there?” Akiko demanded.

“Ask him.”

Akiko asked Hideyoshi.

“I’m sorry,” he said, unable to face her.

“I own him,” Mosquito said. “And if he displeases me in any way, I release the toxin in that pinky that’ll kill him in a minute. He agreed to it.”

Akiko was so furious, she almost started firing blindly, wanting to obliterate everything in her sight. Mosquito’s smug grin made it clear he was enjoying her rage. She looked to Ben, who was watching her and Hideyoshi.

“Where’s Orochan?” Ben asked Mosquito.

“Getting her pinky fitted.”

“How can I trust that you’ll do what you say?”

“You think I’m crazy enough to touch military without an agreement? I cherish my life,” Mosquito declared. Ben remained unmoved. “You want a blood oath?”

“I do.”

Mosquito rolled up his sleeves, took out a knife, and cut a part of himself. He sucked on the blood and said, “I swear on my life to honor the terms of the games to release the prisoners and take you to Catalina if you win.”

“If I play, I want those two released unconditionally.”

“That’s two lives for one.”

“Yeah, it is.”

Mosquito deliberated. “Fine. I’ll let them off as your entrance fee.”

“Ben,” Akiko called. “You don’t need to do this.”

“You love your boyfriend?” he asked.

“He can take care of himself,” Akiko answered.

“Maybe,” Ben replied. “Usually these games are rigged against competitors. Is the tournament rigged?”

Mosquito shook his head. “Just the usual winner’s handicap.”

“What style?”

“Four rounds. Winner gets to pick the stage.”

“No matter what happens, Akiko goes free.”

“She’s not playing,” Mosquito answered.

“That’s not an answer.”

“I give my word that no harm will come to her.”

“You can’t put your life at risk for a game,” Akiko said.

“Isn’t this what you’d call guts?” Ben replied. “When’s the tournament start?”

Mosquito skipped joyfully. “At 8:32 tonight. It’ll be the main entertainment after dinner.”

“I need sleep.”

“Anything you want is yours.”

                              11:13AM

They boarded a big freighter masquerading as a cargo boat, filled with pleasure companions and gambling porticals. The lower deck had been converted into a casino and while it was empty at the moment, it would get packed a few hours later. There were sleeping accommodations aboard the boat, luxurious rooms for the clients that included heart-shaped beds, walls painted in portical gaming motifs, and monkeys that served champagne. Hideyoshi was in a half dazed state when Akiko put him to sleep in her Stonewall Jackson suite. “I can’t believe you’re alive,” he rambled on and on before falling asleep.

She went to Ben’s room, which had a cabaret theme with mannequins of famous wild west dancers outside. She heard what sounded like screaming and burst through the door to find two women frolicking with Ben over alcohol.

“Can I speak to you?” Akiko asked.

“Sure,” Ben replied.

“In private.”

“Oh, right. Outside?”

Ben stepped out.

“Do you know what you’re doing?” Akiko asked.

“I figured if I was going to die, might as well get drunk one last time on good
sake
. Have you met my new friends? They’ve generously offered to accompany me for my last drink.”

“Not the women, Ishimura. I mean the match.”

“Don’t worry about it.”

“Your life depends on this game.”

“Not yours.”

“If you lose, I will blaze my way out,” Akiko said. “I’m not optimistic about my chances of survival, but I’ll take as many of them down as I can.”

“You told me sometimes people have to die so others can live.”

“Hideyoshi can take care of himself. And if he can’t, it’s my responsibility, not yours.”

“I already made the agreement with Mosquito.”

“What about Mutsuraga?”

One of the women called out, “Ben?”

“You worry too much,” Ben said to Akiko. “It’ll work out. And if it doesn’t, you can still go hunt him down without me to hinder you.”

Akiko wondered about the captain, his childhood, growing up without parents, knowing he’d caused their deaths. What would she have done in his shoes? Her memories went back to a summer evening almost a decade ago. She was studying German when she heard a commotion outside. USJ police had arrived with their loud sirens – a neighbor down the road was being arrested. Dad had told her not to look, but she couldn’t help herself. She’d never met them, but had seen them around, a young couple with a daughter and son. All four were manacled, bags placed over their faces, dragged by the police into a black van, never to be seen again.

“Have you ever played the
USA
game?” she asked Ben.

“Does it matter?” he asked back. “I need a long sleep before the tournament. You should get some rest too. Spend time with your boyfriend.” He smiled at her. “Cheer up. I haven’t felt this young in a long time. Even if I lose, it was worth it.”

He jauntily skipped back inside and shut the door behind him.

Akiko returned to her room, lay next to Hideyoshi, and shuddered. She prayed for sleep.

                              6:49PM

When she woke, she wished again it’d all been a dream. Seeing the gun arm, her eyes drooped. Her shoulder ached and she had a migraine. Hideyoshi was still unconscious. His fingers were twitching and parts of his body moved in irregular spurts. She tried to place her hand on his head before realizing the metal would wake him. There were burn marks along his body that were especially bad on his feet.

She thought of the first time they’d made love. He was strong but gentle, and they caressed each other as they drove to mutual pleasure. Unlike most of the younger men she’d been with, there was no hint of impatience, no rush towards climax. Before Hideyoshi, she had found sex mundane. He probed every part of her, relishing and dwelling on every part. She knew he had other lovers, and he’d encouraged her to sleep with other men as well. It was so unlike her younger male companions who were fanatically jealous about her affections, throwing out words like “love” and “forever” while offering little else in exchange.

They’d first met at a cocktail party and he was with a date he ignored so he could shower his attention on her. “Your girlfriend’s getting jealous,” she’d jested, when she saw the scowls his date was directing at her.

“Who?” Hideyoshi had replied.

His topic of discussion had been the discovery by the Germans that Venus had once been inhabited. “They found the remnants of a civilization that had destroyed themselves after an environmental disaster led to an apocalyptic war. Or so the Germans say. Their propaganda department likes to interpret physical evidence in creative ways.”

“What’d they fight over?”

“Too much freedom,” Hideyoshi replied. “You think a totally free society is possible?”

“There’s never been a free society,” Akiko had declared. “The pretense is fostered to appease the conscience of those who can’t stomach economic slavery. But if we’re talking on a philosophical level, it depends on the individual. Some can handle total choice. Others crumble under the burden. What do you think?”

“I think most people are afraid to love because they want the freedom to suffer alone.”

“I thought we were talking philosophical freedom.”

“Love is a voluntary sacrifice of freedom,” Hideyoshi said. “It’s the only freedom we really control.”

“I don’t think anyone has any real choice about who they fall in love with.”

“Oh?”

“I can’t will myself to fall in love with just anyone because I want to. If I’m not attracted to them, I’m not attracted to them.”

“I thought more than half the families back on the main island take part in arranged marriages.”

“Love isn’t marriage,” Akiko said. “You ever been married? Or is that your wife that you’re singularly ignoring?”

“I couldn’t beat myself into loving her.”

“You just confirmed my point.”

Hideyoshi laughed.

“What do you think people on Earth will think about us a thousand years from now?”

“I don’t think they will,” Akiko had answered.

Hideyoshi grabbed two glasses of wine on a platter from a waiter passing by. He raised a toast and said, “Here’s to hoping you fall in love with me.”

Akiko answered, “That’s not my choice.”

Hideyoshi had rolled the champagne around in his mouth before swallowing it. “I bet I can change your mind.”

“You have the freedom to try.”

In the present, it was as though Hideyoshi knew she were awake and woke up himself. A part of her wished he hadn’t.

“W-where-where am I?” he asked, eyes wide in horror.

“You’re OK now.”

“They-they said you were dead.” He reached out and touched her face.

“Who said that?” she demanded.

“The Kempei. They arrested me at the clinic and took me out in front of everyone. They accused me of being in league with you to topple the Empire.”

“They were lying.”

He looked at her arms. “Wh-what happened to you? I didn’t believe them when they told me you betrayed the Empire. You’re the most loyal person I know.”

“What did you say to them?”

Hideyoshi’s eyes swelled and tears began to form. “I… I told them everything they wanted to hear.”

“What do you mean?”

“They-they said you were dead, that it didn’t matter. I…”

“Hideyoshi.”

He punched himself in the face, tried to batter his head into the wall. Akiko yelled, “Stop it!” and did her best to restrain him.

“I betrayed you,” he said, tears covering his face. “I told them you were working with the Americans and hated the Emperor. They told me you were secretly working to overthrow the USJ and I told them they were right.”

“Why?”

“So I could save myself… They started burning me. They told me they’d break all the bones in my body. You don’t understand how terrible they were.”

“I do, actually,” Akiko said. “What’d you tell them about my brother?”

“Everything you told me about him. They already knew so much and had a statement ready for me. I agreed with everything. I’m just a musician, Akiko. I’ve never had to deal with anything like this before.”

“Why are you here with Mosquito?”

Hideyoshi shook his head and wiped tears away. “I came here to die.”

“What do you mean?”

“The morning they released me, I saw a pair of snails on the sidewalk. Do you remember our first night together, it was raining, and you wanted to go out? All along the courtyard, there were hundreds of snails. Baby ones, families, groups. You were charmed by them. I never told you, but I always thought we’d have a little family of our own. W-when I realized what I’d done… I wanted to kill myself. I knew they had these death matches here, so I came here to get killed fighting in one of these games.”

“Then why didn’t you just die?”

“What?”

“Why didn’t you let them kill you before you betrayed me?” Akiko snapped.

Hideyoshi lowered himself to his knees. “Be-because I was weak… If you kill me now, I’d accept it.”

Akiko stood up, looked away. “You want me to be strong for you?”

“For the both of us.”

“You don’t get that right. Make sure I never see you again.”

She left the room, went upstairs, and bumped into Orochan.

“How you doing?” Orochan asked.

“Is the
USA
game hard?” Akiko asked back, irritated by the question.

“It’s very difficult.”

“What do you think Ben’s chances are?”

Orochan shook her head. “Honestly, not good. He’s going to get destroyed by Eagle Killer.”

“Who’s that?”

“The best gamer in the USJ. She hasn’t lost a match in two thousand games.”

“Does he know this?”

“I tried to tell him, but he’s asleep,” Orochan answered. “What’s in Catalina?”

“What do you mean?”

“Why’s he risking so much to go there?”

All Akiko knew about Catalina was that it was a prison colony with thousands of dissidents, many from San Diego. Everyone understood it was a place where the Empire dumped their worst prisoners and unleashed them within the boundaries of the island. There were some guards, but it was otherwise unregulated. She’d read about the brutal death jousts that took place between the prisoners, territorial disputes settled in old buildings that the officers gambled on. She knew Catalina had once been a naval base, but that it had long been abandoned. It was supposed to be hell on earth, a brutal habitat for the condemned. Then she remembered something Wakana had told her, a rumor that Catalina once served as a lab for building mechas.

“I’m not sure,” she answered.

She left Orochan and wandered the boat.

                              8:22PM

Ben had to put on a tactile sensory feedback suit, goggles to simulate the environments of the game, a fake gun that acted as a controller, and special shoes to interact with the treadmill that spun in a complete circle and corresponded to his motion. A ring intertwined with fiber optics surrounded him to prevent him from falling out of his control sphere while also detecting his movements. There were eight control pods, big display screens showing the live feed, as well as a kikkai connection for people to watch directly on their smaller screens. It was a gladiatorial fight via porticals. The deck fitted four hundred guests and they were all being served the “
USA
Banquet.” On either wing, there were side events as appetizers. The west wing had naked sumo wrestling taking place between bare contestants of both sexes that served more as titillating choreography than corpulent combat. The east wing had singers vying for prominence with their vocal chords while using sonic knives to attack rivals. Disapproving audiences could throw fruits at their faces, the most fruitified face earning the spoils of the evening.

The main crowd was a mix of gaming fans, wealthy patrons, and expensive escorts. Some of the more striking attendees wore only silicone plastic, their bodies appearing like walking prisms with crinkles, as their clothes shimmered when they strutted.

Akiko noticed how spry and energetic Ben seemed. “I’ve heard there’s someone named Eagle Killer tha–”

“The best gamer ever,” Ben finished for her. “She was a master at
Honor of Death
and she’s even better at
USA.

“Can you beat her?”

“Probably not,” Ben answered.

“You don’t seem too concerned.”

“If you’d had the day I had, you’d know nothing could make it bad.”

“How about if it ended in death?”

Ben stared at her and frowned. “Thanks for the reminder.”

“I’m serious. You should have spent your free time practicing.”

“That’s what I have the first round for.” He checked the gun controller in his hands and loosened his game shoes.

“Are you seriously taking this that lightly?”

“Relax. No way is Mosquito going to let me die so early. We’ll be split into four teams of two. He’ll probably pair me up with Eagle Killer, so I won’t get killed right away.” His eyes strayed to someone behind her. “Orochan! How are you?”

Orochan approached them. “You shouldn’t have stuck your neck out for me.”

“You wouldn’t be in this mess if we hadn’t asked you for a ride,” Ben answered.

“I shouldn’t have sent you to clean up my mess. I’m sorry. One of my girls must have been working for him.”

“It was Reiko.”

“How do you know?”

“She came by earlier. Don’t be upset with her. She didn’t have a choice and we made up. If I win, will he keep his word?”

“Mosquito is a man of his word,” Orochan confirmed, lifting up her pinky that was still there. “But if you don’t win, you’ll die a painful death.”

“At least he made my last hours enjoyable. Can I get a drink?”

“You need your reflexes to be at their…” Akiko started, until she noticed his hands were shaking. “Hold on.”

She called over one of the waiters who was dressed in an American flag, his short pants revealing most of his hips. “What can I get for you?”

“I’ll take that,” Ben said, grabbing a glass of wine on his tray and consuming it. “Better. You two should take your seat.”

Orochan and Akiko headed for their round dining table.

“I can’t read him,” Orochan said. “What do you think?”

“I don’t know,” Akiko lied, not mentioning his quivering hands.

Waiters brought a first plate of seared ahi tuna as appetizer. Seven of the contestants were in place. A thin, bony woman in a wheelchair rolled out and the audience began to cheer. She was a brunette with freckles, missing both her legs. There was an acute sharpness in her gaze.

“Who is that?” Akiko asked.

“Eagle Killer.”

“Why doesn’t she have prosthetic legs?”

“She had both her legs removed so she can stay interfaced with the game permanently,” Orochan explained. When she saw Akiko’s surprised reaction, Orochan said, “It’s common among the devoted. They directly connect the portical with the muscles and nerves in their body and are perpetually in the world.”

“How about when she sleeps?”

“She wants her subconscious to stay immersed in the game too.”

“Why do they call her Eagle Killer?”

“She got it after she beat the old champion. He was a cocky guy, undefeated, and used to have a pair of pet eagles he took everywhere. When she beat him, he got so mad he killed them both. People started calling her ‘Eagle Killer’ since then.”

Two assistants helped her strap into the controller, which was specially retrofitted to work with her body, including two bionic legs that connected to her pelvis.

The spotlight went to Mosquito.

“We live in the ruins of great empires and it’s usually so depressing,” Mosquito said. “But now we have a game that challenges our notions of greatness, a game where America won. It sounds horrid, but freedom never sounded so sweet as in the
USA
. In honor of tomorrow’s fortieth anniversary of our victory in the Pacific War, we have a special guest, an unabashed patriot, a censor as gamer to join our tournament.” He spouted on for a while longer before loud music introduced the players.

Ben was teamed with Eagle Killer and they both started in the jungles of Luzon in the Philippines. The Japanese were building a satellite dish to call down aerial strikes. Two of the teams – Americans with local guerilla support – had to destroy the installation while the other two – Japanese – defended it. Eagle picked up an assault rifle and climbed to a vantage point where she could get a good line of sight. Ben went for a weapon, but was shot, killed immediately by the enemy. He appeared stunned and stumbled about, doing his best to coerce the controls into doing what he wanted. He called one of the waiters and asked, “How do I sprint?”

“I’m not allowed to say, per the game rules.
Sumimasen
.”

Ben’s avatar jumped about, ran in sporadic bursts, and appeared shellshocked. Eventually, he ignored the weapons in the cache and started running in the opposite direction of the Japanese forces.

“What’s he doing?” Akiko asked.

Orochan observed Ben’s avatar. “It looks like he’s running away,” she answered

“Why?”

Orochan tried to decipher Ben’s perplexing action. “He might be misunderstanding the rules and thinks surviving is the best way to win? I’m not sure, but if he thinks that, he’s in for big trouble.”

“Why?”

“He can get through the first and second round like that, but later they’ll tally up the score and, when you run, you get no points.”

“How do you score?”

“Destruction gets points. Kills get points, depending on where you shoot them. Victory nets points. There’s extra side missions too. Eagle Killer is getting reconnaissance points for exploring all the different areas before she goes for the kill. More points means better weapons, stage selects, and perquisites that make a huge difference in the final round.”

Akiko watched the other screens and the fighting had already commenced. The visuals were stunningly realistic and it looked like a documentary, only more vivid and colorful. She could see the individual blades of grass swaying in the wind, the sun getting doused in a mesmerizing blaze that deluged the whole sky. There were streams and little fishes in them, dayflies swarming in their futile pursuit of existence, and snakes that slithered and hissed at the caprice of combat. Two things broke the realism. No smells, and the humans. The humans looked photorealistic when they didn’t move. But the animation was stunted. Their shoulders were too hunched up, the movement was sometimes too limited, and other times too exaggerated. Their facial expressions were the same: too emotive or too limited in regional influences, so that they looked like robots rather than live human beings. The broader motions generally looked passable, but even their clumsy interaction with weapons indicated the portical restrictions.

The quick movements in the camera angle of the players gave her a headache. She sipped her water, watched Ben again. He was still running in the opposite direction while explosives were rippling across the screens of the other players. One of the screens was splattered in blood, the screen getting split in half.

“Did he lose?” Akiko asked Orochan.

“Each player gets three medics to come back unless they take a headshot direct to the brain. Most players don’t shoot opponents directly in the brain because that means less points. They want all three kills.”

The match was a frenetic brawl that seemed like flashes of jungle, bullet sprays, random explosions, and soldiers charging before disappearing into the trees. It was hard for her to get a grasp of what was going on, though the people watching were hypnotized, flipping from different player perspectives on their personal porticals. They checked stats, examined their positions on the map, and gambled. Two dozen waiters and waitresses were taking wagers on kill times, match lengths, and even death order.

“Why are people so into this game? It’s just a bunch of fake soldiers running around shooting each other.”

Orochan did not hear her question, instead cursing, exclaiming, cringing, and cheering on the decisions the players made.

The first round ended eighteen minutes later with Eagle Killer and Ben’s team coming in second place out of four, due largely to Ben’s abstinence from combat. Eagle Killer had the most individual points at 342, but Ben’s total of 15 points brought them down.

The losing team was unstrapped from their controllers, taken to the dais at center stage, and chained to the ground. A waitress slashed their torsos and limbs, blood forming pools around them. Both men were begging for mercy, imploring to be released, until transparent walls surrounded them, cutting the noise off. Three waitresses rolled down cages with the Pomeranians Akiko had seen earlier. They were let in through a small orifice. The Pomeranians attacked with their abnormally large fangs. It would almost be comedic if it wasn’t so violent. The furry monsters ripped their victims to pieces, shredding apart skin, tearing at the lungs, the stomach, and the heart, sundering the ropy intestines from their bodies. Every devastating blow brought cheers from the crowd. Akiko turned her head away and looked at Ben. He was in an exchange with Eagle Killer who was criticizing him, though he appeared indifferent to her harangue. “I’m trying!” Akiko heard Ben insist. “Can you explain some of the controls to me?”

“I hope they have the swimming death next round,” Orochan said. “You’re gonna love it.”

“You’ve seen this before?” Akiko asked, surprised.

“Only once. They’re so expensive to get into.”

“Where do they get the contestants?”

“You can volunteer, but ever since Eagle Killer joined, the volunteers have gone way down. It’s mostly debtors who want to wipe the slate. But every so often, there are people dumb enough to wager their lives on it.”

“What does that gain them?”

“Gaming champions are gods,” Orochan said. “Ben seriously needs to get better or he’s going to get killed.”

The second round began and the six remaining players were tossed into a two-story shack. Outside, thousands of monsters approached who were the spirits of the Chinese who had been massacred at Nanking. They were seeking vengeance. Bullets were useless against them. Fire arrows, though, dissipated their energy form. The spirits were horrific and disturbingly realistic. Many had limbs missing, bullet and sword wounds, ghoulish facades and bizarre animation that emphasized the supernatural element. There were children and women with clothes torn off, crying for justice. The spirits carried pitchforks, spears, and whatever else they could get hold of.

“What’s going on here?” Akiko asked.

“It’s a standard ‘kill as many as you can without getting killed’ stage,” Orochan explained. “The pair that tallies the most kills when the wave ends wins. This is a long round. They have to kill sixty thousand of those spirits or survive until dawn, but Eagle will try to kill them all because there’s more points that way.”

“Sixty thousand?”

“That’s how many died at Nanking. The creators wanted it to be authentic.”

Akiko had read reports that the actual number of civilians killed at Nanking ranged from two to three hundred thousand. She’d seen photos of pregnant women who had their heads chopped off, babies killed to sharpen swords, and gates where Chinese heads were hung. Peasants were massacred, teenage girls were perforated from their genitalia up, and that wasn’t mentioning those hurt in the bombings. Even knowing the necessity of striking terror into the civilian populace, it’d been hard to stomach for her. The casualty rates had been reduced in the historical records to make the battle more palatable for the puppet government set up under Puyi, the former Emperor of China, as well as the citizens of the Empire who would have found such numbers appalling. What Tokyo Command called the “China Incident” was nowhere near conclusion when the Battle of Nanking took place and the last thing they needed was a rallying call for the survivors and those fomenting for peace. Fifty years later, no one remembered the dead apart from this videogame. Mutsuraga hadn’t even gotten the casualty rate correct.

Once again, Ben appeared confused. His character was able to kill a few spirits before a pair of them overwhelmed him and ate him limb by limb. With the second life, he absconded up the stairs into a corner and tested out the controls, trying to figure out which combination of commands did what. At one point, he took off his portical goggles, called over a waitress, and ordered a cocktail and shrimp.

What is that
baka
doing?
Akiko cursed to herself.

“Does he want to die?” Orochan asked out loud. Many other viewers expressed similar sentiments, disappointed by Ben’s play.

As though they were meant to be distracted, they were served their next course – brussels sprout hash with bacon vinaigrette and poached eggs, grilled octopus with roasted mushrooms in brown butter, and garlic scallion string beans with candied hazelnuts. Akiko wasn’t hungry, but she ate enough to replenish her strength. She almost spat her food out when she looked back and saw Ben flirting with the waitress. On the screen, his character was still hiding away from the combat zone. The other gamers were busy slaughtering wave after wave of undead assailants. A player was late refilling his quiver of arrows and one of the spirits leapt in through a window, grabbed him by the neck, and unleashed tentacles on his face. The player lost control as his avatar became possessed and attacked his partner with a pistol. The partner fired back and both were quickly killed, then resurrected by a medic. Two lives to go.

BOOK: United States of Japan
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