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  • Book Cover Surprise

    Today is Sunday, and as always, most of Sunday mornings, you’ll find me at my desk.  So, today, I’m deep in the mind of Koji from Seiryu Spirit, and sudden inspiration strikes in the form of a book cover.

    I get excited every time my favorite person designs a cover and it matches the story.  So, I have this story we call Hitokiri (The Assassin).  I finished it sometime last year, and I’ve just been sitting on it, not really editing it.  Though I love those characters dearly.  L, who makes most of my covers attacked this morning with the cover for Hitokiri, and now, I feel I need to edit it, turn it into an ebook and that’s just a lot more work, but okay.  I’m for it.

    Hahaha…

    I’ve decided to attack you too with Hitokiri’s cover and hopefully the next little e-book I make. Okay, it’s a definite, I’ve been asked to stop saying hopefully and be definite, so here is the definite next e-book coming your way.

    The Assassin

    May you have an amazing Sunday!

  • Seiryu Spirit – 7

    The Truth about Koji Sukiyama

    Koji insisted on taking Maki back to Hotel Mume.  He didn’t trust her alone, and frankly, Andre didn’t either.  Maki needed an appointment with a psychiatrist, and her mother around her.  Andre’s gaze shifted to Koji.

    Koji looked tired, exhausted.

    When they entered the dining room, Tomoyo ordered a cup of hot tea for her, and settled Maki at the dining table.  The place was quiet, investigators already out chasing leads.  Koji sat at the head of the table and rested his head on his folded arms.  Andre frowned when Tomoyo patted Koji’s shoulders.

    “I’m going to the kitchen,” Tomoyo said.  “Koji, you need food, to restore your energy.  Rest for now before you talk to Maki.”

    Koji nodded his head but didn’t raise his head.

    Andre frowned; Koji really did look too tired.  Andre thought of the traces of blood on Koji’s nose earlier and wondered if they shouldn’t take him to a doctor.  Leon touched his elbow, and Andre turned to him.

    “There’s a call from Lacome Villa.  Confusion with a supplier, I’ll deal with it.”

    Andre nodded, watching Leon hurry out of the dining room to find a private place.  He hoped it was nothing too serious.

    Ogun followed Tomoyo to what Andre assumed was the kitchen.

    Andre watched Maki sipping her tea; she looked drained too, tear tracks staining her cheeks.  Left in a room with a young man with a mysterious identity and a woman who clearly wasn’t sure about living, Andre could only sigh.

    Fantastic turn of events.

    Koji lifted his head from the table, his attention on Maki.

    “Maki,” Koji started.

    “Koji, I thought Tomoyo said to rest?” Andre asked.  “Are you sure you shouldn’t take a nap?”

    “There are children missing.  Who has time?” Koji asked, his gaze still on Maki.

    “But—,” Andre started.

    “Andre, help out and get Maki a sandwich from the kitchen.  It is way past lunchtime, and I’m sure she’s starving.  Tomoyo only knows to worry about me.”

    Andre knew Koji was sending him away, and wanted to protest, but then Koji turned his blue eyes on him.  Oh, what did he know?  He decided to find Tomoyo and bring her back to deal with her strong-willed charge.

    “Maki, why don’t you tell me your version of the day Sakura disappeared?”

    Andre heard Koji prompt Maki as he headed to the kitchen.  Maki spoke in a low tone, so Andre was unable to hear her answer.  He hurried to the kitchen wanting to get Maki’s sandwich fast and stopped short when he found Ogun and Tomoyo arguing in the kitchen.

    “Don’t include the suicidal witness in your report to Tama,” Tomoyo said, her tone severe.  “One word and you’ll have him coming here to take Koji back home.  Ogun—

    “I don’t need you to tell me what to keep out of my reports,” Ogun snapped.  “I’ve looked out for Koji a long time.  I know what to say and what not to.”

    “Yeah, then how come he ended up in a shootout that day?”

    “That’s a low shot,” Ogun said with a scowl, he leaned on the counter, watching Tomoyo slice egg sandwiches.  “Anyway, why is Koji so tired today?  I thought I saw a nosebleed.  Is something wrong with him?”

    Tomoyo kept silent, and Andre leaned on the wall outside the kitchen doors, curiosity turning him into an eavesdropper.

    “This Seiryu jobs drain him too fast.  Anyway, I think his abilities are growing stronger.  Or have grown stronger, and he has hidden it from Saya and Tama.  We were in a small shop today, and he stood there for a few minutes.  I could tell he was doing his mind-reading thing.  His eye color changed too fast, and I had to shove dark glasses at him to hide them.”

    “The eyes are always a surprise,” Ogun agreed.

    Andre bit back a laugh at the conversation in the kitchen.  Mind-reading thing?  Did they know he was eavesdropping?  It seemed like a thing to makeup if you thought someone was eavesdropping on you.  Yet, he couldn’t stop eavesdropping, watching the two through a gap on the door.

    “How does it work?” Ogun asked, taking a small slice of egg sandwich and taking a bite.

    Ogun started to sit on to the counter but Tomoyo smacked his arm, stopping him.  He sighed and concentrated on eating the sandwich.

    “I mean, I know what he is capable of doing, but not how or why.  Tomoyo, is he really possessed by some sort of dragon?  Does it come out when he’s sleeping and haunt the house?  I wouldn’t be surprised you know.  Weird things happen in that house, you know.  And who can ignore Saya, she’s creepier than everything else.”

    Tomoyo burst out laughing.

    “She better not hear you say that,” Tomoyo said, shaking her head.  “No, Koji doesn’t have a dragon that comes out when he’s sleeping.  That’s absurd.”

    “Everyone in the Seiryu Academy sure thinks so.  It’s the freaky blue eyes,” Ogun said, finishing his sandwich.  He leaned closer to Tomoyo and in a dramatic whisper, begged.  “Please…tell me.  I don’t want to freak out every time his eyes turn.  It hurts him, but I can’t help it.  It’s weird thinking that a dragon is looking back at me.”

    Tomoyo finished with the sandwiches, and placed them on two large plates.  She took the kettle and went to the sink to fill it with water.  When she placed it on its pad and turned it on, she stared at the red button.

    “Let’s just say that Koji is blessed with great genes.  His mother’s bloodline guards what they call the Seiryu spirit.  A guardian spirit, or will, a serious large force of good karma.  If you have Koji on your side, you will always have good fortune.  This is why the Sukiyama clan is so prosperous no matter the era.  One like Koji is born as a second child in each generation.”

    Tomoyo turned to face Ogun, her dark gaze seeing through him, and resting on the kitchen door.  For a second, Andre imagined she had seen him, when she didn’t speak, but then she shrugged and continued.

    “But the gift of sight comes from his father’s bloodline,” Tomoyo said, with a bit of reverence.  “Coupled with the Seiryu spirit, it turned Koji into a very powerful telepath.  With a touch, Koji will tell you your past, what you’ve been up to today, or might do tomorrow.  That’s why he is perfect for these types of cases, though they tend to wipe him out.  Koji overextends himself in an urgency to solve the case.  I imagine using your brain to invade thousands of minds for too long, will take a toll.”

    Andre stepped back, remembering Koji sitting on the ledge, his hand on Maki’s leg, blood running down his nose, Koji turning away from to hide it.

    “That makes sense,” Andre heard Ogun say, as though it was perfectly normal to discuss a man who can read thoughts.  “No wonder Tama-san is always worried.  This case, I wish it ends fast.”

    “We just need to find Sakura,” Tomoyo stated as the water kettle stopped.

    Andre stepped back from the door, thinking them crazy.

    Koji, a telepath?

    An unbelievable explanation, what was crazy was that he believed it.  Or wanted to, somehow, wouldn’t it make clearing Henri’s name easy?

    Deciding Tomoyo would bring out the food when she was ready, Andre returned to the dining room to find Maki alone with Leon.

    “Where is Koji?” Andre asked, wanting to talk to Koji alone.

    “He went upstairs, something about washing up,” Leon said.

    How perfect.

    “I’ll be right back,” Andre said, heading out of the dining room.

    “The flower room is on the third floor,” Leon called after him, and Andre gave him a thankful grin.

    Andre took the stairs one at a time.  It wasn’t until he reached outside the flower room that he wondered how he was to get in to Koji’s room.  The door was closed, and for a moment, he hesitated.  Then he tried the lock, and the door opened easily.

    Entering Koji’s room, he paused taking in the subtle elegance.  Papers scattered on the glass coffee table at the small living area.  The bed was neat, and beyond that was a small balcony with a view of the river below.

    No Koji…Andre started to turn, thinking he had missed him on the way up, then he heard water running in the bathroom.  Andre let a soft sigh of relief escape and moved to the balcony to wait for Koji.

    ***

    Koji washed off blood from his nose.  When it was clean, he cupped his hands under the water and splashed cold water on his face, hoping to clear his head.  Shutting the water, he stared into the mirror.  His eyes were back to normal, the dry blood gone.  His headache was still present, though manageable.  Maybe a nap was in order, and a pair of painkillers.

    He thought about Maki waiting downstairs, and the missing Sakura, and sighed.  Maybe just the painkillers he thought opening the cabinet above the sink.  He found the bottle he had brought with him and swallowed two with water directly from the tap.

    Wiping his face with a small face towel, he closed the cabinet, meeting his gaze in the mirror.  He wanted this case to end fast.  Wanted to head back to Tokyo and talk to the woman who knew his mother.  The woman who might give him some small insight into his mother.

    He spent so much time doing what other people wanted: what Saya wanted, what Tama wanted…what about what he wanted?

    “Okaasan,” Koji murmured.  “I only want to know who you were, and where I fit.”

    Such a simple want. Why was it so hard to achieve?

    Koji dropped the face towel into the laundry basket in the corner and paused when he heard movement in his m_pic1suite.  He couldn’t seem to get a minute to himself on this trip.  If it wasn’t Ogun, it was Tomoyo, or one of the academy staff bringing him information.

    He needed to finish with this case.

    Opening the bathroom door, Koji paused when he saw Andre sitting in the chairs by the balcony windows.

    “Feeling better?” Andre asked, looking him up and down.

    Koji slipped his hands into his trouser pockets and stared at Andre Lacome.  While he couldn’t read anything from Andre, Leon Baptiste was easy prey.  Leon had returned while Andre was in the kitchen looking for Tomoyo.  All it had taken was a handshake, and Koji discovered all there was about Andre Lacome and his dear small brother, Henri.

    Looking at Andre now, he wondered what he should do about a suspect’s brother meddling in a missing person’s case.

    “Koji?”

    “Much better,” Koji answered Andre’s question, looking around his suite.  They were quite alone.

    “Ogun and Tomoyo are still in the kitchen.  I snuck up here.”

    Andre confessed with a playful grin.

    “You also forgot to lock your door,” Andre provided.

    There was no point locking his door with all the traffic that passed through it.  Koji shrugged and went to sit in the chair on Andre’s left.  The silence in his head was welcome, it was blissful to sit and simply watch the river flow, no stray thoughts intruding in his head.  Andre was both a treasure and a torture.

    Andre cleared his throat when Koji settled and broke the silence.

    “I think we should get to know each other.  I have many questions about you, and this case—

    “Andre Lacome.”  Koji stated, his gaze still on the flowing river below.  Thinking it was better to set boundaries with this one.  Koji did not want to rely on Andre and the comfort he clearly represented.

    “Your younger brother is Henri Lacome, owner of HL Capital, an investment firm involved with the child trafficking mess in Kobe.  The warehouse where the children were found is said to be owned by your brother.”

    Andre stilled, shifting to face Koji.

    “Why are you in Kyoto?” Koji asked.

    Koji lifted his hand to stop Andre when he started to talk.

    “Henri is framed by Daye Chang,” Koji said.  “Daye Chang is using HL Capital as a shield.  You should be worried.  The people behind Daye Chang are quite capable.  You want to clear your brother’s name, and the Lacome name, and then return to your Lacome Villa in the French Riviera and tend to your many family businesses.”

    Koji smiled.

    “Your friend downstairs, Leon Baptiste, is your business manager/cum lawyer.  He is quite capable and very loyal to you and your family.  I’m inclined to like you, as your favorite investment preference is art.  You own a painting named A Woman’s Heart, auctioned at a private function in New York.  It didn’t come cheap, but you love art so you bought it.”

    “For someone I met last night, you know an awful lot about me,” Andre said, chilled by Koji’s speech.

    Thinking about Tomoyo’s explanation downstairs, Andre found he didn’t like not having any defenses against Koji.  The absolute lack of privacy unsettled him.

    “You walked into a high profile investigation, asking questions about a victim.  If we can’t figure you out, we have no business finding missing children.”

    Andre folded his arms against his chest unable to argue with that logic.

    “What is intriguing is why you are so curious about Sakura Akino.  Why is a man here to prove his brother innocent, interested in a local girl’s disappearance?” Koji continued.  “I should pursue it, but not yet.”

    “Why?” Andre asked.

    “Because, you’re a piece that doesn’t fit the puzzle, yet. So, I will let you stay close.”

    “Hmm..,” Andre frowned.  “What about you, Koji Sukiyama?”

    “What about me?” Koji asked, finally looking at him.

    “You seem to know everything about me,” Andre said, unable to keep accusation out of his voice.  “Won’t you tell me about you?  What do you gain from being here?”

    “I gain nothing here.  I’m helping find lost children,” Koji answered, his voice thoughtful.  “Sometimes, I find people and things.”

    Andre narrowed his gaze.  “Do you like it?”

    “Like what?”

    “Finding people and things?”

    “I—

    Koji broke off, thinking.  Then he stood up from his chair and gave Andre a small smile.

    “I’ll tell you when I find little Sakura,” Koji said, moving to take a green sweater over a suitcase in the corner.  He seemed to favor the color green.

    As Koji wore the sweater, Andre stood too.

    “Will you help me clear my brother’s name?” Andre asked, knowing this was the request he had meant to ask.  The request that had brought him up here to find Koji.

    “Henri,” Koji said, testing out the name.  “Is he innocent?”

    “Henri is many things, but he is no child trafficker.”

    “You love him.”

    “He’s my brother.”

    Koji smiled.

    “You remind me of someone.”

    “So…” Andre prompted when Koji remained standing without answering his question.

    “Will you help me?”

    “Depends,” Koji said, stretching his arms above his head.

    “On what?” Andre asked, frowning again.

    “On where this case takes us,” Koji said, dropping his arms and heading to the door.

    “I’ve made a gamble focusing on Sakura, while there are fourteen other children missing.  It could be the wrong choice.  I might be on the wrong track, and have to start again.  I won’t know until I talk to Maki.  If I’m wrong, then this will take longer—,”

    “You think following Sakura’s last day will lead you to the rest of the children.”

    Koji flashed him a smile as he stepped out of his suite.

    “You catch on fast.”

    “You still haven’t told me about you,” Andre noted, watching Koji lock his door this time, and then they headed to the stairs.  “Only that you find people.”

    “What more is there?” Koji asked, taking the lead down the stairs.

    Is it true you can read people’s thoughts? Andre wanted to ask.  For a second the words were at the tip of his tongue.  He swallowed the question though.  It seemed too crazy, even for this situation.  Tomoyo and Ogun must have been putting him on for eavesdropping on them.

    “Where are you from?” Andre asked instead.

    “Japan.”

    “Ok, I deserve that.” Andre chuckled. “You seem too young to be involved in a police investigation.”

    “I’m a child genius.”

    “Really?” Andre stopped.  Koji was clearly playing with him.  “That’s not an answer.”

    “Isn’t it?” Koji asked, looking at him, as he continued down the stairs.  “I’m twenty.  Of course, only elites are allowed into Special Investigations.  I’m helping seasoned police officers solve a case.  Don’t you think that makes me a genius?”

    “Way to be modest,” Andre scoffed, and followed the child prodigy down the stairs.  “All the twenty year olds I know are neck deep in college, and getting hammered in underground clubs.”

    “Depends on which twenty year olds you know,” Koji answered.

    “You’re frustrating,” Andre decided.

    “I’m told that often.”

    They got to the ground floor and Koji reached for the stairs door.

    “Hey, there is a thing to know about me since you’re so curious.  I’m a frustrating child genius.”

    Andre grabbed Koji’s left wrist, stopping him from opening the door.  Koji’s gaze fell on the spot where Andre held his hand.  His gaze shining brilliant blue for a moment, but then it could have been a play of light, Andre couldn’t tell.

    “Koji.”

    “Don’t,” Koji said, meeting Andre’s gaze then.  “Don’t try to jump into the deep end.  The deep end is full of sharks.  Where you are now is safe.  Stay in the shallow waters, Andre.  I’ll do what I can for your Henri; get you out as fast as I can.  Then you can go back to Lacome Villa.  It feels like a happy, warm place.”

    With that speech, Koji pulled his arm out of Andre’s hold, opened the door and headed to the dining room.

    Andre followed him at a much slower pace, his heart uneasy at the clear rejection in Koji’s eyes.  So intriguing and frustrating at the same time.  Andre sighed, then stopped in the middle of the hallway.

    If he were to believe Tomoyo about Koji reading people’s thoughts with a touch—

    Andre gaped, his hand covering his mouth.

    What had Koji read in that moment Andre grabbed his hand just now? 

    For a millisecond, his heartbeat sped up, but then a laugh bubbled out of him in the next minute at the ridiculous thought.

     Tomoyo had gotten him good.

    ***

  • Seiryu Spirit – 6

    The man offering silence and relief

    “Koji Sukiyama.  What is his role in all this?” Andre paced his hotel room.  “And the way he ran off, as though he couldn’t stand me.  How maddening, n’est-ce pas?”

    “What’s maddening is watching you wear a hole on the carpet,” Leon replied.  “Please forget him, and focus on the problem at hand, Andre.  We’re in a clusterfuck.”

    “What else is new?”

    Andre moved to the coffee table where Leon sat, gadgets of all kinds cluttered before him.

    They had finally made it back to their hotel.  Leon insisted on a few hours of sleep before they could talk about the briefing at Hotel Mume.  Too tired, Andre agreed.  Leon woke him eight hours later, with a knock on his bedroom door, and the scent of coffee from a cart laden with food.

    Andre sat now across Leon.  It was almost one o’clock during the day.  Leon was sliding his finger over the tablet screen.

    “Sakura’s case is bigger than we thought.  We can’t meddle from the outside; it will make us look suspicious.  We have to help the investigators at Hotel Mume,” Leon said, when Andre had a few sips of his coffee.  “I know you wanted quiet, but that’s not going to be possible.”

    Andre met Leon’s gaze.

    “Henri’s case is progressing too fast.”  Leon sighed.  “They’re going to start a search for him, soon.  The amount of money poured into the shipping business allows for it.  The children found in Kobe were to be shipped out of the country, probably to Europe.  The case is career-making for any investigator.”

    “You never have good news for me,” Andre complained.

    Leon lifted the tablet with a slight smile.

    “I got information from one of the investigators last night,” Leon said.  “It seems that once Koji Sukiyama is involved in a case, resolution comes in very fast.”

    “Why?” Andre asked, curious about the man with eyes so blue they haunted him.

    “Don’t know, great intuition?” Leon asked.  “Anyway, we have a date in an hour with an Ogun Sato.  They are all very curious as to why we are interest in Sakura.  I think we should tell them a bit of the truth.”

    Andre nodded.

    “Not all of it though, it will be hard to explain why a suspect’s brother is involved in the search.”

    Leon took his own cup of coffee and sipped.

    “We can say Sakura’s mother asked us to help find her daughter.”

    “That is true.”

    Leon grinned.

    “We can include an incentive.  Are you willing to go all in?”

    Andre narrowed his gaze at Leon.  This whole trip to Japan was costing him money.  Each day spent searching for a solution for Henri kept him away from the family business.

    “I suppose pouring funds into such a vital investigation is essential,” Andre said.

    Andre stared into his coffee.  Well, at least it would buy him time with the mysterious Koji.

    Leon studied him.

    “Still thinking about Koji?” Leon asked.

    Andre couldn’t help it.  The sight of Koji hurrying out as though Andre had done something bothered him.  He wanted to know why.  Wanted to look into those blue eyes again.  There was something so ethereal about them.  Ethereal…was that the right word?

    “He makes me wonder,” Andre mused.

    ***

    Gion was busy during the day.  Tourists browsing the many shops and museums, Koji followed an English couple into a wood block museum.  He paused to admire the pieces on display, using the tranquil setting to anchor

    gion
    Gion

    himself.  His gift was getting stronger, and though he hadn’t told Saya, the effects were getting harder to hide.

    Pausing by a set of wood block prints depicting stars in the sky over a turbulent sea, Koji allowed in all the noise in Gion.  Conversations filled his head, people doing business, tourists asking for directions, their excitement and anxiety on equal level.  Whispered words, a sense of fear in them, Koji closed his eyes, concentrating on the fear.

    “Did you see what they looked like?”

    “They were dressed in black, hoods over their heads.  It seemed like army, but who can tell?  Children are going missing.  I don’t let mine out carelessly.”

    Koji opened his eyes and wasn’t surprised when Tomoyo shoved a pair of dark glasses at him.  Putting them on, Koji looked around the shop hoping no one had noticed.  Nodding to Tomoyo that it was time to leave, she smiled at the owner of the shop and nodded to the woodblock print he’d touched.

    Koji left her purchasing the print, and stepped out into the warm day.  Taking in a deep breath, a throb already developing in his head.  He wondered how long he could keep this up.

    “What did you hear?” Tomoyo asked, when she came out of the shop.

    “Someone saw a kidnapping, but they couldn’t see the faces.  Let’s go to the Akino home.”

    “They run a sushi shop,” Tomoyo said, as they started down the street.  “Your eyes might startle them, Koji.”

    “You do the talking then, pretend I’m blind,” Koji joked with a small grin.

    Tomoyo adjusted the bag she now carried from the little museum shop.

    “Koji, this is exhaustive for you.  Do you see why Tama worries?”

    Koji sighed.

    “I know he worries, but it’s also tiring for me when he treats me like his little prisoner.”

    “I’ve known you two for ten years now,” Tomoyo said.  “Ever since Saya brought me to the estate and gave me a home.  You’re my family and the last thing I want is you unhappy, Koji.  You’re a brother to me, you know that.”

    “I know.”  Koji gave her a sideways glance.  He valued Tomoyo’s constant support.  She made life with Tama easier to handle.  So, he owed her a bit of truth.  “When I was younger, Nii-san’s protectiveness was endearing.  It meant a great deal to me, and still does, but now—,”

    Koji broke off as they approached the sushi shop belonging to the Akino family.

    “I have a lot of questions about our past; our parents and how they died.  I need information.  The only way to get it is out here.  Tama does his best to stop it, he won’t tell me the truth but his attempts to stop me won’t make me give up my search.”

    “But you know how your parents died,” Tomoyo said, puzzled.  “Yuki Takino murdered them, with the help of his black-market organizations.  For money, Tama and Saya have both explained.  You have read the police reports.”

    Koji stopped in the middle of the street, turning to Tomoyo.

    “Why would he need to murder our parents for money when he has tons of it?  What about the barrier over the estate?  Why would mother make it?  Why can’t I remember her?  I know her from pictures, but I don’t remember her, when I should—,”

    “Koji,” Tomoyo frowned.

    “I can’t remember her.  She is a blank space in my head and it frustrates me.  I—I sometimes feel like she is alive.”

    Koji swept fingers through his hair, gripping soft strands tight for a minute, feeling insane.  He breathed out then glad to have his thoughts out in the open.

    Tomoyo gaped and the expression on her face was enough for Koji to guess she thought him certifiable.  Koji regretted his confession instantly.

    “Don’t look at me that way.  I shouldn’t have told you.  Look, forget I said it.”

    “Why would you think that, Koji?”

    “I said forget it,” Koji said, dropping his hands to his side.  Pedestrians walked around them, their gazes curious.  Koji sighed and shook his head.  “Don’t go telling Tama what I just said.  He might really lock me up in my room.  Let’s just concentrate on the task at hand.”

    Koji started toward the sushi shop, shaking his head.  He couldn’t imagine why he had blurted that out.  It was a thought that had filled him of late, and it bothered him more than he could define.  After all, he knew where his parents were buried.  He visited their graves everyday he was home.

    Coming to a stop at the sushi shop entrance, Koji allowed Tomoyo to go in first.  The place was busy with customers.  Tomoyo recruited help from one of the shop’s assistants.  The young man smiled and led them through the back to the Akino main house.  Most shops in the Gion area were family owned.  Koji loved the set-up, and imagined he would have loved growing up in such an open setting, instead of the gilded cage that was home.

    Kaede Akino came hurrying out of her house to the courtyard when the assistant called her.  She looked eager, no doubt thinking they were here to bring her good news.  The assistant hurried back to the shop and Tomoyo took Koji’s right hand.

    The gesture surprised him.  He hadn’t thought she would take his joke seriously.

    He was to play the part of a blind man.

    Kaede reacted accordingly.  She helped Tomoyo lead him into the Akino house, and helped settle him on a comfortable cushion at the low table in the middle of the living room.  Kaede rushed off to get refreshments while Tomoyo sat beside Koji.

    When Kaede came back with a tray laden with sweet cakes and green tea, Koji allowed Tomoyo to do all the talking.

    “Kaede-san,” Tomoyo started, lifting the bag of woodprints.  “Please accept this.”

    Kaede took the bag, placing it aside, without looking inside.

    “Thank you.  Please, have some tea.” Kaede urged.

    “Thank you.”

    Tomoyo pressed a cup into Koji’s right hand, and he brought it up to his lips for a sip.

    “We’re here about the investigation into your granddaughter’s disappearance,” Tomoyo said, keeping her tone gentle.  “The police thought we might be able to help find her.  I hope you don’t mind our intrusion.”

    “But who are you?” Kaede asked, her gaze turning wary.

    “We’re from a private organization that specializes on investigating difficult cases,” Koji said.  “We are here to help.”

    Kaede looked at them conflicted, but her worry for Sakura won.  She didn’t care who found her granddaughter, as long as Sakura was found.  Kaede nodded her acceptance, and Tomoyo prompted her into talking about Sakura.

    Koji used the easy flow of conversation to explore Kaede’s memories.  His eyes safely hidden behind dark glasses, he had no fear that their changing color would surprise Kaede.

    Worry weighed on Kaede, a heavy rock on her soul; she found it hard to breathe.  She blamed herself, and thought there was something she could have done to stop her granddaughter’s kidnapping.

    Koji frowned, following the thread of guilt to the day Sakura disappeared.  Kaede woke up, made breakfast as usual for Sakura.  Sakura’s tutor came to help her with homework.  Kaede left them working and went to the shop to help.  After the tutor left, Kaede asked one of the girls at the shop to take Sakura on a walk because the day was lovely.  Sakura disappeared in the park.  Kaede regretted the decision to let Sakura go out that day.

    Koji touched Tomoyo’s right arm.  Tomoyo paused in her easy questions to allow Koji to talk.

    “Kaede-san,” Koji said.  “Tell me about the girl who was with Sakura when she disappeared in the park.”

    “Oh,” Kaede’s tone faltered.  “She won’t come to work anymore.  I’m unable to comfort her until we find Sakura.”

    Koji understood her regret.

    “What is her name?  Can we talk to her?”

    Kaede got up and moved to a small desk in the corner.  She wrote out the girl’s name and her address and brought back the card.  She handed it to Tomoyo.

    “Don’t be hard on her,” Kaede said, wringing her hands on her lap.  “I have tried not to be, but—, it’s difficult to keep my wits about.  I worry about my Sakura.  It’s too hard to look at Maki and not blame her.”

    Koji frowned when a wave of anger flooded Kaede.  Anger was always too strong, so defeating, he breathed out and closed his eyes.

    “Where is Sakura’s mother?” Koji asked.

    Kaede’s eyes filled with alarm that was then carefully hidden.

    “She’s always working,” Kaede answered, her tone careful.  “Her job does not allow her to come home often.”

    “Would she take Sakura without telling you?” Koji asked, curious about this absentee mother.

    Kaede hesitated, and then shook her head.

    “No.  She would tell me.”

    Koji felt doubt fill her and he wondered even more about the mother who wasn’t here worrying about her missing child.

    “Is she still at work?” Tomoyo asked.

    Kaede sighed.

    “Yes.  I have asked her to come home, but she says it’s easier for her to keep busy.”

    “Understandable,” Tomoyo said, though Koji doubted she thought so.  “Well, Kaede-san, thank you for your time.  I promise that we will do the best we can to find your granddaughter.”

    “But—,” Kaede started to protest, and then stopped.

    “Will you keep me informed?” Kaede asked.  “The police keep saying they are looking.  There is no news on Sakura and it’s very frustrating.”

    Tomoyo stood, taking Koji’s arm to help him to his feet.

    “We will do the best we can to keep you informed,” Tomoyo assured Kaede.

    After a quick goodbye, Tomoyo led Koji out of the shop and to the street.

    “An unavailable mother,” Koji frowned.  “Does that strike you as weird?”

    “Maybe her company is strict, it happens,” Tomoyo said, reading the address on the card Kaede handed her.  “Life is hard on career women, Koji.  Too much time off and they may lose the job.  I hope you get more from Maki Kiyamoto.”

    Koji watched Tomoyo search for the address on her phone.  She found it in less half a second. Koji smiled and followed her into a busy street, filled with tourists.  His thoughts on a woman who still worked despite her missing daughter.

    ***

    Maki Kiyamoto lived in a small apartment tucked into a hostel unit.  She was attending Kyoto University, training to be a teacher.  She worked at the Akino sushi shop, but all that mattered to Andre, Leon, Hisao and Ogun was that Sakura disappeared while under her care.

    “Have the police questioned her?” Andre asked.  “Why do we need to do it again?”

    “We’re not here to question her,” Ogun replied, his answer too cryptic even for Andre.

    Andre met Leon’s gaze, shaking his head.  Ogun was trying his patience, since the moment they had met him.

    “Why are you looking for Sakura?”

    That was Ogun’s first question when they met him and Hisao at a small jewelry shop in an alley.

    Leon answered Ogun, telling him Sakura’s mother had asked them to find Sakura.

    One single piercing gaze leveled at Leon, and then Andre and Ogun had shrugged and urged them to follow him.  That was the extent of their talk.

    “Then what are we doing here?” Andre felt compelled to ask, as they climbed short stairs to Maki’s front door.

    Ogun opened the door without knocking, leading the way into a messy tiny house.  Dishes piled on counters and in the sink.  Clothes on the single couch, and the floor.  The bed was unmade.  Maki had obviously not cared about chores in a while.

    “To get this,” Hisao said, taking a framed photograph with two smiling women.  “Is this it, Ogun-san?”

    “Yes.”

    Ogun took the photo frame and led the way out the back kitchen door into the back of the building.  Andre stopped short when he looked up and saw a woman standing on the ledge of the five-floor hostel building.  She looked ready to jump.  The fall would be fatal.

    Surprised, Andre felt fear fill him when he saw Koji perched on the ledge beside Maki.

    “Shit,” Andre said, already running, following Ogun and Hisao up the fire escape to the top of the building.

    They found a woman in black jeans and a green t-shirt connected with pins standing at the entrance.  She held out a hand when Ogun started to head toward the two on the ledge.

    “Stop,” she said.  “You will spoil it.”

    “We need to help—

    “You will complicate the situation,” the woman said.

    “Tomoyo?” Ogun asked.

    “Koji’s almost talked her off the edge.”  Tomoyo took the photo frame from Ogun and handed it to Andre.  “He said you should take it to him.”

    “Why?” Andre asked, taking the photo frame.

    “I don’t know,” Tomoyo said.  “Go.”

    Andre gave Leon who had come up behind him a skeptical glance.  Gripping the photo frame in his right hand, he walked up to the slender man seated on the ledge of the building, and the girl who looked ready to jump.

    ***

    Koji pushed through Maki’s dark resolution, willing her to stop.  Not to choose the fall, but to think of her mother.  Finding that spark of hope was hard when all Maki felt was that she had failed everyone.  Failed herself.

    “Maki, remember your mum.  Her smile when you go home to visit her,” Koji said, keeping his tone conversational.  “You don’t have to worry about what she will say.  I will make sure you have nothing to be ashamed of, Maki.”

    Koji felt a small tinge of hope start but it was faint.  His head hurt from trying to take on some of Maki’s pain.  So heavy was the burden on her heart, he could barely breathe at the weight of it.  Maki’s emotions were chocking.  Her despair hard to take.

    Then silence enveloped him, pulling him out of the dark, bringing him relief.

    Andre.

    “Koji,” Andre said, in a soft voice, as though afraid if he spoke louder, they might jump.

    Koji hid a laugh and held out his hand to Andre.

    “Give me the photograph,” he said in English.

    Andre pressed it into his hands, and didn’t leave.  Koji was grateful for it.  He needed reprieve from Maki’s dark pain.  Turning to Maki, Koji showed her the picture of her and her mother smiling into the camera.

    “Do you remember this day, Maki?” Koji asked.  “Tell me about this picture.  Isn’t it beautiful?”

    Maki sighed, her gaze on the picture.  Tears spilling down her cheeks.

    “It was the day I entered university,” Maki said.  “She was so happy, so proud…”

    “She still is,” Koji soothed.  “I think that we should get off this ledge, so that you can help us find Sakura.  Don’t you think so?”

    “We’ve tried everything,” Maki said, her voice ringing with frustration.  “Everyone thinks it’s my fault—

    “It’s not,” Koji said.  “And I will help find Sakura, Maki.  Please trust me, can you do that?”

    She held his gaze for a full minute, judging his sincerity.  Koji smiled at her then reached out with care and wrapped his fingers around her left ankle.

    Koji closed his eyes, testing the silence still enveloping him.  He pushed through it, wanting to read Maki’s memory of the day at the park.  The silence opened like a veil, taking him specifically into Maki’s memory.  Keeping the noise out.

    For a moment, a clear picture filled his head of Maki and Sakura playing in the Gion Park.  Sakura had gone to slide with the other kids when Maki got a message on her phone.  Maki sat on a bench to read her message, and when she looked up from her phone, Sakura was gone.

    The silence slid back pulling him away from Maki’s memory.

    Koji let go of Maki’s leg feeling drained.

    “Andre, help Maki off the ledge?”

    Andre wrapped a strong arm around her waist, lifting Maki off the ledge to place her on solid ground.  Ogun and Tomoyo hurried forward to take Maki, and Andre turned to Koji.

    “What about you?” Andre asked, moving to stand right behind Koji.  ‘Do you like the view?”

    “I need a minute,” Koji said.  Liquid slid down his left nostril and he reached up to wipe it off.  His fingers came away with blood and he sighed.  “I might have overdone it.”

    “Overdone what?” Andre asked, leaning over his shoulder to peer at Koji’s face.

    Koji turned his head away to hide the blood.

    “Do you have a handkerchief?”

    Andre reached into his pocket and held out a blue one, with an L embroidered on the corner.  Koji took it fast, and pressed it to his nose.  He pressed hard, hoping the nosebleed would stop.

    When it felt under control, he turned to Andre, only to have Andre wrap a strong arm around his shoulders.  One moment he was sitting on the ledge, the next, he was lifted up and standing, looking up at Andre Lacome.

    Andre tilted Koji’s face up, a frown appearing when he saw the blood on Koji’s left nostril.

    “What did you overdo?” Andre asked, his eyes stormy.

    Koji pushed Andre’s hand away from his chin and shook his head.

    “You wouldn’t understand,” Koji said, taking a step away from Andre.

    He was starting to like the silence in his head.  The relief of not having other people’s thoughts in his head was so tantalizing.

    “What are you?” Andre asked, his gaze intent on Koji.

    What a question, Koji thought.

    “Even I don’t know sometimes,” Koji answered, with a slight smile.  “Thank you for coming here.”

    He started to turn away, but Andre held on to his left arm.

    “Are you running again?”

    Koji glanced at the spot where Andre held his arm.  Heat sipped into his skin, Andre’s heat.

    “I still need to talk to Maki,” Koji said.

    “Right,” Andre let go of his arm.  “I—

    “You may come along if you want.”

    Koji headed for the fire escape, a part of him hoping that Andre would follow.

    ***

  • Seiryu Spirit – 5

    Eyes Filled with the Bluest Water

    Scratching his day-old beard, Andre shifted on the bench at the police station, and watched Leon talk to a police officer.

    They were working on the premise that if Sakura was missing, as Seiren said, her caretaker would have filed a missing person’s report.  It was a guess, based on…the natural order of events if this were a normal case.  Andre frowned.  There was the chance that because Sakura’s mother was a hooker, she might have asked the person taking care of Sakura not to report to the police.  God, he hoped not.  It would make the situation more difficult.

    “Yes, we have Sakura listed in our missing persons’ case,” the police officer said to Leon in heavily accented English.

    Relief flooded Andre at the positive starting point.

    “Her guardian reported her missing, then withdrew the case, before she filed a second time.  Her full name is Sakura Akino, she’s eight years old.”

    “From where?” Leon asked.

    “Gion area,” the police officer said.  “She has been missing for three weeks now.  We’re doing the best we can to find her, to find all of them.  Why do you ask?  Do you have information we can use?”

    “All of them?” Leon asked with a frown.

    The police officer launched into rapid Japanese to answer Leon’s question.  What would he do without Leon who spoke fluent Japanese?  Whatever the police officer said, had Leon turning to look at Andre, his gaze alarmed.  Andre smiled, giving Leon thumbs up, encouraging him.  Leon’s alarmed gaze turned into an amused sigh and he turned back to finish with the police officer.

    Leon came to sit next to Andre after a few minutes.

    “They have fourteen other children missing,” Leon said.  “A huge case that has a special investigation team working it.  He says to wait, and we can meet the team.”

    “More missing children,” Andre frowned.  “We’re not looking to get involved with anything flashy, Leon.  We just need to talk to Sakura’s guardian, and figure this out.”

    “Hard to do when Sakura’s name is on a list with fourteen others,” Leon said, leaning his head back on the wall behind him.

    They hadn’t gone back to their hotel yet.  After escaping their tail, Leon had suggested visiting the police station to ask about Sakura.

    Leon looked tired.  Momentary guilt flooded him looking at Leon, but then a short man in a long dark coat entered the police station, drawing his attention.   All thoughts of getting Leon back to the hotel disappeared when the police officer Leon had been talking to stood up to meet the man.  They talked a few minutes, and then the police officer pointed in their direction.

    “Leon,” Andre said, prompting Leon to sit up.

    They stood when the police officer motioned for them.

    Andre wondered at the nervous energy that suddenly coursed through him when the man in question indicated for them to follow him out of the police station.

    ***

    Ogun entered the flower room at the charming Hotel Mume and took the suitcase he carried to the corner of the room.  Koji sat in the living room area surrounded by police files, reading glasses perched on his nose.  He looked like he might be studying for exams.  Ogun sometimes hoped Koji would be burdened with such regular expectations, instead of the crazy life he lived.

    “Tomoyo is coming up in a bit,” Ogun said, coming to sit in the chair across Koji.  “She has taken control of the kitchen.”

    “Hmm…,” Koji said, going through the last file.  The one with Sakura Akino.  “What does the staff here know?”

    “They think we are on an assignment from an office,” Ogun shrugged.  “I wasn’t specific on the project.  The owner is very helpful, as we booked all the rooms for the week.  Tomoyo has charmed her way into the kitchen.”

    Koji removed his reading glasses and placed them on top of the documents on the coffee table.  He rubbed his eyes, and then stretched his arms above his head.

    “Sakura-chan is the easiest to follow,” Koji announced, sitting back in his chair.  “Her guardian is clearly worried for her.  There is fear in her statements, as it is with all the others, but Sakura’s guardian withdrew the report two days in, and then filed again a day after.  Curious.”

    “The police questioned her on that,” Ogun said.  “She wanted to withdraw the case when she thought Sakura was with her birth mother.  When it was clear that Sakura was not with her mother, she hurried to the police station and asked help to find her.  Obviously, the investigators hadn’t stopped searching, but her actions are suspicious.”

    “Makes me more curious,” Koji murmured, rubbing his forehead with his right index finger.  “Sakura-chan doesn’t fit.  Why is she included in our list?”

    “Other than she’s missing in the same time frame as all the other fourteen, there’s no other connection,” Ogun replied.

    The door opened and Tomoyo came in carrying a tray laden with green tea and neat sandwiches.  She placed the tray on the coffee table, moving Koji’s papers to the side.  She handed Koji a cup and Ogun smiled when Koji brought the cup to his lips when she scowled at him.

    Tomoyo nodded in satisfaction when Koji took two healthy sips and sat next to Koji.  Easy access for her to force-feed him, Ogun mused.  The woman was obsessed with feeding Koji.

    “I want to visit the Akino home,” Koji said, placing his cup on the coffee table.

    “Right now?” Tomoyo asked, glancing at the time.  It was thirty minutes after midnight.  “It’s kind of late for that.  Why not in the morning?”

    “I didn’t say I was going now,” Koji replied.  “Besides, don’t we need to meet the rest of the team?”

    Tomoyo nodded, and turned to give Ogun his mug of coffee.

    “They are having a late meal downstairs,” Tomoyo said.  “Discussions are always more productive on a full stomach.  I made sure they had a delicious meal.  We need to make a good impression before they all meet Koji.”

    “What’s that supposed to mean?” Koji scowled at her.

    “That Tomoyo will need to break out her cooking skills more than once this trip,” Ogun said, standing when his phone buzzed a message.  “Looks like they are ready, we should head downstairs.”

    Koji started to stand but Tomoyo grabbed his arm, forcing him to sit.

    “After Koji has eaten,” Tomoyo stated her tone enough to keep Ogun from arguing.

    He hid a laugh when Koji scowled at him, as if he was a traitor.  Reaching for his own cup of coffee, Ogun took a sip, enjoying the start of a new adventure with Koji.

    ***

    Andre realized following a man they didn’t know into a dark parking lot in the middle of the night was taking a mad risk.  They should have asked for more information before they blindly got into their car and followed the small Mazda now parked across them.  Yet they hadn’t.  Too eager for answers, too eager for progress.

    Andre couldn’t help the chuckle when he and Leon stopped to make a stand.  They stood leaning on their rental car refusing to take another step to follow the mysterious short man in a black coat.  Andre folded his arms against his chest caught between irritation and amusement by the whole scene.

    Leon spoke in Japanese as he delivered their refusal to continue without more information.  It was refreshing when the short man spoke English in reply.

    “I’m sorry for the cloak and dagger,” the short man said.  “I’ve always wanted to act out a James Bond movie and wanted to see how long I could push it.”

    “Depends on which one you’re acting out?” Andre said, deciding to be amused.

    “Of course, the dark haired one…hmm…Pierce Brosnan,” short man answered with a snap of his fingers.  “I love his Bond.”

    Leon cursed softly.  “What’s your name, Bond?”

    “Hisao.”

    “Hisao,” Andre said.  “Where are we going?”

    “You are asking about Sakura-chan,” Hisao answered, and waved toward the exit.  “I am taking you where you can get answers.”

    “This late at night?” Leon questioned.  “Why don’t we just—

    “The team works twenty-four hours, seven days a week,” Hisao explained.  “Thanks to a special team created by officials above, we are well-funded and have the will to keep searching.  No worries about overtime.”

    Andre frowned.  “Private funding?  From powerful political allies?”

    Hisao grinned.

    “I’m a low-paid police officer who wouldn’t know these complicated matters.  Please, let me lead you to investigation team.  I need to catch a few hours of sleep tonight.  It’s been a tough week.”

    Hisao started walking to the exit forcing both Andre and Leon to hurry after him.

    “Why are we leaving the car?” Andre asked, when they stepped into the cool night.

    “No parking space, and we’re going to need more than two hours in the meeting,” Hisao answered.  “I hope you don’t mind the walk.  It’s only three minutes.”

    “Not at all,” Leon said, though his tone sounded like he did.

    Andre on the other hand hoped that they’d done this during the day instead of late in the night.  He itched to take photos, but he’d left his camera at the Hyatt when he’d left to go meet Seiren.

    Hisao was right on the walk time. It took them exactly three minutes.  Their destination turned out to be a charcoal IMG_7363grey building tucked in between a row of houses.  The door into the building was blood red with a gorgeous black seal for a knocker.  A single name on the top floor of the building read ‘Mume’.

    Hisao led the way to the red door and rang the doorbell.  A cheerful young woman opened the door, ushering them into an elegant bright reception area.

    “Welcome to Hotel Mume,” she said.  “Are you here for the team meeting?”

    “Yes,” Hisao nodded.

    She smiled and led them to the right into a neat dining room and sitting area with floor length windows showing off the lighted river in the back of the hotel.

    Andre took in the elegance and enchanting mood, finding it hard to reconcile it with the number of serious people sitting at the long dining table.  Their expressions solemn, the screens projected on the wall full of children’s faces and scenes.  Gloom in splendor.

    The woman who had led them in left.  Leon touched Andre’s arm when the picture of a sweet smiling eight-year-old girl came up on the screen.

    “Sakura Akino,” the team leader was saying, and then paused, his gaze resting on Andre and Leon.  The momentary pause attracted attention, and Hisao smiled lifting his hands in apology.

    “Sorry for being late.  These two gentlemen are looking for Sakura-chan,” Hisao said.  “Our man at the desk thought they would get more information here.  No Japanese for the taller one.”

    “Welcome,” the team leader said, “Take a seat.  The briefing continues as is, we can talk after.”

    Andre nodded, and Leon moved to take the only empty seat at the long table.  Satisfied, the team leader continued his briefing.  While Andre headed to the sitting area, removed away from the intense group.  One other person sat at the wicker chairs by the windows.  A young man in a pale green jersey with the hood pulled over his head.  His hands folded against his chest, his right leg resting on his left knee.

    Andre sat in the chair next to him, curious.  Glancing at his wristwatch, Andre frowned when he saw the time.

    “How odd to have a briefing at this hour,” Andre murmured. 

    “It’s only one o’clock,” the young man answered, his tone low, so that he wouldn’t interrupt the ongoing discussion.

    “You speak English,” Andre said.  “What a relief.”

    “Most of us can,” the younger man said.

    “Then why is it so hard to get into a good conversation here?” Andre asked, thinking apart from Seiren, he had relied on Leon to get around.

    “Your accent sounds French,” the younger man said.  “In France, does everyone speak English at will?”

    “I suppose it depends who you are with.”

    “As it is here,” the answer came and Andre found himself smiling.

    “Andre Lacome,” he said, extending his hand out to the youth.

    There was hesitation, and then long elegant fingers closed over his. 

    “Koji Sukiyama.”

    “May I call you Koji?  Your surname is a mouthful.”

    “It’s a burden to me too,” Koji said, with a small chuckle.  “Yes, Koji is fine.”

    Andre shifted in his seat to face Koji.

    “As happy as I am to have been invited to such a briefing, why is it happening at this hour?” Andre asked, his gaze sliding to the long table, and the screens showing off information ahead.

    “During the day, they are out chasing leads,” Koji said.  “This is the only hour to regroup and share what has been discovered.  They have been at it for almost two weeks.  Now it’s about reviewing the data they’ve amassed and looking at it through fresh eyes.”

    “Two weeks,” Andre frowned.

    That was a long time to go missing.  He had hoped they’d find Sakura fast, and get to saving Henri.  He had a week to find the child, if there was any hope of getting help from Seiren.  If the police had been on the job for two weeks, how were he and Leon to pull this off?

    “Your sigh sounds disappointed,” Koji said beside him. 

    Andre wiped a hand down his face, suddenly tired.  “It’s been a long week.”

    “You make me curious,” Koji murmured, and pushed back his hood to reveal a head full of messy silky hair.

    Andre watched Koji reach to his ears, removing what looked like hearing aids.  Then Koji turned to meet his gaze, and he stared into the deepest azure eyes he’d ever seen.  Surely, his heart had no defense against this kind of assault.  No escape from the depths of those blue pools, so beautifully rendered, he never wanted to look away.  How beautiful Koji’s eyes were, filled with the bluest water, Andre could not look away.

    ***

    Koji’s presence in the large dining room slash sitting area was not to listen to the team leader repeat the case details.  No, he had wanted to poke at their thoughts as they had been chasing down leads for weeks.  Sitting in the corner, no one paid attention to him, too involved in the puzzle of this case.

    Tomoyo sat at the long table getting to know the investigators.  Ogun leaned on the wall closest to Koji, never too far, just in case.  The hood over his head was more to hide his eyes, as he allowed his senses free reign.  When he was twelve, he had needed to touch a person to know their thoughts, get a feel of their mood.  His teenage growth spurt had evolved his gift though, now all he needed to do was stand in a room and allow everything to sip into his thoughts.  People thought loudly, and it was always easier in a focused group like this.

    Sitting alone in the corner, Koji sifted through passing thoughts as the briefing started.  Whispered words, frustration, closing his eyes, he concentrated on the frustration.

    ‘She said she thought she saw a black van on the edge of the park.  If only she could remember…we would have a solid lead.’

    Koji frowned, wishing he knew the investigators well.

    ‘So many kids missing, the residents don’t even want to talk to us because they’re afraid.’

    Koji opened his eyes then, his thoughts on the woman who might have seen something on the edge of the park.  If he could meet the woman in question, maybe he would get more insight from her.  Pushing his noise canceling hearing aids in, he was about to stand and leave the room when the two white men walked in with Hisao.

    Sitting back, Koji watched the room turn to stare at both men.  Hisao smiled and made apologies for the interruption.  When Koji heard they were looking for Sakura, he gave up on the idea of leaving.  Sakura was the way to crack the case, so it was curious that two foreigners were also interested in her.

    The shorter one chose to sit next to Tomoyo, while the taller man came to sit beside him.  Koji crossed his arms against his chest, and wondered if he shouldn’t just read their thoughts.  He was tired from all the traveling and should really rest, still—, it was good to know what the tourists wanted to learn here.

    Curiosity had him sitting through Andre’s conversation.  He was glad for the years Saya had insisted he learn English as it came in useful now.  Andre’s voice was soothing, calm.  He reminded Koji of a man who would not panic in the middle of a storm.  Then, Andre sighed, the sound of it heavy.  The kind of sigh one would give if the weight of the world rested on the shoulders.  Heavy and full of meaning.

    Koji found he wanted to listen to Andre’s thoughts.  He wanted to know what would make a man like Andre sigh so deeply, so—

    Removing his hearing aids again, eager to listen.

    Only to be met with absolute silence.  The complete stillness in the room surprised him.  Koji gaped when all he

    large
    photo courtesy of B.E.I.

    heard was the intense discussion at the long table.  No internal thoughts flooded him, not a stray emotion filled him that wasn’t his.  It was absolute quiet.  The kind he only found with the use of the hearing aids he held.

    Koji turned to stare at Andre in shock.

    “Your eyes are stunning,” Andre said, the awe in his voice clear.

    Koji tried to find his voice, but he couldn’t formulate a word.  He didn’t know what to say, this complete silence so unfamiliar, he didn’t know how to bear it.

    Andre leaned closer and Koji blinked, shock bringing him to his feet fast.

    Ogun pushed off the wall, but Koji ignored him and instead rushed out into the lobby. In the bright reception hall, Koji took in a deep breath, then another, and almost cried in relief when the receptionist turned to him and her internal appreciative sigh filled his head.

    “Koji?” Ogun hurried to his side, concern on his face.

    “I’m fine,” Koji said, breathing out his surprise.  “Just tired.”

    “Are you sure?”

    Koji rubbed his forehead.  No, he was freaking out.

    “I—,”

    Koji broke off, not sure what he wanted to say.  Maybe foreigners were wired wrong.  Andre Lacome was a fluke.  One he had not expected, once they got used to each other, he’d get to hear Andre’s thoughts.

    This was nothing.  He was just tired.

    “I’m heading upstairs,” Koji murmured.  “The foreigners, find out why they’re looking for Sakura.”

    “Koji?”

    “It’s been a tiring day,” Koji said, forcing a smile for Ogun.  “I’m going to sleep first, goodnight, Ogun.”

    Koji ran up the stairs to his suite grateful for every soft whisper he heard in his head on the way upstairs.  He had spent so much time wishing he didn’t have this gift, yet in that moment, facing Andre Lacome, hearing nothing had almost undone him.  He wondered if he shouldn’t stay away from the gaijin altogether.

    ****

    gaijin – foreigner

     

  • Seiryu Spirit – 4

    A Withering Sakura Tree

    Whispers filled Koji’s thoughts.

    Stories not his, ideas full of hope, some worry, others decisive.  Closing his eyes, he took in a deep breath and closed the path in his head.  Calm filled him, an immediate relief.

    It was six in the morning.  The sun rising in the horizon.  A soft mist hovered over the Sukiyama Estate.  Each breath he took fresh and invigorating, renewing his energy.  Occasionally, birds chirped, singing in the morning.  Keeping his pace to their song, Koji ran along the tarmac road on the outskirts of the estate.

    His black sweats kept him sufficiently warm in the cool morning.  They absorbed his sweat as he exerted his muscles to their fullest potential.  This morning ritual kept him fit and cleared his mind.  There was always so much clutter—

    ‘Damn mud will be all over me by the time we get to the house.’

    Koji turned his head to his right to look into the bamboo forest.  He caught a shadow: a man running through the trees.  The forest ground was always wet in the morning.  The trees thick and the terrain rough.  Not a good morning for the one cluttering Koji’s mind with his thoughts.

    Koji sighed.

    Tama was at it again, torturing men in the name of safety.  Funny, the anger had disappeared overnight.  There were truths he couldn’t change.  His brother was his guardian, his light—a sigh escaped…his warden in this gilded cage.  It was easiest to live through it.

    Koji continued his run, determined to expend his frustrations.  He was passing the old shrine steps when he saw the tree.

    A very old sakura tree in full bloom stood in a field of vivid green grass.  It was so beautiful, Koji slowed to a stop to stare.  His shadow in the forest stopped too, unable to move forward and leave him behind.  Koji ignored him and kept his gaze on the tree.  It was a stunning vision, wondrous.  He couldn’t remember the tree being there, but the trunk was thick, indicating the tree was old.

    It belonged there.

    Koji took in every detail.  The delicate pink petals on the cherry blossoms, sweeping branches and the absolutecherry blossoms green of the grass.  This tree deserved to be immortalized.  The painting would need to be right.  He stood for a couple minutes simply taking it in.  When Koji was sure he would get it right, he resumed his run, veering off the tarmac road onto a small path that went across a large lawn.

    A noble three-story structure built in a mixture of traditional and modern Japanese architecture came into view.  It was an old house.  One that had stood for two centuries: weathered the tides of time and undergone innumerable modifications to accommodate countless Sukiyama generations.

    The familiar clay tiles, the walkways connecting different sections of the house, the turrets on the third floor.  The outside walls painted white.  Trees and flowers growing in natural design around the house.  The complicated mixture of styles…all of it, was simply home.

    And Koji loved every inch of it.

    Traditional-Japanese-Style-House-PlansSlowing down to a walk, Koji followed a cobbled path to sliding doors that would take him into the kitchen.  He paused at the entrance to remove his running shoes.  He slid his socked feet into sandals and entered a short hallway that opened into a large warm kitchen.

    Tomoyo, Tama’s girlfriend, maybe to-be-wife – which was still in consideration—, stood at the cooking range stirring soup in a pot.

    Koji paused at the entrance watching Tomoyo.

    This morning she was dressed in a pair of black khaki pants and a fitting white t-shirt, the seams pinned together with safety pins.  Her short hair in fluffy spikes.  She had earrings running down her right lobe.  Koji smiled.  He didn’t think he’d like it very much if Tomoyo changed.

    “You’re late,” Tomoyo said in greeting.  She turned to look at Koji and flashed him a wide smile.  “How was your run?”

    “Good,” Koji said, walking to the refrigerator.  “I’m not so sure it was fun for my bodyguard.”

    “You saw him,” Tomoyo sighed.  “He’s not very good at his job if you saw him.”

    “You and my brother deserve to be together,” Koji said.  Opening the fridge, he reached in for a yogurt container.

    “Whatever,” Tomoyo grumbled.

    Koji didn’t miss the flitting look of hurt on Tomoyo’s face.  He had known for a while now how much Tomoyo cared for Tama.  It hurt her, having Tama keep her close but at arm’s length.  His gift was a torture some days.  He didn’t like knowing such secrets about the people he lived with.  It made life difficult.

    “I’m sorry.” Koji apologized, staring at the pack of yogurt he held.  “You didn’t deserve that.  You all need to take a step back with the protection agenda.  It’s driving me insane.  I’m going to take a shower, and head to the art room, at least there I will be alone.”

    “Your brother is doing what he thinks is right,” Tomoyo said, her tone gentle.

    “I’m trying to survive it,” Koji said.

    Giving Tomoyo a small nod, he left the kitchen and headed into the dining room.  Off the dining room, was a corridor with a staircase going to the second floor.  Koji took two steps at a time, eager for a shower.

    ***

    The art room was Koji’s haven.  He spent hours in here.  The scents of oil paint filled the room, telling tales of old and new paintings.  There were drying canvases on easels, carefully covered with white sheets until they could find a new home.  Large windows on the western side of the room thrown wide open, allowing in the cool afternoon breeze.  Dipping a brush into a carefully mixed shade of green, Koji brought the brush up to his canvas, and made a series of sure strokes on the image coming to life.  He had been painting all morning and the sakura tree was beginning to take shape.

    That blooming sakura tree he saw this morning, surrounded with lush green grass.  The image filled his mind.

    How breathtaking it was, Koji thought, taking a step back from his canvas.

    The painting wasn’t bad, he judged, but still a mere shadow of the real thing.

    Dropping his brush into a can of solvent, he grabbed a cloth from the worktable beside him and started cleaning his fingers.  He was blissfully daydreaming when the door to the art room slid open and a young girl stepped into the room.

    “Koji-chan,” she greeted her gaze on the finished painting.  “It’s time to eat.”

    “I’m not hungry,” Koji replied, taking the rest of the brushes and putting them all in the container with solvent.

    “You’ve been in here all morning.  You have to eat sometime,” Kouya insisted.  She seemed mesmerized by the cherry tree.  “It looks so real, I could touch the cherry blossoms.”

    “Don’t touch, the paint is still wet,” Koji said, cleaning his paintbrushes.

    When he was finished, Koji removed the apron he wore to reveal a blue men’s kimono, modified to look like an oversized overcoat, over ripped blue jeans.  A wide belt tied at his waist.

    Kouya moved away from the painting and looked at him.  She was a student at the adjoining Seiryu Academy where Saya spent most of her time.  Kouya’s gaze moved over him as if taking inventory.

    Koji sighed at the familiar glance.  He knew what Kouya saw.

    His eyes with their rare azure color unnerved many.  His black hair too straight and over long since he hated visiting the barber, and he’d rather run from Saya than have her holding scissors to his head.  He was short for his age, and didn’t eat nearly enough, as everyone in the house said, so he was too skinny by their standards.  Koji had long decided the women in this house had impaired vision.  He was perfectly healthy and strong enough to keep up a grueling workout with Ogun.

    “Did Tomoyo send you?”

    Kouya smiled.

    “She insists I tell you that if you don’t come to eat, she’ll call Tama-san.”

    “That little brat,” Koji said with a glare.  “Unbelievable.”

    Koji sighed.

    “Koji-chan, Tomoyo is only worried for you,” Kouya soothed.

    She smiled and moved to take his right hand.  Her slender fingers sliding over his paint-stained ones.  She headed for the door, pulling Koji along.  Koji smiled at Kouya’s determination and gave in only because he adored the younger girl.

    Kouya called him Koji-chan because she truly thought him family.  He paused to slide the doors to the art room closed, locking them with a key on a chain on his wrist.  He followed Kouya, his bare feet silent on the wooden walkway leading to the inner part of their home.

    Kouya kept up a steady stream of conversation.  Telling him about school, and her gymnastics club.  His aunt, Saya Matsumoto, ran the Seiryu Academy.  Saya allowed students who didn’t have a home to return to like Kouya to stay at the Sukiyama home.

    Okaasan says I’m a natural at gymnastics.”

    “Of course, you are,” Koji murmured, amused by the fact that Kouya called Saya, mother.  A habit Tama started, but one Koji found hard to adopt.  He couldn’t call Saya, mother.  He had tried.

    It just didn’t ring true, so Koji called her Sensei instead.

    “Koji-chan, do you think I’ll ever be as courageous as you?” Kouya asked, when they stepped up into a hallway leading into the main house.  “I heard you can jump off a tall building and land on your feet with grace.”

    Gods, more like with broken bones, but he loved heroic stories with his name, so he wasn’t going to correct her.

    “You are courageous, Kouya,” Koji assured her.  Saya would have his head for this pointless encouragement, but what the hell.  “You’re already jumping on the beams without fear of broken bones.  You will be following in my footsteps very soon.”

    Koya chuckled, pleased.

    They entered the kitchen and Kouya let go of Koji’s hand, hurrying to Tomoyo’s side.  The scents in the kitchen were delicious enough to whet Koji’s appetite.  The wide kitchen windows thrown open to let in the afternoon.  Tomoyo stood at the counter pounding garlic.  The scent filled the room, stinging his nose.  She looked up when Kouya greeted her and turned to scowl at Koji.

    “Sit down,” Tomoyo ordered.  “That’s a week now that I’ve had to threaten you to eat.”

    “Don’t be mad at me,” Koji said, moving to sit at the long kitchen table in the middle of the room.  “By the way, blackmailing me with Tama is not very nice.”

    “It works,” Tomoyo said.  She stopped pounding garlic and moved to a steaming pot on the cooking range.  “There’s beef stew, eat it while I brew tea.”

    Koji felt his stomach reject the idea of stew at the mention of it, but he stilled his protests.  He needed to eat to keep his strength up.  One couldn’t survive on tea and yoghurt alone.  This lack of appetite was a new struggle.

    One that had appeared three months ago after a jaunt outside the estate.  Every time he returned from an excursion outside, his body seemed to lag and go through general discomfort.  Dizziness, feeling restless, not wanting to eat, the longer he spent outside the estate, the worse the symptoms.  He kept the struggle to himself, but Tomoyo saw too much.

    Tomoyo placed a bowl of beef stew before him and met his gaze.

    She pulled up a chair beside him.

    “Kouya, pour your big brother some tea,” Tomoyo instructed, pointing to a kettle of hot water on the counter.  She turned to Koji with a frown.  “What’s going on with you?”

    “Nothing,” Koji said, focusing on eating a spoonful of the delicious beef stew.  “I was painting today.  Lost track of time.”

    “What did you paint?” Tomoyo asked with interest.

    “I saw this very stunning cherry blossom tree and had to render it.”

    “Cherry blossoms?” Tomoyo asked with a frown.  “Where? When?”

    “By the shrine, this morning, during my run,” Koji said, swallowing the stew.  He started to take a second bite.

    “Are you sure?” Tomoyo’s frown deepened.  “There are a bunch of bamboo trees and the garden kept by the shrine priest.  He has no cherry trees there.  Did they transplant one?”

    “There is a tree,” Koji insisted, he had seen it this morning.  “Surrounded with the greenest grass you’ll ever see.”

    Kouya brought him a cup of tea and sat down beside Koji.

    “Our club visited the shrine earlier and there is no tree.”

    Koji placed his spoon down and stared at the bowl for a moment, a frown creasing his brow.

    “Are you sure?” he asked, meeting Tomoyo’s gaze.

    “Yes.” Tomoyo and Kouya both answered.

    Koji pushed back his chair and ran out of the kitchen.  He paused at the back door to wear sandals, and then took off in the direction of the shrine.  It took him four minutes to get to the front of the old shrine.  He stopped and stared at the ordinary gardens surrounding the shrine gates, bereft of his tree.

    Behind him, Tomoyo and Kouya caught up with him.

    “It can’t be,” Koji murmured, moving closer to the gates.  He stared at the messy gardens, no grass, no tree…he closed his eyes.

    Why had it seemed so familiar, like it was always there?

    Opening his eyes again, he gasped when he saw the tree again.  The delicate blossoms moving in the breeze.

    “Can’t you see it?” he asked.

    Kouya gripped Tomoyo’s hand when Koji looked at them in question.  His usually light blue eyes were a rich, vibrant azure.  They seemed too bright, their color too brilliant.

    “It’s a large tree,” Koji said, turning back to study the Cherry Blossom tree.  “The flowers delicate and bright.”

    Koji frowned as one side of the tree started to wither and die, the blossoms falling to the ground as dark as coals.  The decay continued until the tree was a charred mass, before it crumbled to the ground in dark ashes.

    Koji closed his eyes and turned away from the sight.

    Usually plants withering and dying meant destruction, but why the tree first?

    Opening his eyes, he looked again and only saw the Shrine Priest’s flower garden.

    There should be charred remains.

    “What is it?” Tomoyo asked, filled with curiosity.  “What did you see?”

    “The tree withered and died,” Koji replied puzzled.  “A strange sight as spring is just starting, that doesn’t bode well.”

    ****

    “Our plans fell through,” Daye Chang reported, his head lowered.  “We had planned to grab him on the way to the gallery, but when it got difficult, my men opted for a full on assault.  Sukiyama’s security was thorough.  They had him away from the scene in minutes.”

    “It’s good to test their defenses,” Takino Yuki said.  “Thanks to Teri Aoyagi we now know there is a second son, one Tama Sukiyama invests in keeping protected.”

    “What’s next?” Daye asked.

    “The Seiryu Academy was the way in last time,” Takino Yuki said, his gaze speculative.  “The school is elite, designed to protect and nurture children with special needs.  Ran by a woman who is more paranoid than the defense forces.  This is the reason why I have you chasing the leads in Kyoto.  How goes the search?”

    “We’ve managed to capture all the names on the list,” Daye said.  “If nothing happens, or we made a mistake, they can turn into merchandise and we’ll ship them out with our next cargo.”

    “Perfect,” Yuki nodded.  “Once again, we’re only testing their security measures.  Record everything that happens.  I need as much detail as possible.”

    “Yes Sir,” Daye left his office with a small bow.

    Once alone, Yuki moved to the windows in his offices, his gaze on the building directly across the street.  The Sukiyama Group corporate building was majestic with its thirty floors, boasting ocean green glass from top to bottom.  Yuki had acquired the high rise across the Sukiyama building to be closer to his enemy.  To better understand them while he planned his next attack.

    “The sins of the ancestors befall the children,” he murmured.

    It had taken twelve years to get this close.  Sukiyama’s new head was more cautious than his predecessor.  Tama Sukiyama never allowed the inner workings of his family into public notice.  To the point that a shootout outside the Sukiyama building had gone unrecorded, unreported.  The damage repaired within the hour.  Mighty indeed.

    Yuki had found no Sukiyama family registry, and no formal education records to trace the members of the family.  Tama gave no personal interviews in business, mentioned no girlfriends, no wife.  It was as though the family didn’t exist.

    Yet, they clearly ran such big business.

    Yuki had tried twice to find the Sukiyama Estate, and been lost for days.  It irked him.  He ached to enter that fine property and take what Misato had surely left in the care of her family.

    Daye’s plans might have failed, but they revealed that Misato had two children.  Yuki now knew a second son existed and Tama protected him fiercely.

    Useful information, Yuki nodded.

    If the plan to enter the estate using the Seiryu Academy failed, Yuki would focus on finding this second brother.  Tama couldn’t hide him forever.

    ***

    A week after Tama’s lockdown started, Saya and Ogun met in the living room early on a Thursday morning.  Koji was out running, one of his longstanding morning rituals, which left Ogun and Saya time to talk.

    “Fourteen students missing plus one unknown.”  Saya stared at the pictures on the glass screens in the corner of the living room.  “They were due for enrolment next week.  Why would they disappear?”

    “Their parents filed missing person reports through the last month,” Ogun said.  “The investigation is ongoing, but so far, no hard evidence, no witnesses.”

    “What is the Kyoto Seiryu branch doing to help?” Saya asked, moving to touch the screen on the youngest child in the group.  She was the unknown.  Saya did not remember accepting this child into the school.

    “The investigation team is at a dead end,” Ogun said.  “Without evidence, or witnesses, they can only keep searching along with the police.”

    Saya studied the young face on the screen.

    Sakura Toshiro, age eight, she reminded Saya of Koji, when his parents died.  Innocence was so easy to rip away.  Saya rubbed her eyes with her fingers and squelched thoughts of abominable crimes that came to mind.  The missing children cases were taking a toll on her.  The number of cases connected to the Academy had increased in the past two years, and she worried.

    “I want you in Kyoto,” Saya said, her tone heavy with exhaustion.  “These parents came to us seeking entry into the Seiryu Academy for a reason.  Their children cannot be left lost.  Use your best men; we will have Koji go with you.”

    “Is that possible?  Tama said Koji’s not to leave the estate,” Ogun reminded her.

    “I’ll handle big brother,” Saya said.  “Should be easy as Koji will be in Kyoto and not Ginza.  The boy needs an escape from all the restrictions; otherwise, we will have no peace.  This lockdown is getting weird as Koji stays in his art room painting dead trees.  He needs to get out more.”

    “I agree,” Ogun said with a nod.

    “Get everything ready, and wait for my go ahead,” Saya said, and watched Ogun leave the living room with fast strides.

    Saya returned a frowning gaze to the pictures on the screen.  Why these children?  Each one chosen by the Seiryu Academy board.  How specific, with the exception of Sakura, the eight-year-old Saya had never seen.

    “If you keep frowning, your age will start showing,” Tama said, coming into the living room.  He picked up the morning paper from the coffee table and gave the headline a cursory glance.  “Is Koji up?”

    “He’s out running.  Tama, I need to talk to you,” Saya said.  “Come here and take a look.”

    Tama folded the paper and moved closer to the screens they used to display quick information.

    “Are you giving prizes already?  Don’t make demands on my time this week.  My schedule—

    “These are missing potential students.  They were to join the academy next week,” Saya said.  “We have a problem if they were taken against their will.  This could be Plexus.”

    “That’s absurd, what would they want with children?” Tama asked.  He gave the pictures a final glance and headed to the kitchen.  “Have our people investigate.  I’m sure this is a coincidence.  You’re too paranoid, Okaasan.”

    “Tama,” Saya followed him into the dining room then into the warm kitchen.  Exasperation growing when Tama sat at the kitchen table, unconcerned.  “Doesn’t it seem odd that children we chose to join the academy have now disappeared?”

    “Maybe you’re overreacting, and this is a case with no ties to us,” Tama suggested, opening the paper to the business section.  “Not everything revolves around us.”

    “I’m sending Koji to Kyoto,” Saya said, sitting next to Tama.

    “Over my dead body,” Tama responded, without lowering the newspaper.

    “You know this is important,” Saya said.  “Don’t fight me.”

    “There are a few hundred people who work for that academy you run.  I don’t see why you won’t utilize all that labor.  My brother doesn’t need to go to Kyoto.”

    “Controlling me again?” Koji asked, coming into the kitchen from his run.  His forehead coated with sweat, he held a bottle of water in one hand.

    “Koji-kun,” Saya greeted.  “Have a seat.  I have a job for you.”

    “A job?” Koji asked, drinking his water.  “Is it dangerous?”

    Saya winced.  Did Koji need to raise his brother’s ire?

    “No, it’s not dangerous.  I only need you to check on students expected to enroll next week.  Their parents have reported them missing.”

    “Missing?” Koji asked.  “Maybe they chose another school?”

    “Unlikely,” Saya said.  “The police are involved and so far, nothing has turned up.”

    “We would need police reports,” Koji said, pulling out a chair at the kitchen table.  He continued drinking his water, clearly running with this.  “It’s always easier when we know what the police know.”

    “Ogun has them already,” Saya smiled.

    “I like how you two are going on as if this is happening,” Tama sipped tea that Tomoyo had brought him.  He turned the page on his paper and continued reading.

    Koji slammed his bottle of water on the table, giving Tama a sour look.

    “How many students?” Koji asked Saya.

    “Fourteen,” Saya answered.  “There is a wild card, though.  A young girl named Sakura Toshiro.  She was not on our lists.  She lives in the Gion area, and is only eight.  She makes the number fifteen.”

    “What can she do?” Koji asked, aware the missing children worried Saya because of their hidden abilities.  He accepted a tray of food from Tomoyo, and flashed a smile when she glared at him.  He picked up the spoon she handed him and took a bite of rice porridge.

    “Sakura has no special abilities,” Saya continued.  “She is simply a young girl caught up in a strange web.  I don’t know where she came from or why she’s part of the missing children.  You’ll have more insight when you get there.”

    Tama placed his paper on the table and looked squarely at Koji.

    “You’re not going to Kyoto,” Tama said, his tone hard, not inviting an argument.  “Have you forgotten the conversation we had a week ago?”

    “How could I?” Koji asked.  “Still, I want to go.”

    “I’ll have you locked up in your room, and the door boarded,” Tama said.  “In fact, I think that’s a very good plan.”

    “I’m not fifteen,” Koji snapped.

    He pushed his chair back and stood abandoning his food.  Folding his hands against his chest, he moved to lean on the counter.

    “You can’t keep me here forever, Nii-san.  Besides, you said you didn’t want me in Ginza.  I’ll be in Kyoto, that’s cities away.”

    “Are you happy now?” Tama turned to Saya.  “This is your doing.”

    “I only need information,” Saya said.  “Ogun will be with Koji the whole time, there is no chance he will be in danger.”

    “Koji is not meant to be running around saving the world,” Tama said, shaking his head at Saya.  He turned to Koji to find his brother glaring at him, irritation etched on his face.

    “Can’t you understand me, Koji?  It kills me trying to be this person to you.  I also just want to be your big brother, you know.”

    Koji sighed.

    “Tomoyo can come along.  You trust her, don’t you?”

    “With your life,” Tama answered.  “Don’t smile at me like that, Koji.”

    “Tomoyo, will you come along?” Koji asked, turning to look at Tomoyo.

    “Yes,” Tomoyo answered, meeting Tama’s dark gaze.

    The shift of emotions between them left Koji breathless.  He knew Tama would agree if Tomoyo came along.  Tama rarely refused Tomoyo anything, which was cruel of Koji to use her, but he wanted out of the estate.

    “There, are you happy now?” Koji asked his big brother with a smirk.

    Saya hid a smile when Tama sighed.  Koji thought Tama had agreed because of Tomoyo but Saya knew better.

    Tama was protective of Koji, but he was also the one who could never deny Koji anything.  Koji got his way when it mattered, but always with a price, Saya thought, turning to look at Tama expectantly.

    “You can go if you tell me what you saw by the shrine,” Tama kept his gaze on Koji.  When Koji feigned ignorance, Tama scowled.  “Everyone knows you saw something at the shrine, Koji.  What was it?”

    Koji dropped his arms to his sides and stared at the floor.

    “There was a very large and old cherry tree.  It was in full bloom, the flowers beautiful and many.  Later in the afternoon when I returned, the tree withered and died.  Seemed to burn from the inside out, the flowers withered last.”

    Tama kept his gaze on Koji, though he spoke to Saya, “What does it mean?”

    “Foreboding death, mayhem, or simply a tree withering,” Saya provided with a shrug.  “You shouldn’t use it to hold your brother here.  That isn’t right.”

    Okaasan is always pushing her own motives,” Tama mused, then turned to Tomoyo.  “Nothing happens to Koji, not even a paper clip pinch.”

    “I’ll protect him,” Tomoyo promised her gaze on Koji who looked unimpressed by his brother’s fierce warning.

    “Don’t do anything unnecessary.  If you see trouble, call me,” Tama continued.  “Koji, don’t give her a hard time.”

    “Yes, Master,” Koji said, his tone mocking, earning a scowl from Tama.

    Tama rose and left the kitchen without another word, thoroughly won.

    ***

    The Damsel in Distress

    The Blue Dragon club was nothing to write home about, Andre thought, his fingers wrapped around a warming beer bottle.  He leaned on the wall in the darkest corner.  Not hard to find, as the club barely had any light to start.  The D.J. was good: good enough to draw in a crowd.  The dance floor was packed.

    The beer was cheap, the spirits pricey, but still affordable, all in all, a perfect synergy, business wise.  Andre appreciated effortless business plans, and the owner of the Blue Dragon had one going.  Problem was, two days haunting this place, and he’d yet to catch a glimpse of the secret world Henri said existed here.

    Bringing his beer to his lips, Andre shifted his legs, and took a healthy sip.

    “Want a fresh one?” a sultry, sexy heavily accented voice asked.

    Andre looked up to see a beautiful woman in a short green dress standing a few feet from him.  Her long hair a thick curtain of silk, her phoenix eyes beautiful, she smiled and Andre understood why Henri had fallen for this deep seduction.  She was hard to ignore.

    “Why are you standing alone?” she asked.  “Don’t you want to dance?”

    “I’m not much of a dancer,” Andre answered.

    “You’re new here.”

    She moved closer and leaned on the wall next to him.

    “I’m a tourist,” Andre said, shifting to look at her in the flashing lights of the club.  “A gaijin.”

    She chuckled, the sound of it musical.

    “It’s funny when you refer to yourself that way.  You call it being green.  I’ve met many like you before.  Men on the move, always looking for the next excitement.”

    “Is that so?” Andre returned her flirtatious smile, and placed his beer on a table close by.  “In the spirit of finding excitement, why don’t you help me out with a problem?”

    “What kind of problem?” she asked, her voice smooth and decadent.

    “I am,” Andre shifted closer to her until their faces were inches apart, “looking for someone.”

    “Really?” She grinned, bringing her hands up to his arms.  Her green dress shimmered in the flashing lights, and her hair sifted over her shoulder like fine silk.  “Could this someone be me?”

    Andre wrapped his left arm around her waist, pulling her even closer to whisper in her ear.

    “You tell me, Seiren,” he said.

    She tensed against him and started to struggle out of his arms, but he tightened his hold and turned to press her against the wall.

    “Don’t make a scene,” Andre warned.  “I hear your boss is a pain in the ass.  I’m not ready to meet him yet.  You on the other hand—

    “Who are you?” she hissed.  “How do you know that name?”

    “Henri Lacome,” Andre said, and she seemed to wilt in his arms at the mention of Henri.  “I see you remember him.”

    “He was good to me,” Seiren said, her voice filled with tears and fear.  “Is he here?  If he is, tell him to go home.  It’s not safe.  They will really kill him this time.”

    “Why are you back here?” Andre asked, letting go of Seiren when it was obvious she wouldn’t run away from him.  He braced his hands on the wall behind her, so that they would look like lovers.  “Did you work with your boss to drag Henri into trouble?”

    “No.”  Seiren almost shouted the word at him.  Her eyes wide, she shook her head and he frowned when tears slid down her cheeks.  “I would never.  Henri helped me see my daughter.  No matter how short it was.  My poor girl, we had a precious two hours together before they caught up with me.”

    “Why did they look for you so much?” Andre demanded, sure that Henri’s case was tied to this woman.  “What for?  Why drag Henri into trouble?”

    “I know too much,” Seiren said, trembling.  “I have seen too much in this club, you understand.  They use my daughter to control me, keep me from leaving.  After I ran away with Henri, they took my precious Sakura.  I don’t know what to do.  I must do all they say to keep her safe.  They punish Henri for daring to steal from the Blue Dragon.”

    Andre cursed under his breath.  This story was filled with too many victims.  He could only save Henri, the woman and her daughter seemed like a complication he didn’t need.  Shaking his head, he started to step away from her, but she grabbed onto his shirt as one would a lifeline.

    “Help me,” Seiren said, desperation clear in her eyes.  “I know you’re here because of Henri.  Please, don’t—

    “I can’t afford to draw attention—

    “If you want to save Henri, you’ll help me,” Seiren said, discarding the plan to beg, jumping straight into bargaining.  “Daye Chang will use Henri as a scapegoat for his trade with children.  He has powerful friends, so it will work.  It will be difficult for Henri to escape Daye Chang’s plot.  I can help.”

    Andre hissed.

    “Why should we trust you?  For all we know, you helped Daye Chang frame Henri.  Why do you know so much?”

    “Because I do,” Seiren snapped.  “I know every part of this club, even the parts hidden from stupid gaijin.  I will open all the doors, if you help me save my daughter.”

    Merde,” Andre cursed.  “You’re more trouble than you’re worth.”

    “Find my daughter and I will make it worth your time,” Seiren said, and leaned up as though to press a kiss on his cheek but Andre shifted away from her kiss.  “What?”

    “I don’t want your brand of thanks,” Andre hissed, just as a burly man showed up on Andre’s right.  The man’s gaze on Seiren.

    “He is here for me,” she said, her gaze challenging.  “Fine, don’t get a fuck.  We can discuss other means of payment.  Remember, you don’t have much time.  I heard them discussing evidence to tie Henri to the warehouse with the children.  They will turn it in a week.  Find my daughter before then and I will help you get it.  Now kiss me.”

    Andre stiffened, hating the thought.  Her gaze narrowed as she studied him, then a slow smile curved her lips.

    “It’s not that disgusting,” Seiren teased, “we’re just pretending, gaijin.  You must really not like women.  How different you are from Henri.”

    Andre hissed and dug his fingers into her thick hair, bunching it tight as he leaned in to brush his lips on her cheek.

    “If you’re lying to me,” Andre said, wrapping his arms around her, miming a passionate embrace for their voyeur.  “I will kill you, Seiren.”

    “You won’t have to,” Seiren said, barely moved by his threat.  She kissed him hard on the lips and murmured.  “Find my daughter first.”

    Seiren then stepped away from him, and Andre brought his right hand up to his lips.  She winked at him as she hurried to the big burly man who took her arm.  Andre watched them head into a corridor leading deeper into the depths of the club.  He wanted to follow, but it wasn’t time yet.  He needed more information, more evidence.

    Minutes later, Andre left the club, hurrying down a deserted alley.  He heard footsteps behind him as he reached the end of the alley, and broke into a short run when he joined the main street.  Darting past pedestrians on the busy streets, Andre hurried to the rental car Leon had parked in the corner of a street and slid in to the passenger seat breathing hard.

    “Trouble?” Leon asked, shifting gears and joining traffic as quickly as he could.

    “Dark clubs, damsel in distress, and a burly thug, what do you expect?” Andre took a water bottle from the console between them and drunk thirstily.  “I found Seiren.”

    “She’s a looker,” Leon said.  “Our contact suspects she actually lives in the club.”

    “Seems like it,” Andre sighed.  “She said she would help get the evidence they want to use against Henri.”

    “Really,” Leon frowned.  “That seems almost too easy.”

    “Yes,” Andre chuckled, though the sound was without any ring of joy.  “We just have to help her find her daughter.”

    Merde.”

    “That’s what I said,” Andre sighed.  “This trouble is like a massive fuck hole, with no end, just more fucking turns and crevices without the bliss.”

    “You can be really crude,” Leon said.

    “Henri’s troubles draw it out of me.”

    Andre ran his fingers through his hair in frustration.

    “How does he manage to get things so fucked up we have to rely on a hooker we can’t trust?”

    “The warehouse ownership documents lead back to Henri’s firm.  Such physical evidence is hard to ignore and the investigators are not willing to compromise.” Leon gripped the steering wheel tight.  “Seems someone powerful is pushing for prosecution.  Worse, child trafficking cases draw attention, and everyone wants answers fast.  The easiest thing to do now is pursue Henri’s firm and Henri.”

    “Yes, yes,” Andre said.  “My brother’s innocence has become a liability.  No one wants to take the time to make sure they’re getting the right guy.  We need the hooker we can’t trust to introduce a new path to follow.”

    “Well, at least we have a strategy,” Leon flashed him a smile.  “What did the damsel/hooker say her child’s name was?”

    “Some sort of flower,” Andre said, snapping his fingers as he replayed everything Seiren had said in his head.  It took a minute for the name to click.  “Sakura.”

    Leon smiled.  “Sakura, that’s pretty.”

    “How did you know that Seiren would approach me in the club?” Andre asked.

    “Henri,” Leon said.

    Andre cursed again and Leon chuckled.

    “You might not want to talk to him right now, but he’s a great source of information.  I called him to discuss his firm, so, it was easy to ask about Seiren.  Henri said she liked talking to foreign men because they made her feel different.  All you needed to do was show up, and stay separate from the crowd.”

    “Well, it was luck she was back at the club.”

    “I don’t believe in luck,” Leon said.

    Andre scoffed.  Yes, luck was a childish way to view life.

    Instead of luck, it was better to rely on great planning.

    “Where to?” Andre asked.

    Leon glanced at the rearview mirror, prompting Andre to do the same.  A white van followed them.  The driver was no expert.  He made it too obvious that he was following them.

    “Well first we’re going to lose our tail,” Leon said, increasing his speed.  “Then, we discover this Seiren’s last name.  It can’t be that hard to find Sakura.  The faster we finish, the better.”

    “Yes,” Andre agreed.   “I already miss home.”

    ***

    Seiryu Spirit Chapter 3

  • Seiryu Spirit – 3

    3. The Family Name carries Weight

     “Why do you always stare at this painting?”

    Andre Lacome stared at the canvas on the wall, captivated by the depiction of a woman stoking a charcoal stove.  A modern house loomed behind her.  She sat on a small stool, holding a fan, a red cloth tying her silky black hair back.  A soft sheen of sweat coated her forehead, wisps of her hair clinging to her skin.  The pot on the charcoal stove boiling away.  She was smiling, her gaze on three children playing a ball game in the grassy patch away from her.

    “Do you know why she’s cooking with the charcoal stove?” Andre asked.  “She has a modern house; clearly she’s able to cook using a gas stove or even electricity.”

    “She’s broke?”

    Andre glanced at his younger brother, Henri, and grinned.

    “Does she look broke to you?” Andre asked.  “Her gaze is full of joy.  The painter captured her in a moment of happiness.”

    Henri folded his arms against his chest.

    “You spend too much time staring at paintings.  I might need to get you out of this place by force.  Find you a real man to look at.”

    Andre only smiled at his brother’s comment. 

    Henri was impatient with the arts, never had the time to sit and brood over a painting or a piece of music.

    “What brings you home?” Andre asked Henri, not moving away from the painting.

    “Can’t your brother visit home when he wants?” Henri asked.  “I haven’t seen your face in weeks.”

    “Henri.”

    “See, I knew that was coming,” Henri said with a delighted laugh. 

    “Henri.” He mimicked Andre.  “That tone, like you’re admonishing a school boy.  You would have fit right in teaching at the lycee Louis le Grand.”

    “Do you want me to punish you?” Andre asked, his tone bored, used to his brother’s commentary.

    “How delicious would that be,” Henri grinned and jumped back when Andre glanced at him.  “Okay, hide that scowl, it’s damaging to my heart.”

    Andre gave a sigh and turned away from the painting, only to have Henri grab his right arm.

    “I’m sorry, I’ll be serious,” Henri said, leading Andre to an armchair in the large living room of their family home.  “Sit, sit, this will be easier if you’re sitting.”

    “I’m afraid to ask what’s going on,” Andre said, settling into the comfortable armchair.

    Henri didn’t laugh this time, or try to joke.  Instead, he paced the length of the coffee table, his fingers clenched into fists, and then he let out a short breath.  Sitting on the edge of the couch opposite Andre, he took in a deep breath.

    “How bad?” Andre asked, meeting his brother’s gaze.

    “Come on,” Henri sighed, with a frown.  “Why do you always do that?”

    Andre scoffed.

    “I’ve cleaned up your messes your whole life, Henri.  On a scale of one to ten, one being mild, ten being fuck-ups of the highest proportions, tell me what we’re dealing with.”

    “Twenty?” Henri mumbled and buried his face into his hands.

    “Twenty,” Andre closed his eyes.  “Did you kill someone?”

    “Nothing like that,” Henri said, lifting his head to look at him.  “Seriously, Andre.  Why would you imagine something like that of me?”

    “Twenty?”

    “Okay, fine, maybe I’m exaggerating a little,” Henri shook his head.  “No one is murdered.”

    “Then what is the trouble?” Andre asked.  “Tell me fast, Henri.  I have a contractor meeting in thirty minutes.”

    “Do you remember the Asian we met at Maman’s tea party?” Henri asked.  “Three months ago, he was going on about shipping and how it was the big business to be in now.”

    “How much are you in?” Andre asked.

    “I invested in the shipping company legitimately.  Twenty percent, nothing huge and we’re not the only partners.  The money is not the problem, Andre.”

    “But it is the root of the problem.  The easiest way is to let the investment go, cut all ties, and walk away.”

    “What if there are crimes involved?”

    “The same option applies,” Andre said.  “As long as your conscience is clear.”

    Henri wiped a trembling hand down his face.

    “It’s not.  I don’t care about the money, but—

    “What?”

    “On my last business trip, there was a woman I met at a club in Kyoto.  She was beautiful, Andre.  So beautiful, but in trouble.”

    “That’s how you love them,” Andre said.

    “She’s going to die if we don’t help.”

    “Now you are being dramatic, Henri.”

    “I’m not,” Henri snapped, glaring at Andre.  “You weren’t there, you didn’t see her eyes.  How frightened she looked.  She managed to convince me to get her out of the club.  I thought we would have a good time and I would fly out, leave her money.  I didn’t anticipate how important she was to the Asian.  He caught us on the way out of the club.  He stopped us and his men dragged her away—

    “Are we having this discussion over a paid date?”

    “That’s not the point,” Henri snapped.  “Whether I paid her or not is a non-issue.  She might die, you—

    “You went back for her,” Andre said in realization.

    “After I got to my hotel room, I couldn’t get her out of my mind.  I couldn’t just leave a frightened woman alone.  What kind of man do you think I am?”

    “Foolish and soft-hearted,” Andre said, with a sigh.  “The Asian wasn’t friendly to start with.  I’m sure he didn’t take interference lying down.”

    Henri got to his feet and sunk fingers into his dark curly hair. 

    Andre watched his brother pace around the couch, fingers in his hair.  Henri had taken so many of their mother’s traits.  It was uncanny.

    “You’re right.  I went back to the club.  Dressed her in men’s clothes and smuggled her out,” Henri said, after a few minutes of pacing.  “I took her to my hotel room, and gave her money.  She thanked me, said she had a daughter named Sakura.  She wanted to go back to her.  We had sex, and when I was leaving, I told her she could go to the authorities if she needed help.”

    Andre closed his eyes, afraid of the rest of this story.

    “I was a successful hero.  She was out of a bad life.  I left her happy,” Henri continued.  “Then, last night I get a frantic call from my staff in Kyoto.  The Japanese authorities are looking for me.”

    “Why?”

    Henri shuddered.

    “They found five children in a warehouse in Kobe owned under my firm’s name.  I’m apparently funding child trafficking.  I swear to God, Andre.  I have never seen the deed to that warehouse.  I have never signed any ownership papers—,” Henri shook his head.  “Child trafficking, fuck, I would never—

    “I know, Henri.”

    “Who would do this to me?  If this gets out, HLCapitol’s done.  We can’t handle that kind of negative backlash.  Child trafficking….”

    Henri came around to sink into his couch.

    “I saved a woman, and ended up a culprit.  Hikaru, my business manager in Kyoto, says investigations have started digging into the investment firm and our clients.  I’m to be brought in for questioning on sight. I can’t afford this kind of trouble.  What are we going to do?”

    “You stay hidden here at Villa Lacome,” Andre said.  “The moment they arrest you, life gets harder for both of us.  So, lay low.”

    “What about business?”

    “Run it from here.”  Andre raised his arms indicating the great big house they both called home since birth.

    “Maman and I will kill each other.  You know we fight over everything.  I hate when she meddles, and she can’t help herself.  I can’t stand it, Andre.  We love each other best apart.”

    Andre sighed. 

    “Maman is in the states for three months.”

    Relief flooded Henri, his shoulders visibly relaxing.

    “You should have said that from the start.  I will come to stay.  Then?”

    “I’ll go to Japan,” Andre said.  “I’ll sort this out.  Once I do, Henri, you have a promise to make me.”

    Henri rubbed his eyes, frustration clear on his face.

    “I’m not moving back here.  You know Maman drives me crazy.  You’ll end up checking me into a mental hospital.  Don’t try to cut off my freedoms.”

    “Then stop jumping into business with people you don’t know.”

    “How the hell am I supposed to make money then?” Henri asked, eyes wide in shock.

    “Responsibly,” Andre snapped and got to his feet.  “Last time was a diva in Czech Republic and her manager, now a hostess in Japan and her deadly pimp?  What is his name?  You didn’t mention it.”

    “Daye Chang,” Henri said with a shudder.  “Runs the club from an office in the basement of his building.”

    “Wonderful,” Andre pointed a finger at Henri.  “Stay put, and send your power of attorney to Leon.  No going out, no more damsels to save, and for fuck sake, don’t go out.”

    “I came to you, didn’t I?” Henri bargained, as Andre started to leave.  “I didn’t let it fester.  We have the Lacome name on the line, here.  I should get points for recognizing that and coming to you.”

    “No points,” Andre glared at his brother.  “Maybe we should marry you off to Lisbeth next door.  She still fancies herself in love with you.  You should try falling in love with her.  Save her from a lifetime of pining after you.”

    “That’s mean,” Henri gaped.  “She’s in her fifties and spends all her time in Wellingtons and overalls.  She told me once that she gets an orgasm watching her grapes grow.”

    “No wonder she makes good wine, you can decant it together,” Andre said. 

    Henri picked up a vase from the nearest stool and hurled it at Andre.

    “That’s Maman’s favorite,” Andre called back when the vase crashed on the ground.

    He couldn’t help the smile when Henri cursed royally.

    Andre headed outside the villa, and stood in the parking lot staring at the black car waiting for him.  Henri,  Andre thought, shaking his head.  Was this all he had in the world?  Fixing Henri’s fuck-ups and holding the family business together.  How wonderful it must be for Henri to have someone to run to this way.  Why didn’t he have someone he could go to, and lay all his weight down, feel at ease? 

    Andre looked up at the clear blue sky, and took in a deep breath. 

    Was it winter in Japan?  He couldn’t remember.  Living here spoiled him for any other place.  He had never understood why anyone would go looking for trouble as often as Henri did.

    “Child trafficking,” Andre murmured.  “Maybe I should just hand him over to them?”

    “Then you would have your Maman crying day and night over her baby in prison,” Leon said, beside him.

    Andre turned to face his best friend and lawyer.

    “You heard?”

    “Hard not to,” Leon chuckled.  “Henri’s narration dramatics have not changed.  I was still in your study when he started.  I called his firm’s lawyers.  I have everything we need.”

    “Thankfully, you are here,” Andre said, heading for the black car.  “First we meet the contractors, business must carry on.  I still need to feed him, pay the bills for the estate.   Then we plan for Kyoto, and this Daye Chang.”

    Leon walked around the car, and joined Andre in the backseat.

    “Are you sure you can handle Asian underground business?” Leon asked, when the driver drove out of the Villa compound.  “Henri might be clueless, but you’re not.  This sounds very dangerous.”

    “They dared drag a Lacome into their dirt.  I won’t have it.  No one is arresting my little brother on child trafficking charges,” Andre snapped.  “They’ll have to kill me first, Leon.”

    “I was afraid you’d say that,” Leon said, settling into his seat.

    ***

    Five families received good news when investigators rescued their children from a black market cartel.  After weeks of a harrowing ordeal, the five children were found in a warehouse in Kobe owned by a French Investment firm…investigators are hard at work identifying the faceless villain behind their kidnapping.”

    “Faceless villain,” Andre scoffed and scrolled down the screen skimming the article.  “At least they have kept Henri’s name out of the press, as well as the firm.”

    “Not for long,” Leon said.  “Everyone involved is waiting for hard evidence, and then they will jump at getting the Lacome name involved.  We need to be a step ahead.”

    “What hard evidence?” Andre turned off his tablet and handed it to Leon.  “My brother is a crazy coward.  Saving women because he wants to feel like a knight.  When real trouble starts though, he runs home.  He doesn’t have the character to deal with kidnapping children.  Fools.”

    “I don’t think you should visit Henri’s offices,” Leon said.

    Andre adjusted the hat he wore, and brought his camera up to capture a pair of Maiko crossing a picturesque bridge, in full costume.  He took several pictures, and when they noticed him, they stopped and smiled in his direction.

    “Look at that, such beauty,” Andre said, thanking them with a wave.  They hurried off, and he studied the pictures.  Kyoto was stunning.  “Henri always knows the best places to visit.  Why he also finds the ugliness, I don’t know.”

    “Are you listening to me?”

    “Yes, Leon.  No visiting the offices, lest they pick me up too,” Andre said, looking around the streets.  “You go visit this Hikaru.  I’ll explore.  Who knows what else is hiding here that could help us.”

    Leon narrowed his gaze, studying him.

    “I’m worried about you, Andre.  You should take a real vacation after this.  You barely rest anymore.”

    Andre grinned and patted Leon’s shoulder.

    “Go on now, the faster we leave this place, the better for you to nag me less.”

    Leon chuckled and left him with a short wave.

    Alone, Andre walked to the bridge the two ladies had used earlier and stood watching the river flowing down.  The waters moving in gentle waves, the buildings on each side heavy with history.  Who could imagine underneath this beautiful setting, men like Daye Chang dared run a dark and terrible business.

    Well, if he could not visit HL Capitol, then he would discover what type of club Daye Chang owned.  Maybe he would find a handsome date for the night.  Some hours steeped in senseless pleasure would surely make him look more relaxed.

    Alleviate Leon’s concerns, Andre thought with a smile.

    ****

    Human Nature

    In a boardroom in Ginza, fifteen floors above ground, Koji swiveled his chair from side to side in boredom.

    He sat in the corner of the boardroom, right by the windows, his elbows braced on a small table set before him.

    To his right, twelve people: ten men and two women sat around an oval table, each one at the top of their potential.  With Tama at the head of the table.  His big brother sat listening to reports and proposals from various business ventures under the Sukiyama name.  So many ventures, so many problems, Koji wondered how Tama could keep track of it all.  Yet he seemed to know what was going on in each topic.  His brother was truly great when it came to business.

    Koji sat back and stared at the ceiling.  The lights went off and he sat up straight to find a presentation starting on the wall opposite.  Koji reached up to remove the enhanced ear buds in his ears.  Holding them in his hands, he took in a deep breath as the room came alive in his head.

    A jumble of thoughts filled his brain, and he closed his eyes and forced his brain to concentrate on sorting it out.

    Tama called these board members people he could rely on.

    Listening to their private thoughts and ideas, Koji wondered how Tama could rely on these people. 

    Ambition fueled all of them, such blinding ambition it bordered on obsession. 

    Their insane need to gain more, and more, such deep hunger for wealth, power, recognition, the more gained, the more the need grew.  The level of dedication to Sukiyama Group was different.  Some needed the recognition of the name, others using the name as a way to build their own companies…their own wealth.

    This wasn’t the first time Koji had done this for Tama.

    But every time he did, it left him with a bad taste in his mouth. 

    How could Tama entrust their family’s business to these people with their blind ambition? 

    Once, he had asked Tama why loyalty was so easy to buy in this world.

    ‘Everyone has a price to pay for what they want to gain, for what they desire.  The price can be time, loyalty, dedication….  Work for me, I’ll pay you this much.  You can achieve your goal and fulfill your desires e.t.c.  I’m only able to take advantage of this need to gain until it has reached the limit,’ Tama explained.  ‘When the limit is at overcapacity, people take two routes: one is to walk away from the position.  This is easiest, as all we need to do is replace them with someone with the same hunger.  The second choice is scarier as it taught me that humans turn into beasts.  If this happens at Sukiyama, the only thing I can do is slay the beasts, and protect what belongs to the family.’

    Koji smirked at the memory of that explanation and clenched his fists when he connected with dark intent.  At first, he couldn’t tell who it was, the anger filled the room, such hatred toward Tama, and…him.

    Koji felt shocked.

    Nausea grew, Koji leaned his elbows on the table and he opened his eyes to look at the board members.  Staring at each one, searching…then a woman’s voice filled his head.

    Once this is over, they won’t dare hurt my family.  They’ll have what they want, and I can leave for good.’

    Koji focused on the only two women in the room.

    Why they want the painter is a mystery, the kid looks like a wimp.  Oh well, as long as my son is safe, I don’t care.  The Aoyagi family will move out of the country and start a new.

    Koji couldn’t help the gasp.  He hid the sound with a cough, and the fear that filled Teri Aoyagi grew as she nervously gave him a glance.  Now that he knew it was her, all he could read was her anger, her awful intent.  Whatever she was planning felt malicious, that it was directed at him, made him feel even worse.

    Unable to stay, Koji got to his feet and hurried out of the boardroom, rushing straight to Tama’s office on the same floor.  Pushing the ear buds into his ears, he turned them on, and hurried to the balcony, standing outside in the air.  A cool breeze swept away Terri’s dark thoughts.  Moments like this, he craved the lush silence of his family home.

    The office door opened, and Tama hurried in, coming to the balcony.

    “Who is it?”

    Koji glanced at his brother.

    “Is this any different from what Saya has me doing at night?  Why are you always so mad when I go help her team out?”

    “Because her missions are dangerous,” Tama said with impatience.  “There are weapons involved, you turn reckless, and could get shot.  Then what the hell would I do, Koji?”

    “This is no better,” Koji said, taking in a deep breath.  The air not as fresh as home.  “Those people who work for you, none of them are good.”

    “No one is entirely good, Koji.”

    Koji sighed and wiped a hand down his face.  Removing his dark glasses, he met his brother’s gaze.

    Tama never flinched at the sight of his eyes.

    Never, not once, Koji thought, taking comfort in that at least.

    “Teri Aoyagi,” Koji said.  “She’s so worried about someone she refers to as ‘they’.  She’s thinking too loud.  Her anger towards our family is sickening.  She thinks me a wimp.”

    “You’re not,” Tama stated.

    “I want to go home now,” Koji said.  “Don’t make me stay here longer.”

    “I better find you home,” Tama said, moving closer to take the dark glasses from Koji’s hand.  With care, Tama fitted them over Koji’s eyes, and pressed a soft kiss on Koji’s forehead.  “I’ll worry if you’re not home.”

    “I’ll be there.”  Koji promised, right after he spoke to the woman who knew his mother.

    “Alright,” Tama stepped back, and gave him a slight smile.  “Ogun will be with you.”

    “As always,” Koji said, watching his brother head out.  “Don’t be too hard on that woman.  She worried for her son.”

    “She’s been plotting to hurt you, that’s all I care about,” Tama said, his tone hard.

    Koji shook his head at his brother’s attitude.  Glancing at his wristwatch, Koji smiled, thinking he had plenty of time to get to Kamakura, then head home.  Tama and Saya would never know he was off the schedule.

    Excitement coursing through him, Koji hurried into Tama’s office, got his jacket and headed out too.  Ogun caught up with him at the elevators.

    “Do you have her address?” Koji asked, as they rode down to ground floor.

    “Yes.”

    “And her number?” Koji asked.  “In case she’s gone grocery shopping or something.  What do you think she’ll like?  Should I get her tea?  Or flowers?  She must be Saya’s age—“

    Koji broke off thinking about Saya Matsumoto.  That woman could not be compared to any other woman on the planet. 

    He shuddered.

    “Let’s not think about Saya,” Koji murmured as the elevator doors opened.  “Ogun, you have a mother, don’t you?  What does she like?”

    “Scarves, home appliances, flowers, tea,” Ogun said, a smile gracing his lips.

    “Can we get them all?” Koji asked.  “We don’t know what she prefers.  To be on the safe side.”

    “That’s called pouring money on the streets,” Ogun said, as they crossed the lobby to the exit doors.  “How about a nice package of fragrant tea?”

    “Will that be enough?” Koji asked, following Ogun out the swinging doors into the cool day.  It was only mid-morning, and everyone was busy at work.  “What if she refuses to talk to me because she hates the scent we get?  Won’t that be—,”

    Koji broke off when Ogun suddenly grabbed his shoulders and pushed him to the ground.  Glass shattered and that was when the gunshots registered.  A series of them, directed toward them.  Screams erupted, and building security flooded out.  The surprise of the attack set Koji off balance, he could barely think.  His left leg stung, and there were too many people around him.  More explosions, screams, glass crashing—

    “We need to get back,” Ogun said, helping Koji up, his arm tight around Koji’s waist.  The security team shielded them as they raced back into the building.

    Koji gripped Ogun’s arm as they moved.  Ogun gave him no chance to hesitate, practically dragging him across the lobby to the VIP elevators.  Koji took in a ragged breath when the elevator doors closed and the elevator started up.  The silence in the elevator after the explosion of weapons downstairs was surreal.

    Koji leaned on the wall, shocked.

    When the doors opened, it was to find Tama waiting.  He looked frantic with worry.

    Tama rushed to Koji, and helped him out of the elevator, taking him straight to his office.

    “Are you hurt?” Tama asked, pushing him into the closest chair.  “Koji?  Anything hurting?”

    “Someone was shooting at us downstairs,” Koji said, the statement sounding hollow to him.  “I—I can’t believe that just happened.  Why?”

    “Shit, there’s blood on your leg,” Tama cursed and immediately started to roll up Koji’s trousers.  “It looks like a scrape.  A bullet scrape.”

    Koji stared at the line of red on his left leg wondering why the pain hadn’t registered yet.

    Ogun appeared with a first aid kit, and Tama insisted on treating the scrape himself.

    Tama remained silent through the process, but Koji could see the closed off expression on his brother’s face didn’t bode well.  His brother was angry.  So angry, his hands were shaking as they placed a bandage on Koji’s leg.

    “Don’t overreact,” Koji said, when Tama finished.  “I’m sure this is nothing.”

    “Ogun, take him home,” Tama said, closing the first aid box and getting to his feet.  “No stopovers.”

    “Come on,” Koji jumped to his feet, wincing at the sting of pain that sliced through him.  “Don’t do this, Tama.  Please.”

    “Someone just tried to kill you,” Tama snapped, taking Koji’s left hand.  He led him to a secondary exit in his office that opened into a stairwell leading to the roof.  “I need you at home, where no one can reach you.”

    Koji tried to shake off his brother’s hold, but the man seemed possessed with superhuman strength.  The struggle was futile.  Behind him was Ogun his hand firmly on Koji’s back, helping Tama.  They reached the roof just as a helicopter landed.  Koji cursed.

    “This damn family name is a burden.  I swear, Tama, keeping me locked up is called abuse, not protection.”

    “Fight me all you want, I can take it.  I’m not going to let them take you away from me,” Tama warned.

    He pushed Koji into Ogun’s arms, and Koji was left with no choice but to let Ogun lead him to the waiting helicopter.  In minutes, he was strapped in and the helicopter hovered above Tama, whipping his hair into a mad frenzy.  The fierce anger in Tama’s eyes made Koji worry that his brother would never allow him the freedom to be out here again.

    “I’m sorry,” Ogun said into his ear, and Koji turned to face him.  “The woman in Kamakura—

    “I’ll find another way to see her,” Koji said, his fists clenched with determination.  “I won’t be stuck at home forever.  Surely even Tama knows that.”

    Ogun sighed and Koji ignored him, settling into his seat as the helicopter flew them to his gilded cage.

    ***

    “You’re as evil as they are,” the accusation was full of pain.  “You spend all your time protecting your family, but when it comes down to it, you’re no different from the bastards blackmailing me.”

    “Is that why you betrayed us?” Tama asked, his tone cold.  His dark gaze hard as he stared at the elegant woman standing in his office.  He wanted to rip out her throat.

    How dare she provide a way in for his enemies?

    Darkness boiled under his skin.  She wasn’t wrong.  He could be as deadly as Takino Yuki.  However, reigning in his savage tendencies, he decided control would be to his advantage.  He needed her cooperation otherwise, the culprits behind the shoot out downstairs would go free.  Still, there was a limit to his kindness too.  Thinking about the scrape on Koji’s leg, he swallowed down bile.

    Taking in a deep breath, Tama put his hands in his pockets.

    “You know what to expect from the Sukiyama Group.  As of this moment, you are expelled from the board.  All assets afforded to you by the company reclaimed.  You’re a traitor, Teri Aoyagi.  I will make sure you’re well and truly branded as such.”

    “Monster,” Teri screamed.  “Don’t leave me without a way out.  You’re destroying my family.”

    Tama took in her accusations.  Her beautiful face, cold and calculating.  She wasn’t innocent.  He wondered how he hadn’t seen it before.  She’d known how to hide her treachery.  He had missed something with this woman.  He couldn’t afford to miss it again with the others.

    Turning away from her shrieks, he ordered, “Get her off my property.”

    His security wasted no time.  By the time Tama reclaimed his chair behind the large desk by the windows, the room was empty except for one man.  Shou Kazama.  Ogun and Shou both grew up at the estate.  Shou lost his mother in the deadly raid at the Sukiyama Estate twelve years ago.  Ogun lost his father. 

    Tama trusted them with his family because they understood him.

    Tama picked up the pictures on his desk.  Shou had found them in Teri’s office.  They were of Koji coming in and out of the Shisei Gallery in Hamamatsu.  It was sometimes too easy to follow Koji, thanks to his love of reinvented kimonos and yukatas.  Tama had a dozen pictures of Koji in all kinds of kimono tops worn over faded jeans, ripped jeans, paint-stained jeans.

    Lord, his little brother was a fashion statement.

    “She handed them Koji’s routes to the Shisei Gallery from the company’s building.  The times he visits the gallery.  How long he stays on Wednesdays, and if he comes to see you, what would be written on your schedule,” Shou said into the ensuing silence.  “Their plan might have worked had Ogun not been with him.  I ordered the Estate’s security to stop Koji from leaving.”

    “They are called Plexus, their ties to the black market are deep,” Shou Kazama said.  “Koji’s art has become popular.  They might have wanted to take him for his art, or to leverage him against you.  Plexus was blackmailing Teri, threatening her family, so that she would get the information they needed.”

    “My family’s safety comes first,” Tama reiterated.  “She should have approached me before the situation got to this.  She’s a liability now.  I expect you to manage the fallout with board members and the staff.”

    “Yes of course,” Shou said with a nod.  “We’ll run new investigations into the board members.  This will not happen again.”

    “I’m concerned it happened at all,” Tama sighed.  “Plexus is bold.  Takino Yuki must be pouring money into their activities.  We need to work harder with our own investigation into Yuki.  Twelve years, and still nothing.  It’s disheartening.  As for Koji, stop all his visits to the gallery.  Divert all shipments to the estate, have him check them there and return them.”

    “But Sir—,” Shou started.

    “No arguments,” Tama said.  “Koji stays safe.  Too many people think they can get to him.  That woman you just took away was very close to handing him over to Plexus.  We need to be careful.”

    Shou frowned, clearly wanting to argue.

    Tama understood his reluctance.  Koji was going to get difficult about this decision.  They were all in for a strenuous couple of weeks.  Koji could get very creative in his escapes.

    “I’ll talk to him,” Tama promised.  “I’ll make him understand.”

    “He’ll listen but will definitely act to the opposite of what you say,” Shou said.  “Ogun might really quit this time.”

    Ogun was Koji’s primary bodyguard.  He was the one who oversaw Koji’s safety, so they ended up spending a lot of time together.

    “Let me handle it,” Tama insisted.  “For now, clean up this mess.  The board will be nervous, let’s get to reassuring them.”

    When Shou left, Tama let out a huge sigh and walked to the bar in the corner.  He poured himself a glass of whiskey and took a healthy sip, welcoming the burn.

    Twelve years of dealing with betrayals and it still left a bad taste in his mouth.

    How many more would come?

    Placing the glass on the smooth counter, he reached up to loosen his tie and walked to the floor length windows.  The city continued its afternoon.  Ignorant of the many intrigues happening behind closed doors. Hands in his pockets, Tama took in the busy scene below and allowed it to calm him.

    He was going to need a clear head tonight.

    Koji was not going to be happy about the new rules.  Their relationship was reaching new heights of conflict.  Tama was finding it harder to keep the secrets of their past hidden.  Koji’s questions about their parents were relentless.  Questions that required answers Tama wasn’t ready to give yet.

    Tama couldn’t help wishing Koji was still fourteen.  Those days, the only thing they argued about was mud tracks in the house, untidy bedrooms, and doing homework.  Oh yes, and trimming hair.  Koji had an extreme aversion to scissors.  It was a fight getting his hair trimmed.

    Such mundane arguments, Tama missed them.

    Now Koji was twenty, almost twenty-one.  He wanted to get out of the estate more.  He wanted to find out why their parents died.  He spent his time training with deadly weapons in the basement.  Swords, daggers, guns, Tama barely saw the young boy he’d protected for most of his life.  How could he make Koji understand that he was the most important piece on the board?  If anyone dared hurt Koji, a monster would be born.  Closing his eyes, memories that haunted his dreams filled his mind and he opened his eyes fast.

    Maybe he was wrong in keeping the truth of that night from Koji.

    Saya was forbidden from telling Koji the truth.  Since, Tama was now the Seiryu Spirit’s guardian, Saya followed Tama’s wishes.  The only thing they had decided to tell Koji was that Takino Yuki murdered their parents.  Keeping the rest a secret, remained a heavy burden to keep.  One that got harder each time Koji asked why Yuki would kill their parents.

    Why Yuki was free?  Why Koji couldn’t remember their mother?  Tama worried about that last bit most.  He worried what would happen to Koji if her remembered their mother’s death.

    Letting another sigh escape, Tama suddenly felt like heading home.  He needed to see Koji to reassure himself that they had survived another day.

    ***

    Exhausted, Koji fell asleep on the couch in the living room while he waited for Tama.  When he woke up, it was to find Tama sitting on the edge of the coffee table watching him.

    Koji couldn’t help noting the dark circles under Tama’s eyes.  His brother wasn’t sleeping again.

    “You should rest,” Koji said, closing his eyes.  “You look like you’re hauling the weight of the world.”

    “I am.  Is your leg hurting?” Tama asked.

    Koji opened his eyes to meet his brother’s gaze, and wondered.  Beyond this estate, where people had freedom, did they also get big brothers who were obsessed with safety?

    “My leg is fine.  I waited for you here because I’m afraid of what you’re going to do.  Ogun says I shouldn’t go to the gallery anymore,” Koji said.  “We’ve been through this before.  You promised me not to tie me up, Nii-san.”

    “Today was a hard day, Koji,” Tama said.  “Aoyagi helped Plexus find your schedule.  They had a plan to grab you.  When it looked impossible, they tried to kill you.  That this happened at all is enough to worry about.  Can’t you be good?”

    “I want a life out there,” Koji complained, sitting up to face his brother.  “Do you think it’s fair for you to keep me here this way?  It feels like a bad joke.”

    “This is no joke, Koji,” Tama snapped.  “Your life was in danger today, that’s all I know.  It still is, so yes, your gallery visits are cancelled.”

    “Cancelled?” Koji scoffed.  “Am I acting in some bad television show so that you cancel my appearances?”

    “Joke all you want.  My decision is final.  Ogun will arrange to bring the shipments here; you can make your selections that way.”

    “No.” Koji refused to allow this tyranny back.  It was ridiculous shipping crates in, bringing them all the way to this secluded island they called a home and then flying them to the Shisei.

    “You’ve clearly gone insane.  I feel like this is hell and you’re the devil devising new ways to torture me.”

    “I’ll be anything to ensure your safety,” Tama stated.  “Don’t give Ogun a hard time about this.  Stay within the estate, Koji.”

    “How long will you imprison me this time?” Koji asked.

    Koji moved to stand up, but his head spun, and the living room danced.  He paused, feeling dizzy.  Tama got to his feet and came to help him, but Koji waved him off.  He didn’t want his big brother’s comfort today.  Tama ignored his protests and simply took his upper arm, helping Koji to his feet.

    “I don’t do this to punish you,” Tama said, letting go of Koji’s arm when Koji jerked away.

    Tama sat on the couch.

    “Koji, having you hurt, kidnapped, or killed is a constant nightmare for me.  I will do anything, anything, to keep you out of harm’s way.  So, I can take you hating me if it means nothing happens to you.”

    Koji closed his eyes, biting his lip.

    What was he supposed to do with a comment like that?

    Giving Tama a sour look, he turned and left the living room.  He was going to sleep more.  Obviously, the opportunity to talk to that woman in Kamakura was lost.  Once Tama started a lock down, it would likely last a month.

    Koji didn’t hate his brother, but the urge to lash out was growing too fast.

    Soon, Koji thought, this estate was going to turn him into a crazy human beastie.

    ***

    “I’m the devil to him,” Tama said to Saya when he found her resting at the kitchen table.  “Can you imagine that comparison?  Does he mean we’re in hell?”

    “He’s angry,” Saya soothed.

    She sipped on green tea.  Each sip she took with a grimace, and that brought a smile to the young woman leaning on the counter watching her.  Her name was Tomoyo.    Tama felt his heart squeeze at the sight of her, and once again thanked the lucky stars that had brought her into their lives.

    He didn’t know what he would do without her.

    As though sensing his thoughts, Tomoyo looked at him, treating him to a wide smile.  She set his heart to dancing.

    “Don’t think too hard, Tama,” Saya was saying.  “Koji is just upset.  He will get over it.”

    “Listen to Saya.  She’s the grim to Koji.  So, the grim and the devil in the same house, what an interesting time we should be having,” Tomoyo said, with a twinkle in her eyes.  “How close was it, Tama?”

    “Aoyagi handed them Koji’s schedule.  Detailed chunks of how long Koji stays in the corporate building to the times Koji visits the gallery.  The gun shots left me breathless, for a moment, I thought they got him.”

    “She must have someone in the security team to even know Koji visited you at the offices today,” Saya said.  “We could have a mole on our side as well.  Have they checked the teams thoroughly?”

    “Ogun checked and cleared this side,” Tama said.  “The schedule wasn’t accurate, but made from observing Koji.  We’ve made his presence at the gallery too much of a routine.  It has to stop now.”

    “Don’t ground him here,” Tomoyo said, shaking her head.

    She came to sit at the kitchen table too.  Picking up the sake bottle on a tray, she poured some into Tama’s cup.

    “Tama, please give Koji space, he’s chafing as it is.  You’ll be making life difficult for everyone.”

    “What am I to do?” Tama asked, tossing back the shot of sake first.  “Koji can’t be running around Ginza.”

    “Have him out elsewhere,” Saya said then.

    Her comment had Tama narrowing his gaze in suspicion.  Saya’s suggestions were always full of mischief.  Shaking his head, Tama pointed a finger at her.

    “You are not going to talk me out of my decision.  Koji needs to stay safe, in this estate, where no one can find him.  That’s final.”

    ***

    Seiryu Spirit Chapter 2

  • Seiryu Spirit – 2

    2. The Present –A Gilded Cage

    Twelve Years Later

    Sweet Taste of Escape

    The world was a cluttered, noisy massive weapon, constant and unrelenting.  Filling his mind, his brain, his thoughts, he craved silence, loved absolute quiet.  Or in exchange…a constant loud noise that drove away everything else.

    Koji stood still in the middle of a dance floor at the GZ club in Osaka, eyes closed as music pulsed around him.  Loud, driving…sending a delicious thrill down his spine, he swayed to the beat, letting it flow through him.

    The club was so loud, that despite the throngs of people dancing around him, not one intruded into the blessed peace of the moment.

    Koji smiled wider, every atom in his body celebrating to the freedom.  Clubs were his favorite places.  Each city had at least one that played its music at the highest decibel possible, pushing the limits.  He made it a habit to find the perfect club no matter the assignment.

    “Koji-kun,” a gentle voice intruded.

    Koji brought his hand up to his ear, touching the ear bud lodged there.  He didn’t reply, the static from his touch was enough to let them know he was listening.

    “Our target has left the building.  This is our only window, any later and they’ll be back.”

    Koji set the timer on his wristwatch.  The map to the next building showed up on his reading glasses as he made his way off the dance floor.  Instead of heading to the exit, he turned toward the stairs that would take him to the third floor of the building.  Koji shadowed his way up to the roof, avoiding contact with club staff.  He took a set of stairs used by maintenance to the roof of the building.

    The cold air filled his lungs: a heady mixture of fumes, cooling tar and exhaust, city’s best perfume.  Koji breathed out a small cloud.  The temperatures were low; spring was still a few weeks away.

    Walking to the edge of the building, Koji climbed up onto the ledge and stared at the bus road below.  The club was in full swing, people walking in and out of adjacent buildings, laughing and having a good time.  It was only ten p.m., and the city was just tuning up.

    The building across the club was a go-down, one that held an eclectic list of clients.  Koji only cared about one name on that list.  Daye Chang.  He was a man the authorities had been following for three months now without progress.  Ten suspected cases of kidnapping, drug trafficking allegations, three missing person’s cases directly related to Daye.  The worst of those charges was a report on five missing children between the ages of eight and twelve.

    The only reason why Koji stood on top of this building now.  The only reason why he was able to leave his usual world, and step into this…torturous freedom.

    Koji looked up at the dark sky and sighed.  There were no stars in the city, not like the ones he watched at home.

    “Five men leaving the building now,” that gentle voice spoke into Koji’s ear, and he returned his attention to the building across the club.  “Your timer is at twenty minutes.  Our team is moving into position.  Go in with the least amount of disturbance.”

    “The police?” Koji asked.

    “I’ll send them what they need once the package is secure.”

    “Okay,” Koji said, stretching his arms above his head.

    Dropping his arms to his side, he retrieved a round rod from a holder on his hip and aimed at the building across.  He pressed his finger on a small button on the rod and shot out a line.  The expensive metal hook clamped into the wall, extending into a strong star lock.  Koji tagged on it to test and dropped the end he held on the club’s roof floor.  Lodging it under a thick drainage pipe.

    Wearing black gloves, he took a metal bar from his boot designed to move over the wire, allowing him to glide in the sky unnoticed.  He reached the go-down roof fast, and climbed onto the rooftop.

    “Start tracking,” Koji murmured, “accessing the building from the top.  I hope you got the alarm.”

    Koji broke the lock on the access door, and crouched as he opened the door to peer down the stairs.

    “Security systems hijacked,” the answer came.  “If the alarm accidentally goes off, our team will show up first.  You just need to watch out for security guards.  There might be one or two.”

    Koji went down the stairs with confidence making sure to close the maintenance door.

    “Should we rob banks instead?” Koji asked, adjusting the glasses he wore.  His team watched what he saw, a small consolation in case he missed a bogey.

    “Is life only about money?”

    “Isn’t it?” Koji asked, as he hurried down a flight of stairs to the second floor.

    “Do you really want to rob banks?”

    Koji chuckled under his breath.

    “Do you know how many people think about robbing banks in a day?”

    “I bet you know.”

    “Yes.  If we started a service, we’d get rich,” Koji teased, moving to take the rest of the stairs down to the main floor.

    He felt the intrusion before his partner alerted him.

    “Security guard.”

    Koji hurried back up the steps and moved to crouch behind a large flower vase.  Pressing his body into the small space between the floor, he stayed still and watched the guard lazily climb the stairs.  The man gave the corridor on his side a cursory glance, yawned and headed in the opposite direction.  He looked tired, his inspection lazy and routine.

    Koji got up and hurried to the staircase when the man turned his back on him.  He skipped down the stairs on silent steps and reached the main floor.  The main floor was a stunning collection of crates ready for shipment, and service desks.

    “Your goal is a corridor in the back.  The secure room you’re looking for is at the end of the corridor.”

    Koji gave up banter and concentrated on sneaking between crates and shipping boxes, desks and packing stations.  He caught a glimpse of a camera mounted on the wall, and grimaced.

    “I’m camera-shy,” Koji murmured.  “I hope I’m not starring in an episode of ‘Thief who got caught’.”

    “You’re safe,” the answer came.  “I’ll tell you when you’re not.”

    “You words make my heart flutter,” Koji mumbled, finally reaching the designated corridor.  He walked with confidence, as it was clear of any security guards.  When he reached the secure door, he touched the security pad on the lock.

    “Nine-two-five-six,” the numbers came before he could ask.

    Koji punched in the numbers and the lock beeped once, flashing red without unlocking.

    “Are you sure?” Koji asked, glancing down the corridor, worried about the guard who might have come down to the main floor.

    “Oops,” the gentle voice chuckled, “punch them in again.”

    Koji pressed the numbers in faster this time.  The lock flashed green and the door hissed open.  He entered the room closing the door behind him fast, and took in a deep breath at the darkness that greeted him.  This secure room seemed without the slightest sliver of light.

    Taking a torch from his pocket, Koji shone it around the room, the single light cutting through the thick darkness.  His breath held when he saw frightened wide eyes looking at him from the farthest corner of the room.

    Switching off his torch, Koji took in a deep breath and stepped back to the door, afraid.

    “Did you find them?”

    Koji swallowed hard, and extended his hand to touch the wall, his fingers searching for the light switch.  When he found it, he flooded the room and his heart filled with apprehension.

    The five children huddled in the corner watched him.  Their anxious gazes enough to undo him.

    “How long?” he murmured, unable to take a step closer to the children.

    “Two minutes,” the answer came.  “You don’t have to engage.  You’ve done enough, Koji-kun.  Wait for us.”

    Koji wished he could remain by the door, but those children…

    Their fear so real, it filled the room, like a giant dark cloud.

    Koji closed his eyes and forced his own fear back.

    “Don’t be late,” Koji said and pushed off the door.

    The hit was instantaneous.  Panic, fear…such fear…paralyzing…Koji tasted bile in his mouth.  He took it in and tried to disperse as much of it as he could, but his soul felt steeped in their fear.  Tears stung his eyes and he stopped before he reached the five children.

    Three girls, and two boys, crouching down to their level, he held out his hands and worked on taking in as much of their fear to ease the tenstion.

    “I’m here to help,” he said, his voice wavering.  “I promise, nothing will happen to you.  I’ll protect you.”

    Koji knelt on the floor, his hands still held out.  “My name is—

    “You can’t.”

    Koji bit his lip hard, his gaze moving from one worried gaze to another.

    “My name is Seiryu,” he murmured.  “I’ll take you away from this dark place.”

    He knelt for a full minute before the youngest of the girls rushed him, and wrapped her arms around him.

    Koji held her, rubbing her back to infuse warmth.  She wore thin clothes and it was cold.  The others moved closer, though their wary gazes constantly returned to the door he’d used.

    “We’re going to start.”

    Koji moved to stand up, picking up the little girl in his arms.  He took a step back and the remaining four, grabbed on to his jacket and moved with him.

    “It’s going to get a little noisy,” Koji said, keeping his tone calm.  “We won’t use the door, we’ll make our own.”

    He kept a steady stream of conversation as a red line appeared on the outer wall.  Continuing up to make an entrance large enough to accommodate an adult.  In the next minute, concrete crumbled into pieces and cold air swept into the room.

    “Hi,” Ogun Sato waved at him, and Koji glared at the gentle voice that spoke in his head.

    “You’re late,” Koji complained.  “They’re cold.”

    A van appeared at the make shift entrance and Koji hurried the children towards the open doors.  Ogun moved to take the girl he held and Koji winced when she clung to him, refusing to let go.

    “It’s okay, sweetie,” Koji soothed, moving closer to the van to help her in.  “You’re safe now, I promise.”

    She shook her head, still clinging to him.

    Standing her on the van, he took a step back to look into her eyes.

    Finding a smile, Koji touched her messy hair.

    “I promise you are safe,” he said.  “You’ll meet your grandmother soon.  Trust me.”

    She let go with reluctance, and Ogun helped her sit close to the eldest girl, wrapping a blanket around her.

    Koji checked the timer on his watch and sighed when he saw the numbers turn to zeros.  The men who had left were back.  He grabbed the doors and moved to close them.

    “Get in here,” Ogun ordered, hurrying to stop him.

    “No time,” Koji said, slamming the van doors closed and rapping on the top to signal the driver to go.

    The van took off at top speed.

    “I’m going to pinch you for this,” Ogun warned in his ear.

    Koji chuckled at the threat, looking back in to the lighted room behind him.  The door he’d closed earlier swung open.

    “Oops,” Koji took off in a run, heading to the front of the building.  He’d left a motorcycle parked down the street.  He would divert attention from the van. He took the corner at the front too fast and didn’t see the man walking to the front entrance in time.  They collided into each other hard.

    When the man on the ground heard the shouts from the security team, he reached for Koji determined to stop him. 

    Koji dropped a thin dagger hidden in his right sleeve into his hand and swiped it across the man’s cheek.  The man gave a short cry and stumbled back, giving Koji time to escape.

    Running at full speed, Koji reached his motorcycle, swung on to the comfortable seat and turned over the engine.  He took off down the street with a grin, and started an intricate detour back to the hangar they’d rented out for this particular mission.

    One hour later, Koji drove the motorcycle into a secure parking lot, going straight to a plane waiting to take off on the runway.  He parked the motorcycle, and threw the keys at the guard who met him.  Koji removed his gloves as he boarded the plane and sank into a comfortable seat with a relieved sigh.

    “Sir.”

    Koji looked at the pilot who had come in from the cockpit.

    “We’re ready for take-off,” the pilot said.  “We’re heading to Tokyo, request from headquarters.”

    Koji nodded his approval and the pilot hurried away.

    Alone, Koji unzipped his jacket, removed it and placed it on the chair beside him.  Sinking his fingers into his hair, he massaged his head and tried to ease the tension growing in his head.

    “You gave me a fright,” Ogun said, coming from the back of the plane.  “I’m not including your little stunt in my report, but don’t do it again.”

    “The children?” Koji asked.

    “Safe with their families,” Ogun said.  “Left local authorities to handle the aftermath.  Saya-san will be happy.”

    “I’m glad it’s over,” Koji murmured, knowing the struggle those children would face returning back home.  His head throbbed.  He’d tried to absorb as much of their fear, take it away, but he knew they would remember it for a while.  Removing his glasses, he placed them on the coffee table, and rubbed his temple avoiding Ogun’s searching gaze.

    Ogun watched Koji, concern rolling off him, and then he sat on the chair across.

    “About your other project,” Ogun hesitated, checking toward the back of the plane, making sure they were alone.

    “Your staff is preoccupied,” Koji said, finally meeting Ogun’s gaze.

    He didn’t miss Ogun’s intake of breath.  No doubt, his eyes were extra bright tonight, he still felt raw from dealing with the children.

    “I’m sorry,” Koji said, lowering his gaze to the coffee table between them.

    He started to reach for his dark glasses but Ogun stopped him.

    “No,” Ogun protested, clearly apologetic.  “I should be used to it by now.”

    Koji knew his eyes unnerved many, especially when he was extra sensitive like tonight.

    “What have you found?” Koji asked, hoping returning to the topic would draw Ogun’s attention away.  

    “Your mother’s investigation is a steep climb uphill,” Ogun said.  “Are you sure it’s not easier to ask Tama or even Saya-san?”

    “I’m twenty-one in six months,” Koji murmured.  “I’ve tried every trick in the book since I was eight.  They refuse to tell me about her.  I have to do this on my own, otherwise I will live a life never having known who my mother is, why she died.”

    Ogun sighed and nodded.

    “I understand, but it’s very difficult to find people who knew your mother.  There are no files on her in any database in the country, including her schooling, not even her medical records. She’s wiped clean.  We’re relying on witnesses.”

    “The last six people I’ve met were dead ends.  All they could say was that Misato became a teacher,” Koji complained, his tone tinged with bitterness.  “Their memories held no clear picture of her.  I read nothing from them.”

    “There is a lady living in Kamakura.  She says she attended the same high school as your mother.  They were friends, but not too close,” Ogun gave him a small smile.  “I figure if you meet her, you might get more than I would.”

    Koji felt hope spring.

    “Are you sure she is legit?”

    “Yes, I checked out her details.  Her sister still lives in Shinjuku where they both went to school.  It is the same school Saya-san attended.  Meet the lady to confirm the rest,” Ogun said.  He placed a tablet on the coffee table.

    “I’ve uploaded all her information on there.  We have a week to meet her, she’s headed out of the country to see her daughter in Malaysia after that.” Ogun stood.  “Look it over when you’re feeling better.  For now, try and get some sleep.  You don’t look good.”

    “Do you know why we’re going to Tokyo?” Koji asked, staring at the dark tablet on the table, wanting to read the files on this woman.

    His head though…gosh he felt like it was going to explode.

    “Your brother insisted,” Ogun said.  “Saya told him you’re out here finding the kids and he wasn’t happy.  He said he wanted to see you in Tokyo first thing tomorrow.”

    Koji let his head fall back on the headrest and closed his eyes, needing relief.

    “Thanks, Ogun,” Koji said.  “Let me know when we get there.”

    Ogun laid a blanket over him and squeezed his shoulder.

    Koji was glad when Ogun closed the door separating the rest of the plane from him.  The absolute silence in the room was enough to ease some of the pressure in his head.  He stretched out on the comfortable chair and allowed his mind to rest.

    Heading to Tokyo, he thought, drifting between consciousness and oblivion.

    His brother would be angry.  Tama hated it when Koji left the Sukiyama Estate in Enoshima.  They would argue, Koji didn’t like arguing with Tama, but he couldn’t help it.  He needed answers, and the only way to get them was out here.  The only way to get out was to join cases like the one he’d just finished.  Otherwise, he stayed locked up at the Sukiyama estate.

    If only he could persuade his hardheaded brother to give up the truth.

    Koji sighed.

    If wishes were cars…he’d own the roads by now, his last thought before slipping into oblivion.

    ***

    Koji startled awake on a large bed.  The screeching sound of a car’s brakes filled his head, followed fast by a screaming wife, a crying child, and dogs barking.  Koji pressed his fingers to his ears, curling up on his bed as the onslaught continued.

    The last thing he remembered was falling asleep on the flight to Tokyo.  Ogun must have helped him up here, and forgotten the most important part.

    Koji groaned when the off note voice of a woman singing in the shower filled his head.  So painfully offbeat, it hurt.  He stumbled out of bed, and headed out of his bedroom.

    Hands braced on the wall, he made his way to the living room.

    A laugh filled his head, coupled with excited conversation, Koji stopped, feeling like he might double over with all the stimulation.

    Tokyo, this city was so hard on him.

    His head filled with noise one moment, then the next, blessed silence flooded him and he let out a grateful gasp, sliding to the floor.

    “Is it better?” Tama came to crouch beside him.  “I’ll remind Ogun not to forget to engage the active noise controls.  Koji, can you walk?”

    Before he could answer, his brother lifted him up and carried him into the living room placing him on the couch.

    Tama perched on the glass coffee table, his gaze unreadable.

    Everyone Koji met, brought him noise, yet his brother remained a silent, private entity. 

    Saya had worked overtime closing off Tama’s thoughts, hers as well and parts of Ogun.

    It was a blessing, since Koji didn’t think it would be good to know everything about the people living with him.  Still, in some cases, like knowing the truth about his mother, he rather wished he could read Tama’s mind.

    “You’re not at home,” Tama stated, his dark gaze enough to let Koji know he wasn’t happy.

    “Neither are you,” Koji replied.  “Where were you?”

    “Working, you?”

    “Working,” Koji said, giving his brother a small smile.

    Tama scoffed, and shook his head.

    “You look drained.”  Tama reached out and brushed hair out of Koji’s eyes.  “Was it hard?”

    Extremely, Koji wanted to say.  Instead, he shook his head and forced a smile.

    “A walk in the park,” he lied.

    Tama studied him too closely, those dark eyes seeing too much.

    Koji clutched a throw pillow on the couch, ready for a lecture.

    Tama surprised him when he stood up and moved away.

    “I’ll make you breakfast.”

    Koji watched him head to the kitchen, and sat on the couch feeling cheated.  It worried him when Tama acted nice.  Like now, he frowned.

    “Tama?”

    “I’ll make you fried eggs on toast,” Tama said, his voice muffled in the kitchen.  “I need you to come with me later.”

    Koji nodded his head at this statement.

    Yep, Tama would never give without taking.  Escape a lecture for a service, Koji sighed and closed his eyes.

    “Where to?” he asked.

    “The offices, there is a board meeting.”

    “I don’t appear for those.”

    “I know.”

    “Tama, you know I only follow what you want, so why do you need me there?”

    Koji hated board meetings.  The two times he attended, he’d hated listening to the thoughts of men and women meant to be loyal to Sukiyama, but were not.  It was better to let Tama handle that level of betrayal.

    He opened his eyes when Tama didn’t reply and found his brother looking at him from the kitchen entrance.

    When he lifted a brow, Tama gave him a small smile.

    “Would you prefer to talk about last night, and why you were out in Kobe instead of home?” Tama asked.  “I clearly asked Saya not to send you on those cases.”

    Koji got off the couch fast, and stretched his arms above his head.

    “Fried eggs on toast sound wonderful,” Koji said, dropping his arms down.  “Should I wear a suit too?  Wow, I wonder how the company’s stocks are doing.  I should check that right now.”

    Tama chuckled when Koji picked up his phone from the coffee table and got to searching.  Koji stopped when Tama returned to the kitchen, and let out a soft sigh.

    Shaking his head, he threw his phone on the couch and headed to his bedroom for a shower.  The faster he did what Tama wanted, the better.  Then he would get to meet the woman who might know his mother.

    What a day this was turning out to be…

    ****

    Seiryu Spirit Chapter 1

  • Seiryu Spirit – 1

    1. The Past – The Sukiyama Barrier

    I – His Brother’s Shock

    Rain fell in sheets.  The night darker than black.  Alarms blared through the five-acre Sukiyama Estate.  Constant, deafening, enough to make his brain hurt.  None of it stopped Tama Sukiyama.

    p_top_05
    This would be Sukiyama Estate

    At fifteen years old, Tama’s determination was stronger than most.  He could move a mountain if he wished it.  On this night, he cut across the Northwestern lawn, running to the unsettling bamboo forest on the outskirts of the property.  On a normal night, Tama preferred the neat laid out paths  on the edge of the forest to get to the dirt road.  On this terrible night though, Tama decided to cut through the bamboo forest.  Night was thicker in the forest and Tama hated the darkness.  He pushed aside his fear, running into the trees without hesitation. His breath came in gulps, his chest heaving with exertion.  His muscles burned, and his heartbeat filled his ears.  Sweat poured down his forehead, down his neck to his back, making his shirt cling to his slender body.  His black pants were muddy at the bottom, his shoes sloshed with water from the grass, and now from the muddy forest floor.

    Tama swiped his left wrist over his forehead, pushed strands of hair out of his eyes.  Branches swatted at him, stinging nettle swept across his ankle, the painful sting not enough to break his focus.  Gritting his teeth, Tama ignored all discomfort, determined to get to the dirt road.

    His mind filled with one thought, saving his little brother.  Koji was eight.  Earlier in the afternoon, Koji had gone to visit their neighbors, close family friends who loved having Koji over.  The Takadas were like family to the Sukiyama Clan.  Koji loved visiting the Takadas because the family had children his age.  Nana and Rei.  No one at the Sukiyama Estate had worried about Koji staying at the Takada home too long.  When it got late, Shizuka Takada would usually call the estate either to say she’d drop off Koji, or to let them know he was sleeping over.

    But tonight…tonight was different.

    Tonight, the Sukiyama Estate was under attack.

    The thought renewed waning adrenaline through Tama’s body.  He pushed through thick bamboo trees hoping to see the dirt road soon.  His brain filled with his mother’s panicked order.

    Misato Sukiyama never panicked.  When she did, Tama imagined the world was ending.  She had screamed for him to get Koji home as fast as he could.

    “He must be safe, Tama-kun!”

    Tama tasted the bitterness of panic just as he came out of the forest on to the wide dirt road.  Crossing the road, he climbed up a gentle slope of green to find a smaller compound fenced with trellis panels.  Tama hurried along the cobbled path that led to a side gate on the property.

    The alarm from the estate was distant.  Tama imagined Shizuka Takada would meet him to ask what the problem was.

    The wooden gate into the compound was partially open.

    Tama didn’t give it a thought.  He walked up the path, around a beautiful garden, and came up to the back of the house.  Climbing up the short steps to the deck, he didn’t bother removing his muddy shoes.  Shizuka would have his head but it didn’t compare to delaying his mother’s orders.  Aware of the mud tracks he left in his wake, Tama promised to make it up to Shizuka later and entered the warm kitchen.

    “Shizuka-san, Koji-kun,” Tama called, looking around the clean room.

    The silence was unnerving.

    It was never this quiet in the Takada household. 

    Shizuka’s two children, Rei and Nana, teamed with Koji, usually filled the house with activity and noise.  Shizuka would have appeared by now to yell at him for messing up her clean floor.

    Frowning, Tama hurried into the short hallway that would take him into the living room.

    “Where are you guys?  Okaasan is calling,” Tama said, the last comment added to impress urgency.

    Shizuka would understand his urgency.  Whenever Misato Sukiyama called, everyone obeyed.

    Touching a fern growing in a pot on top of a high stool by the living room entrance Tama wondered why Shizuka wasn’t on him yet.  The sound from the television was welcome.  The kids were watching their favorite anime.  It was only eight o’clock.  Koji was going to be very upset with Tama for dragging him back home.

    Entering the living room, Tama pasted on a smile to soften the coming argument and froze.

    His heartbeat, which had calmed from the run, revved up and flung itself into a volatile beat that threatened to deafen him.  A hoarse scream escaped and his vision narrowed down to colors.

    Red, on every corner of the living room. 

    The walls, on broken furniture, the television screen, the carpet, the flowers Shizuka liked to place on stools.

    Tama gasped, his lungs failing him.  His chest felt too tight.  He couldn’t breath.  His stomach lurched; his dinner felt alive and wanted out.  His brain finally managing to process that the red color was blood.

    Blood painted on the walls.  Nausea rose up with vengeance and he bent over, letting out the contents of his dinner.

    Where was Koji?

    Panic sucked away vital energy, his hands braced on his thighs, Tama looked around the room.  He had to find his little brother.  There was so much blood.  Was he too late?

    No.

    Koji was safe, he shook his head and straightened up, fingers clenched into tight fists.  He just needed to find Koji first.

    The room was a mess: couches overturned, the coffee table broken, shelves emptied.

    Tama saw a woman lying in a mess of broken glass by the windows.  Her hair was all he could see of her face.  A large map of red on her pink dress.  The fabric ripped in the middle of the blood spot, it looked like a stab wound.

    “Shizuka-san,” Tama hurried to her side, knowing even as he shook her that she wouldn’t be lying so still if she were breathing.  Sorrow filled him.  He loved her like a mother.

    Tears filled his eyes and he looked around the room.

    Please let Koji be alive, the chant started in his head.  His little brother couldn’t be dead.  He was alive.  Looking around the room, Koji frantically searched through debris.  Koji had left the house in a blue t-shirt.  He’d caused such a fuss over it too.  Misato had laid out a green t-shirt this morning for him, but Koji wanted the blue one, something about the color being Rei’s favorite.  Koji had wanted to match Rei today.  Their mother had given in after a short fuss.  It was always like that with Koji.  No one wanted to disappoint his sweet face.

    “Please let him be alive,” Tama murmured.

    He pulled at broken wood panels, and tagged torn fabric.  His heart hammering so loud he wished it would stop.  The harder he wished the louder it got, sending him into panic.  His hands were shaking.  Tama took in a deep breath and forced his brain to focus.

    Shizuka had gone down with a fight.  She’d left nothing standing in the living room.

    Tama felt despair fill him when he spotted little Nana.  She was on her stomach too, in the corner of the room, behind the television stand.  She was in a green dress, her hair in a ponytail.  Tama jumped over broken chairs to her.  Grabbing her small shoulder, he turned her over, and a cry escaped when he found two wounds in her stomach.  Her eyes were still open, the fear in them frozen forever.

    Screaming, tears tracking down his face, he closed Nana’s eyes gently, and reached for a throw blanket tucked behind a bookcase to cover her.  His heart clenched painfully when he revealed a boy in a blue shirt lying under the blanket.  The back of his shirt was red; the stab wound in the middle sickening.

    Tama’s hand froze, a second ticked and then insanity filled his brain.

    “No.” He abandoned Nana and reached for the boy.  Lifting him up, Tama turned him to see his face.  It was traitorous, the wave of relief that filled him when he recognized Rei.  Rei’s eyes were closed, his body too still.

    Tama bit his lip, carefully laying Rei beside his sister.  Taking the blanket, he covered them both, and turned to the bookcase.  Pushing it further away from the wall, a gasp of relief escaped when he saw Koji tucked into the corner.

    He gave the bookcase a hard shove and hurried into the space.  Koji sat with his head buried into his lap, his arms wrapped around his knees.  Tama gripped skinny upper arms tightly and with barely controlled strength, he shook his little brother.

    “Koji,” Tama said, his voice heavy with tears, kneeling in front of his little brother.  There were no wounds on Koji.  He looked whole.  Still, when Tama shook him, his head fell back, to reveal open unfocused eyes.

    Sitting back on his haunches, Tama pulled Koji onto his lap, holding him like a baby.  Touching his forehead, Tama hissed.  Koji was cool to the touch.  He didn’t seem like he was breathing, so Tama pressed his fingers to Koji’s neck, seeking a pulse.  He took in a deep breath when he felt a slow pump against his fingers.

    Tama stared at his brother puzzled.  Koji was too still.  His eyes open but no reaction to light or him.  His black pupils were dilated; the peculiar blue of Koji’s irises was such a contrast.  Tama felt relief flood him when he caught the small flair of Koji’s nostrils proving that he was breathing.  Shaking, Tama decided the best option right now was to carry Koji to safety.

    Whoever had done this would pay, their parents would see to it, but first, he needed to take Koji home.  Misato would know what to do to help Koji.

    ***

    II –The Woman with a Fierce Heart

    Tama carried Koji on his back, hurrying along the dirt road.  Thankfully, the rain had stopped, but the night was cold.  He had found a blanket in one of the bedrooms at Shizuka’s house and carefully wrapped Koji with it.  He hoped his little brother was warm.

    Before leaving home, Tama had heard his mother say she was heading to the shrine attached to their home to meet their father.  The dirt road would lead him to the shrine.  Tama held Koji tighter just glad his brother was alive.

    A line of bamboo trees ran along the spring that flowed through the Sukiyama property to his right.  Those bamboo trees thickened into the forest he’d ran through earlier.  On his left, a field of grass morphed into the entrance to the shrine marked by Torii.  There was no one around the entrance, and for a moment, Tama wondered if the adults had returned back to the estate.  A grief-stricken cry filled the night, and Tama stopped at the Shrine gates, staring at the stairs.

    The panic he’d felt at the Takada house returned.  Tama started up the stairs into the shrine, needing to know who had made that terrible cry.  He climbed up the stairs barely feeling the weight of his brother on his back.  Clearing the stairs, he walked up the lighted walkway to the sanctuary ahead.

    When he reached the entrance, he paused before entering the partially opened double doors.

    In the middle of the large prayer hall, his mother, Misato Sukiyama, knelt on the floor.  Her long hair falling down her back in an untidy wave.  His aunt, Saya Matsumoto, knelt on the other side of the prone figure between them.  Saya’s face was the only one he could see.  It shook him to see Saya’s face wet with tears.

    The air was filled with the despair he’d heard in the scream.

    “Where is Yuki?” Misato demanded, her voice rough.

    It suddenly occurred to Tama that the scream might have come from her.  Walking closer, Tama recognized the man lying between the two women.  It was his father.  His mother’s hand was pressed against a wad of cloths on his father’s stomach.  The white fabric turning a deep red.  Misato’s other hand, stroked strands of hair away from Syaon Sukiyama’s face.  He seemed in peaceful sleep.

    “The perimeter guards report that Yuki is trying to find the main entrance into the estate,” Saya answered.  “Thank goodness the shrine obscures our boundaries.  Our men are doing the best they can at the front gates, but Yuki came heavily armed.  There is a lot of gunfire.”

    “Has anyone seen my children?  Did they return to the house?” Misato asked.

    “No.” Saya’s answer was quiet.  “Please don’t face Yuki.  Think of the children.  Koji is only eight.  Tama just turned fifteen.  He needs guidance to run this place now.”

    “They have you,” Misato said, her tone firm.  “These attacks won’t stop.  We’ve lost too much, so many people that we love, our friends and now my husband is gone.  I refuse to give Yuki my children too.”

    Lost?  Tama frowned.

    His father wasn’t lost.  He was right there.  What did she mean?

    “Misato,” Saya started, but stopped when she glanced up and noticed him.

    “Tama,” Saya gasped.

    His mother turned to look at him.  The shock on her face reflected his.  He had never seen his mother cry.  Tears tracked down her soft golden skin.  Her eyes were red.  Her shoulders slumped in defeat.   It was impossible.  Misato Sukiyama was the rock of the family.  She always remained unmoved in the worst situation.

    “Oh no,” Misato sobbed, scrambling to her feet, she rushed to him.  Her hands moved over Koji’s back, shaking her head, when Koji remained unresponsive.  She looked at Tama for answers.

    “He’s alive,” Tama said, his voice trembling.  His gaze trailed back to his father.  His father hadn’t moved.  Syaon would have moved when he saw them.  “What’s wrong with Dad?”

    “Let’s put your brother down first,” Misato said.  “Saya, come and help.  They’re both freezing.  We need to get them warm.”

    Misato took Koji from him.  She had to remove Tama’s fingers one by one, as his grip on his brother was tight.  Once he let go, Saya and Misato laid Koji on the floor.

    “What happened?  Where is Shizuka?” Misato asked.

    “Someone attacked their house,” Tama said, his gaze on his father as he knelt beside his mother next to Koji.  “Shizuka, Nana and Rei are dead.”

    Saya rubbed a hand over his back to comfort him.  For a moment, the familiar gesture felt out of place.  So much had happened in the space of thirty minutes.  Comfort seemed a strange emotion.

    Saya turned her attention to Koji.  She looked into Koji’s eyes and touched his little brother’s left wrist.  Meeting Misato’s gaze, Saya said, “He’s in shock.”

    “My poor baby,” Misato said, rubbing Koji’s arm.  She leaned down and pressed a kiss on Koji’s forehead.  Sitting back on her haunches, she closed her eyes and let out a soft breath.

    Tama worried, seeing his mother this way, he couldn’t take it.  Then she pulled off the ring she wore on her right index finger.  Tama’s eyes widened.  In all his years, he couldn’t remember a day his mother had removed that ring.

    Okaasan, what are you doing?” Tama asked.

    The gold ring had blue stones intricately embedded on the surface, with a large blue/green stone as the centerpiece.  His father once jokingly referred to it as Misato’s light.

    “I’m saving you and your brother,” Misato said.  She took Koji’s right hand and paced the ring on Koji’s right index finger.

    Tama watched in awe as the ring fitted itself to the size of Koji’s index finger.

    “Tama, stay here and look after your brother.  Saya will stay with you.”

    “Where are you going?”

    Tama couldn’t stop the hysteria in his voice.  His father was gone…dead…it hurt to think that word in relation to his father.

    “You can’t go.  Who’ll help Koji if you go?”

    “You, Tama,” Misato said, looking at him.  “Okaasan needs you to stay strong.  Take care of your little brother.  You are his guardian now.  Teach him the things your father and I have taught you.  Be there for each other.  You must always do this, promise me.”

    Okaasan,” Tama shook his head.

    She was everything now.  Without their father, she was their world.  How could they be without her?

    Misato cut into his fear when she moved closer and placed her hands on his shoulders.  The warmth that seeped into his skin through his damp shirt made him want to make the promise.  Even though it felt like their world was ending.  Wherever she was going, seemed like she wouldn’t be returning.  He met her light blue eyes and found strength to answer her.

    “I promise,” Tama said in a whisper.

    Misato gave him a swift nod and pulled him into tight hug.  She enveloped him in warmth that rejuvenated him.  Then as quickly as that warmth wrapped around him, it was gone.  Misato pulled back and leaned down to Koji.  Her fingers trailed over Koji’s cheek.

    “The ring will protect him until he’s old enough to remember,” Misato said to Saya.  “Like me, and every second child born into previous generations in my family, he’s the keeper of the Seiryu Spirit.  Guide him well, and Koji will do much good for others, Saya-chan.  It was easy for previous generations in the family because we only had this power to protect and wield.  It will be harder for Koji because he has also inherited his father’s gift of sight.”

    “The stone contained and hid your power; will it not do the same for Koji?” Saya asked.

    “Until he’s twenty, then it gets harder to contain without help.  I planned on assisting him through his coming off age year,” Misato said, her voice trembling.  “You will have to do it for me, Saya-chan.”

    “Misato—,”

    “Listen,” Misato cut her off.  “Syaon was more than my husband, Saya.  He was my mate, part-holder of my power.  The Seiryu Spirit keepers love young.  When we turn twenty-one, the power multiplies and is shared with the right person.  The right mate.  Fate is useful in finding such a partner, but I botched the process during my time.”

    Misato shook her head, her gaze on Koji.

    “I led Takino Yuki into believing he would be my mate.  By the time, I realized it was Syaon, Yuki was obsessed with possessing what isn’t his to have.  I caused this massacre upon us.  Koji’s life will be in danger if Yuki finds him.  Yuki will try to force him to share this power, if not try to take it away all together.  Saya, you must not let this happen.”

    “Which is why Koji needs you to stay,” Saya begged.  “Stay, Misato.  We’ll go into hiding.”

    “Yuki has breached our home and murdered my husband.  I have no choice but to stop him.  I need to protect my family, and you,” Misato said.  “Tama is Koji’s guardian.  Teach my children everything you know until they’re old enough.  Their lives depend on it.”

    Misato hugged Saya then.

    “My dear Saya, please guard my treasures fiercely.”

    “I will,” Saya promised.

    Tama hated the finality of the moment.  He squeezed Koji’s shoulder, hoping his brother would wake up and then their mother wouldn’t have to go.  Koji stayed still, unseeing.  Tama watched helplessly as Misato stood, and went to their father.  She stood over Syaon for a moment, her head bowed.

    When she turned away from Syaon, her eyes were filled with resolve.  She didn’t pause when she reached them.  Instead, she walked by without a single glance and headed for the exit doors.

    Tama jumped to his feet ready to run after her.

    “Okaasan!”

    Strong arms wrapped around him and he struggled.

    “Let me go,” he demanded of Saya.

    “Okaasan,” he called, watching his mother reach the double doors.

    Misato gave him a slight smile and closed the doors with a slam.

    “Your little brother needs us here,” Saya said, when he started to struggle in earnest determined to go after her.

    Saya refused to let go, no matter how much he fought against her.  She held firm.  So tight was her hold, he started to cry.  The tears fell fast.  His sobs hard and wrenched from a part of him that felt damaged.

    His mother was going to her death.

    Why would she do it so calmly?  Why was all this happening?  What were they to do without the woman with a fierce heart?

    ***

    III – Head of the Sukiyama Clan

    “Sign here” Saya said, the next morning.

    They were in Koji’s bedroom on the second floor of the main house.  Koji was asleep.  His eyes finally closed.  Tama wasn’t sure what his brother dreamed about, but Koji sleeping was better than looking at unmoving Koji with open eyes.

    Tama looked at the papers Saya held out to him and frowned.

    “Why don’t you sign them?” he asked.

    “I can’t.  You are the head of the Sukiyama Clan now.  It is your birthright, Tama.  You need to sign this so that we can start the funeral arrangements.”

    “Funeral,” Tama said his voice a whisper.

    His gaze returned to his brother.  Koji would wake up to a different world.  At some point in the night, their mother’s death was confirmed.  The man Saya called Yuki had stabbed her at the main gates.  She had lost a lot of blood, and no matter how many times Tama begged, Saya refused to let him see her body.  Tama wiped a palm down his face.

    “There are more formalities to get through, but we’ll wait for your brother to wake up,” Saya said.  “I know you are worried about him.  For now, sign these paperwork so that we can arrange to put your parents to rest.”

    Tama shivered.

    There were no tears left.  He had changed into comfortable clothes: a black t-shirt, sweater and black slacks.  His feet were in warm thick socks.  His hair dry.  The room heated.  Yet, he felt so cold; he could hardly move his fingers to take the pen Saya offered.

    Tama had so many questions to ask Koji.  His brother must have seen the people who attacked the Takada house.  Investigators assumed the same intruders attacked the estate, but they needed proof to start a case against Takino Yuki.  If Koji could remember—

    Koji moaned slightly and Tama forgot the documents.  He moved to Koji’s side, as his brother turned his head from side to side then opened his eyes.

     “Koji-kun,” Tama said, leaning over him.  He took his brother’s hand and gave it a slight squeeze.  “How do you feel?  Does anything hurt?”

    Nii-san,” Koji said, his voice filled with pleasure, the single word like manna to Tama.  Big brother, Koji said.  Koji’s trust in him so clear.  Tama closed his eyes, feeling like he didn’t deserve it.  Koji’s best friends were dead and he hadn’t been there to protect Koji.

    “Are you okay?” Tama asked, in a strained voice.

    “I’m fine,” Koji said, his voice heavy with sleep.  “Why are you so sad?  Did something happen?”

    Koji’s gaze found Saya and he smiled.

    “Saya-san, you’re here too.”

    Tama stared at his brother in shock.  Did Koji not remember?  How?  Tama turned to Saya in panic.  How was he supposed to tell Koji?”

    “Why are you frowning, Nii-san?” Koji asked, taking Tama’s hand, and giving it a squeeze.  “Did I fall and hurt myself again?”

    Koji sat up on the large bed, rubbing his eyes with a small yawn.

    “Koji, do you remember what happened at Rei and Nana’s house last night?” Tama asked gently.

    Koji stared at him.

    “Did Rei hurt himself?”

    “He can’t remember,” Saya said.  “Tama, don’t force it.”

    “But why?” Tama shook his head.

    He looked away from his brother, conflicted.  How was he supposed to explain that their parents were dead?  What explanation could he give?  He was trying to formulate a story, when Koji gripped his right hand tight.  Turning to look at his brother, Tama stared at the tears running down Koji’s cheeks.

    “Koji, what’s wrong?  Does anything hurt?”

    “They are dead,” Koji said, sobbing hysterically.  “Mom and Dad, they are dead.  You were thinking it right now.  They are dead!”

    It took hours to calm Koji down after that.

    He cried so hard, Tama worried it would make Koji sick.  Tama climbed into the bed and held his brother while he cried.  Saya had to go find a mild tranquilizer to help calm him.  Tama rocked his brother until he slept.

    Leaving the room, Tama followed Saya downstairs to the dining room.  She laid out the documents she wanted him to sign on the table, and he started pacing.

    “Why can’t Koji remember?”

    “I don’t know,” Saya said. “We should take it as a blessing in disguise.”

    She pulled out a chair and sat her gaze on him.

    “You need a strong shield for your thoughts.  I’m not without power of my own.  I will work on protecting your thoughts.  If Koji can’t remember, we won’t have him reading the truth off you so easily.”

    “These abilities mother spoke of have started too early,” Tama said, his knees suddenly feeling weak.  He pulled out the chair at the head of the table and sat.  “What will happen if someone tells Yuki about Koji?”

    “You let me worry about that,” Saya said.  “Tama, your parents left you their holdings.  As the head of the clan, the responsibilities on your shoulders triple.  I promise to guide you the best I can.”

    Saya’s words were important.  He knew that, but for some reason, the meaning refused to sink in.  His brain was stuck on the fact that the Sukiyama Family was down to him and Koji now.  There was no one else.  Saya wasn’t a Sukiyama.  They called her aunt because she had been a part of their lives all his life.

    “Your father’s position has both enemies and friends.  There are those who will kidnap you or your brother for money, or leverage, the world is quite unreasonable.  Now that your parents are dead, these attempts might increase.  Tama, you must grow your strength, show no cracks even when it seems impossible.”

    “Enemies,” Tama murmured, his dark gaze moving to study Saya.  “Do you mean like Takino Yuki?  The man who killed our parents last night?  What exactly did he want?”

    “Takino Yuki is dangerous.  He wanted what was inside your mother, what is inside your brother.  He will do anything to get into this estate to accomplish his goals,” Saya said bluntly.  “Your mother, Misato, died casting a protection spell over this estate.  I don’t know how long it will last, but for now, you are both safe.  No one can enter the estate without invitation.”

    “Spell,” Tama said, rolling the words on his tongue, trying to digest them.  “Does that mean that anyone who enters the estate uninvited will die?”

    “Yes,” Saya said, with a sigh.  “She created a sanctuary.  No one can find the estate at random.  A good thing for now, not so much when you are grown up and want to have friends over.  We’ll need to find a solution to that barrier in time.  Right now, we need to move forward.  First, Tama, please sign these papers so I get started on the funeral arrangements.”

    “Saya-san,” Tama said, terrified.

    When she looked at him, he sighed. 

    “You won’t leave us, right?  Please stay with us.  I can’t do this without you.”

    Saya smiled then, and got up, moving to where he sat.  She placed a hand on his left shoulder and squeezed.

    “This is my home too, Tama.  I will not leave you.”

    Tama nodded.  It was enough.  If Saya was here too, he could be strong.  He would fight through the fear and face what was coming.  He would protect Koji for a lifetime.  Reaching for the papers, he took the pen Saya offered.  Giving them a short perusal, Tama signed his name on the designated lines.

    ****

    IV – The Hidden Card

    A week after the Sukiyama funeral, Tama and Koji went to visit their parent’s grave, leaving Saya in the estate.  Once she saw the car leave the main compound, Saya left the main house using a side door, and hurried to the Sukiyama store house used for food storage decades before.  In recent years, Misato had renovated the building wanting to use it as a warehouse for a gallery she wanted to open.  One of her many projects left incomplete.

    Keying the code into the doors, Saya walked into the large open room and sighed when the doors locked behind her.  She turned left and went down steep stairs leading to a hidden basement.

    She once again keyed in a code into the lock and the door hissed open into a well-lit room.  The man sleeping on a stiff metal chair jerked awake, and stood when he saw her.  She closed the door and her gaze moved to the large bed in the middle of the room.  The machines around the bed hummed steady rhythms.

    Saya was unsure whether she should feel relief or despair.  This scenario was far from ideal.

    “Well?” she prompted the sleepy man in a white lab coat.

    “Touch and go,” the man said.  “Only time will tell now.”

    Saya took in a deep breath and let it out slowly with a small nod, her gaze on the figure on the bed.

    Yes, time is all they had now.

    ***

  • Always You – Shorts by Sui

    Happy February!

    It’s good to celebrate small milestones! This year, I’m determined to give my writing the attention it deserves, no matter what! And so far, I’ve managed to upload three short stories onto smashwords.  They are oldies, (meaning, they were written before) but they never had e-books before.  I couldn’t seem to find the time before to upload them.  Now, I’m glad that this is done.

    Always You2This last short – Always You, Only You, is a story that came to be because of a close friend.  I struggled with the ending, yep, this happens at times.  There are those endings that just won’t come easily.  However, no matter how much I read through it, these two characters, Miki and Shin, just won’t have it any other way.  Oh well, enjoy this little departure from my usual endings.

    February comes with new goals.  I hope to write a new story for valentine’s day this year.  I’m in the mood for romance, and I hope you are too!

    On a side note, here is a pride of lions to make you smile.  Family runs strong here.  10376279_786371224756058_8538788702431511340_nHehehe, went on a safari adventure and ran into these guys! Whoa! Exciting and exhilarating! They truly bring life into perspective.

    Have a fabulous weekend,

    Cheers,

    Sui.

  • Shorts by Sui – The Unexpected Gift

    Mid-January! The year is fifteen days old.  I hope you have done at least one exciting thing.  You just need the one to get started, then the second one comes easier.

    unexpectedFrom my desk, here is another short story e-book to read called The Unexpected Gift of Love- Anthology.  Two stories in one. The Unexpected Gift of Love came to be because of a prompt response from Gayauthors.org.  I post some of my work-in-progress stories on this site and it has become an invaluable writing resource over the years.  Check it out sometime.

    Back to the story, Ren Hill faces a personal betrayal that breaks his family in half.  He must find a way to move ahead and protect his teenage twins from heartbreak.  Ryan, who has always liked Ren, has the hard job of convincing Ren to give him a chance.

    The Unexpected Gift of Love was a look at divorce and the impact it can have.  I think that commitment is such an important aspect in relationships, it requires effort, and sometimes that effort just fails. What a disappointment that turns into!  Do check out this little story.

    You’ll find a shorter bonus story in this e-book called Monday Evenings, Thursday Dinner and Sunday Afternoon.  The cutest, funnest story, I love it.  It makes me smile, I hope it does you.  Do you ever have days when, after you fight with your friend, your boyfriend, your partner…family, you spend your time thinking the worst of the situation?  You walk around continuing the fight in your head, it escalates to great levels and when you meet the person you were fighting with later, your anger sort of dissipates.  And you wonder, why were you so pissed?  Well, this story is about that kind of situation.  Reed and Kristos have a fight and….go read it!

    Alright, I hope your January is going well, that it’s fantastic, and only good things are coming to you.

    Download this new e-book on Smashwords, for Free!

    Look out for the last of this Shorts by Sui Last week of January.