Rendezvous at Kamakura Inn

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Rendezvous at Kamakura Inn Page 7

by Marshall Browne


  Her attitude modest and attentive, she was waiting on his pleasure. In a flash, he decided that she had the essence of this remote mountainous region, for him—yet another unusual thought. Was he turning into a poet?

  He said, “The man sitting here earlier, who is he?”

  “Shoba-san, Mr. Ito’s man.”

  In a rush of air, as if he’d been cued in, steady on his feet, though his round face was red from alcohol, Ito entered the hall. He went to the woman and inquired about an outside line for his room phone. She responded. He turned and peered at Aoki for a long moment, then bowed. “My condolences on the tragic loss of your wife.”

  Aoki’s face tightened in amazement. Then he blinked at the change in the woman, subtle, yet to his trained eye distinct. Her body had stiffened as she gazed with a deep intensity on the banker’s flushed face. Under her gaze Ito dropped his eyes and turned away to descend the stairs.

  Lighting a cigarette, Aoki walked the shadowy corridors to his room. Hatred, subtle but malicious, had been in that look, hardly a thing for a ryokan proprietor to show a customer! But then, if his guess was right, he was also her stepfather.

  He shook his head, suddenly the old case seemed to be hemming him in from all sides, minute by minute, to be flaring into life.

  Inspector Aoki reached his room and paused, hand on the door, again amazed that he and Ito had simultaneously arrived at this dot in the mountains, each with his particular knowledge of the other.

  There was a slight movement farther along the dim corridor. Aoki peered in that direction and was surprised to make out a cat sitting there, watching him. Abruptly it came forward. Aoki didn’t know much about cats but had nothing against them. He lowered his hand, and tentatively the cat sniffed it.

  “What are you doing?” he said. Hunting time, he thought. This place would be a paradise for mice, and cats. He stroked it briefly and then slid open the door, with its aged painted camellia.

  A padded kimono had replaced the other on the futon. The charcoal brazier to warm his feet and hands glowed in the electric light. The temperature was dropping, all right. He’d drunk the large whiskey quickly, and it had affected him. His bed had been remade. He butted the cigarette in an ashtray, sat on a cushion, and gazed into the alcove at the other dusky camellia.

  This ryokan was steeped in tradition, foreign territory to him. Tokie and his father, the traditionalists, would’ve been at home here. His loved ones, and all they stood for, had slipped through his fingers, seemingly in an eyeblink. Aoki stood up in the small room and held out his hands, confirming that they were shaking. His misery, his defeat, came crowding up on him. Ex-governor Tamaki. He turned away from the alcove, but whichever way he turned, the Fatman’s face was over his shoulder, hard and contemptuous, an untouchable, a winner.

  Aoki took a deep breath. He needed another Cutty Sark, but he fumbled in his bag and found one of the six chocolate bars he’d extracted from a vending machine at Tokyo Central station. He peeled off the silver wrapper and bit into the candy. On the wooden chest, the five orphans looked forlorn. He touched the moss around their tiny roots. Barely damp. He trickled water from a glass onto each; he’d have to remember to do this daily.

  Aoki heard a sudden rush of wind and lifted his head as it whined past the eaves. It had come from nowhere, and even as he listened it grew in force. The charcoal fire in the kotatsu shifted in an uneasy sound. The faint smell of ash was in the room. He glanced at his watch: 11:15 P.M. One whiskey and his head felt fuzzy. The altitude? No, fatigue. He undressed and put on the yukata to sleep in.

  The wind was howling around the ryokan now like a predator who’d cornered prey. Aoki, a stranger to mountain country, had never heard anything like it. He lay down on the padded mattress, and his mind looped back to Watanabe. Had the head of the investigation seven years ago been keeping his eye on the chief suspects, Ito and Yamazaki, all the while? Had the superintendent known that the two men were coming here and thrown Aoki back into the case for his own purposes? But if so, why hadn’t his boss filled him in?

  Frowning, he thought back to what he’d known of the superintendent’s involvement in the case that, reportedly, had permanently stalled his promotion. Plenty of cops had unsolved cases on their records, even high-profile ones, but they still got promoted. The case had run into a dead end, and Watanabe had turned his focus onto her ex-husband, Hatano, a chef in Osaka. So far as Watanabe had been concerned, the man, a violent type who’d been sent packing years before by his ex-wife, had been furious at her marriage to the rich banker. Watanabe had become obsessed with the idea that the woman was the victim of her ex’s jealousy. Hatano had made a few drunken threats, but Watanabe’s terrific efforts had found no hard evidence to support a prosecution, especially without a corpse. Even so, he’d relentlessly kept on down that track, despite mounting criticism from his superiors. Finally, he’d become convinced that the twin daughters, who would inherit the ryokan, had conspired with their father in a murder. At that point, he’d been taken off the case.

  Aoki shook his head. Even the smartest operators sometimes ran off the rails. Feeling baffled and remote from civilization, he reached across to switch off the light. Saito’s long, sardonic face emerged in his mind. He wondered if the man from Osaka’s interest in the case went beyond the voyeur’s. He clucked his tongue; perhaps he was getting carried away with it all.

  He thought of something else and switched the light back on and reached out for his wallet and took the news clipping from it again. For the second time that day, he squinted at the faded newsprint. He confirmed what had entered his mind: Madam Ito had disappeared on the evening of October 24, 1993. Today was October 22, 2000. The day after tomorrow would be the seventh anniversary of the night she’d gone missing.

  He switched the light off and lay back under the quilt. Moment by moment, the creaks from the antique timbers were increasing in tempo; the scroll was banging against the alcove wall, the window glass was rattling in the frame, and torn paper panels in the fusuma door were flapping. Aoki sat up as the whole wooden structure shuddered in a fiercer blast, seeming to shift sideways. He felt like a man on a storm-tossed ship that was about to go down without a trace.

  Chapter Eight

  AOKI STARTED AWAKE INTO A darkness that was as dense as crude oil. His neck was running with moisture, his heart bounding from the cruel nightmare that came too often. Lying back, he surmised that one night it would kill him with a chest-wrenching heart attack. As long as it was quick.

  Nothing in his past had prepared him for what he’d found in the kitchen that night: not the mayhem that had come his way as a homicide detective, or earlier, as a traffic cop; not the surrealistic scenes in the Tokyo subway the day of the gas attack by the Aum Shinrikyo cult. Nothing. Not even his father plunging forward on the dinner table, his face contorted in his death agony.

  The lifeless fingers of her right hand, slightly inky from the last brushstrokes of her calligraphy . . .

  That horror—deep-set in him, the police psychiatrist said—was a significant part of his problem. “Turn your mind to the future,” the shrink advised. But he’d never get over it.

  Using the bedside flashlight, he peered at his watch: three minutes to three. Outside the covers, the air was freezing on his arm as he reached for a towel and mopped his neck and chest. The charcoal in the kotatsu had turned to ash.

  With a stab of surprise, he realized that the wooden building’s shuddering and the wind’s banshee wailing had ceased. Beyond the walls, in the wake of the departed storm, the absolute silence seemed a roar in his ears.

  Aoki got up and put on his overcoat, slid back the door, and stepped out of the Camellia Room. With the aid of the flashlight, he set out along the corridors. Faint snoring came from a door he passed, the only hint of humanity except for his quiet footfalls, which brought a subtle creaking from the floorboards. He ascended the staircase, went through the dark hall and along the corridor, and entered the anteroom.
/>   His breath hissed out; his arm came up automatically, as if to shield his face. The room was awash with dazzling white light. Framed in the large window was a dense white curtain of falling snow. On the Go board, the black stones were sharp and lethal, the white ones almost invisible. Shivering, he went to the window and gazed out. Before the nightmare had woken him, the old case had been in an earlier dream, and now it returned like a figure in white walking through these dark and rambling rooms.

  It must have been about sixteen years ago when Ito had met the divorced Madam Hatano. She’d inherited the ryokan from her father. After her disappearance, the papers claimed Ito had wooed her for a year, coming and going from Tokyo. A fresh mountain beauty, they wrote, though the photograph in his wallet was of the more mature woman, fine-featured and delicate. Yet a strong character did show in her face, and a sophistication that went beyond “fresh mountain beauty.” The Mona Lisa smile the photographer had caught heightened the enigma.

  As he watched the snow fall on the deeply silent mountain, swinging his arms for warmth, more and more of the case was coming back to Aoki. It was said that she’d also had an air of the demimonde, later; probably that was what had attracted Yamazaki, given his reputation with women. At any rate, the Ministry of Finance official had made his move—”seduced this leading banker’s wife, the owner of a mountain ryokan,” reported one paper, sprinkling spice for the salarymen and their wives. Throughout the case there’d been a shortage of facts, but avidly the media had embroidered what they had. It came out that the affair with Yamazaki had lasted about two years, accepted by her “complaisant” husband. Both men had had several mistresses during the period, and much about that had come out, too. Each was then in his early forties, the libido in its second flowering. It was strange how the raw publicity hadn’t harmed either man’s career.

  Aoki rubbed his hands vigorously; the aching cold was penetrating his bones. For Superintendent Watanabe, the case had been his nightmare. Aoki was realizing, more and more, how it must have been festering in his boss’s mind all these years.

  He should go back to the room before he froze to death, but the partially reconstructed though still essentially mysterious night in October 1993 was relentlessly seeping into his consciousness. Ito and Yamazaki had told the police their stories of that night, as had others, but it all led nowhere. When Ito had reported her as a missing person, given his influence, the police had responded diligently. Then the bloodstained clothes had turned up, and their interest had sparked. It appeared they had a murder investigation on their hands—and Superintendent Watanabe had been up and running.

  Aoki stood like a statue in the snow’s light. If anything, the snowfall was becoming heavier. Crack! Startled, he peered under the eaves into the snowy world. Crack! Crack! The weight of the snow was snapping branches off the trees. It had terminated his thinking, and he was shivering violently now as though he’d caught a chill. He left to find his way back to his room, hurrying toward warmth.

  In the room he warmed his hands in the kotatsu, then found his cigarettes. The lighter flared. He drew in tobacco smoke and immediately felt warmer and more lucid in his thinking. One paper, seeking readership, had speculated that she’d been dismembered and minced up for pig food. It was hard to see the bankerly Ito or the urbane Yamazaki having a hand in such a demise! Yet each had been shown up as ruthless in his profession, and what calculations and fantasies went on behind any person’s professional facade?

  He butted the half-smoked cigarette and returned to bed, keeping the overcoat on.

  When Aoki awoke for the second time, he didn’t know where he was. Then he lifted his head and made out the blurred flower in the alcove. The sound of the stream, like the gale, had died away, leaving an out-of-the-world silence, a pregnant one. He sat up, now alert. In the space of twelve hours his brain had gone from the moribund to the hyperactive. For months, his mind had been dormant except for the gathering stone-hard hatred for Tamaki. It was working again—yet, he felt, not quite reliable. He flung the covers back and walked to the bath. Thirty minutes later he returned, red-faced and glowing. The cat was sitting outside his door, and he bent down to stroke it. Its yellow eyes turned up to his, assessing him. Another assessor.

  He was dressed when a female voice came from outside the door. It slid open, and the middle-aged maid who’d carried in his luggage was there, on her knees, head lowered in a bow. A lacquered tray with a steaming tea bowl was on the floor in front of her.

  She got to her feet and put the tray beside the bonsai pots, giving them a curious look.

  “What is your name?” Aoki asked. Clearly she was to be his room maid.

  “Mori, sir.”

  “Well, Mori-san, who does that cat belong to?”

  Surprised, she turned to look at the cat sitting in the doorway. “No one, sir, it is the house cat.”

  “What’s its name?”

  “Cat, sir.”

  Aoki smiled, and she bowed and withdrew.

  At 8:30 A.M. he went to the main hall. The mini sumo look-alike was back, seated against the wall, same gray suit, same vacant stare from the tiny dark eyes. The policeman observed him narrowly. A punch from those muscular arms could smash bones. Aoki had his black belt in karate, but he hadn’t practiced since pressure of work had forced him to give up instructing at the boys’ club a year ago.

  A large charcoal brazier was burning brightly. The remaining maple leaves had fallen from the display branches. As if the snow’s told them the show’s over, he thought. The situation he’d stepped into might be reactivating his investigator’s brain, but was this mountain ryokan changing his thinking in this other way? He grunted.

  The woman appeared from her office, businesslike, briskly confronting the premature termination of the fall season. The daughter! He felt certain of it. If so, one of the sisters who, according to Watanabe, had conspired with their father in their mother’s “disappearance.”

  “I’m afraid we’re snowed in, sir. Nearly six feet have fallen.” Aoki nodded. The weather forecasters, the taxi driver, the man from Osaka, the proprietor—each had foretold the situation accurately. “It’s the earliest big fall for many years. And the telephone line is down somewhere.”

  Aoki was surprised at this. He doubted cell phones would operate here, not that he’d brought his own; there was no one he’d want to call. Through the glass doors he could see how deep the snow lay; six feet would become ten if it kept up like this. He’d put on a heavy cable-stitch pullover that his wife had knitted two years before.

  He gazed at the woman. She wore a padded black kimono streaked with red and had reddened her lips with lipstick.

  Shoba sprang to his feet, bowing. Ito had hurried in. The bank chairman sharply inclined his head to acknowledge his fellow guest. “What is wrong with the phone?” he said to the woman. “I need to contact my office in Tokyo. It’s most urgent.”

  “I am afraid the line is down.”

  “What!” He hissed through his teeth. “For how long?”

  She hesitated. “A day or so.”

  Ito stared at her, consternation on his round face, his breathing audible. The air was rank with his overnight digestion. He recollected himself, gave a cursory bow, and turned on his heel to leave. She watched him go. For an instant her eyes met Aoki’s; then, with a bow, she returned to her office.

  The bodyguard sat down again, boss gone, energy deflated.

  Walking past the scrolls of calligraphy to breakfast, Aoki had a feeling that something significant was going to happen. As though a switch had been flicked on, it seemed that his pragmatic street cop’s sixth sense had been reactivated, and everything in him was jerking back into action.

  He’d found in an alcove what he’d been looking for: the framed business registration certificate with the managing proprietor’s name, Kazu Hatano. He stroked his chin thoughtfully. The proprietor-manager of the ryokan was, indeed, the daughter of the missing woman and thus this big-time banker’s stepd
aughter.

  Chapter Nine

  AOKI BREAKFASTED ALONE. WHEN HE came out to the anteroom, there was no one to be seen, not even a maid, and the fire was crackling away. He returned to his room, rubbing his hands against the cold, though the temperature had risen from the overnight freeze. He unpacked his Sony shortwave radio and placed it on the low table. In his old life, he’d sometimes surfed the international airwaves looking for jazz.

  He went to the window. The glass was opaque, the snow ridged against it a mere shadow line, and he reached out with his fingertips. They stuck to the glass: Everything here was as cold as his thoughts.

  Never could he have anticipated what Tokie had done. Criminal minds he knew about, but he’d been ambushed by an honest one bent on a mission springing from a naive notion of justice and, above all, from love. Had she found her inspiration in the melodrama and convoluted plots of the Kabuki plays?

  Aoki sneezed. He turned from the window and looked at the padded kimono but put on a tweed jacket that felt tight over the sweater. One of the bonsai plants looked sick, and he peered at its tiny root system. Not enough moisture, or too much? He supposed the maid would relight the kotatsu. He glanced at his watch, switched on the radio, and tuned the dial through fields of static to NHK.

  This morning shock waves hit the nation when the giant Tokyo Citizens Bank failed to open for business. Overnight government regulators moved into the bank. The head of the Diet Committee for Banking Industry Reconstruction, Yukio Tamaki, said the bank’s ability to meet its obligations had deteriorated dramatically in the past two days, and the government had no choice but to step in. On the news, the Nikkei index fell 8 percent in early trading. In an intriguing development, the bank’s chairman, Hiroshi Ito, has not been seen since Sunday afternoon, and all efforts to contact him have failed.

 

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