“Oh, I’m a writer. I used to work for an advertising agency, but I left. Not for any particular reason. I just didn’t like it.”
“What do you like?” Unathi said, still suspicious.
“I like music. I like to cook. I like to think about jogging. And you?”
“Who am I or what do I like?”
“Let’s start with the first.”
The question made Unathi philosophical. “Mecha-captaining and monster-battling aside, I guess I’m still just a girl from Soweto.”
“That must be nice,” the writer said.
The phone rang. It seemed to have an impatient tone. “Oh, excuse me one moment.” He ducked back under the mecha’s arm and went down the hall to pick up the phone.
It was a gray phone, slim and somehow nostalgic. “Hello?” he said into the receiver and then, “You again? I thought I told you already I don’t have time for these phone games.” He listened for a moment and then held out the phone for Unathi. “It’s for you.”
Unathi limped over, holding her side. She’d definitely broken a rib. Maybe several. She took the phone receiver and held it to her ear.
“Hello,” a woman’s voice said. It was a serene voice, like her mecha’s vocal system.
“Hi,” said Unathi, taken aback.
“Did you have some of Haruki’s spaghetti?”
“No,” Unathi said.
“You should have some. He’s an excellent cook. You’ll like it.”
“Excuse me, do I know you?” Unathi was getting annoyed now.
“Yes, we’ve met many times. Have I mentioned I’m naked? I just got out of the shower.”
Oh great. Phone sex. Like she needed that. “Have I mentioned I have a giant hairball to track down and destroy before it consumes the whole city?”
“Oh. No. No, you hadn’t. Perhaps you should go do that,” the woman said.
“Is there some kind of point to this phone call?” Unathi thought about hanging up, but there was something about the woman’s voice. The situation was eerily familiar. Not like déjà vu exactly, but like she’d seen it in a movie or maybe read it in a book.
“Not really. I just wanted to say hello.”
“Hello and goodbye.”
“Oh and you should go to the suicide forest. It’s beautiful this time of year.”
“What?”
“Aokigahara. It’s under Mount Fuji.”
“I know where it is.”
“I think it might be helpful for you. Well, that’s all,” the woman said pleasantly and then, “Goodbye.”
Unathi listened to the dial tone for a moment and then replaced the receiver. “What was that about?” she asked Haruki.
“I don’t know. She phones sometimes. I don’t mind so much.”
“She said I should visit Aokigahara.”
“Why would she say that?”
“I don’t know, you tell me. She’s your mystery lady phone caller.”
“Well, maybe we should go check it out.”
“Maybe we should. Maybe it’ll lead us to the hairball.”
“It could be a wild sheep chase,” Haruki mused.
“You mean goose chase.” Unathi hated it when people got their idioms muddled.
“Yes. You’re right, I don’t know why I got that confused,” Haruki apologized. “But I know a short cut. It’s this way, through the alley.”
He led her out the back door into a small garden behind the house. There was a white and green deck chair with a book beside it. He helped her climb over the breeze-block wall and into an alley that ran parallel to the backs of the houses. The black and white cat jumped up onto the wall and watched them.
“I call it an alley, but it’s not really an alley,” Haruki said. “It’s also not a way, because, technically, a way should have an entrance or an exit, but this doesn’t. It’s also not a cul-de-sac, because a cul-de-sac should have an entrance. This is more like a dead end.”
“You’re going to be a dead end if you don’t stop talking and get me to Aokigahara.”
“All right, all right,” the writer said, “Sorry.” He was quiet for a while, leading her behind the houses. Both ends were fenced off with barbed wire. He was right: it wasn’t a way or a cul-de-sac. Above them, in the trees, a bird sang like a wind-up toy or a spring unravelling. The cat jumped down and padded after them.
They came to a well and she helped him push the cover off. The cover was made of wood, faintly damp with moss that had grown over the edges, with a metal handle set into it. Inside the well, it was very dark. A metal ladder descended into the black. It looked new and well maintained. There was a rich, cloying smell, like sarin gas or dead bodies. Maybe both.
“Ladies first,” Haruki said. The cat jumped onto his shoulder. It looked like it was coming along for the ride.
Unathi sighed, looking down at her boots. At this rate, she was going to have to go on another whale hunt.
Unathi counted 439 rungs until she stepped down onto loamy earth.
“It’s man-made,” Haruki said climbing off the ladder and brushing the dirt off his hands, “Possibly an old storm drain. Or maybe it connects to the subway. An abandoned line that used to lead to Aokigahara.”
“Or straight to hell,”Unathi said grimly.
“That seems unlikely,” Haruki said. The cat jumped down off his shoulder and padded ahead. It looked back at them with an inquisitive meow, as if to say “Well, are you coming?”
They followed after the cat and, after thirty minutes or so, the tunnel opened into a cement bunker with a rusted metal door that was wedged shut. There were signs that someone had been there recently. There were paintings stacked up against the walls. The top one featured a colorful theme park monstrosity. In the corner, there was a life-size sculpture of an anime boy with spiky hair and a death-grip on his erect penis jizzing spunk around his head.
“I recognize this,” Unathi said. It was hard to forget a sculpture of a naked anime boy with a sperm lasso. “This is the work of that art factory. The one run by that famous guy who formed a collective of hungry young talent to mass-produce a range of work? What’s his name again?” Before the aliens attacked and Unathi had been enlisted, she’d gone through a rigorous geisha cultural immersion programme, which had left her surprisingly well versed in a number of suitable conversation topics, from fine art to politics, and a thousand ways to brew jasmine tea.
“Ah, my namesake,” the writer said, “Takashi.”
“Yeah, okay. Whatever.” Irritated, Unathi flicked through the paintings stacked up against the wall, until she hit one that was horribly familiar. She hauled it out to get a better look. It featured a lunatic grinning flower with rainbow petals. It was almost identical to the glowing face at the heart of the hairball.
“And I definitely recognize this,” she said. “But why is this here?”
“Never mind that,” the writer said, yanking at the rusted door. “This door is stuck.”
“Not for long.” Unathi grinned and broke it off its hinges with one well-placed karate kick (another advantage of the cultural immersion programme).
They emerged into a forest. Sunlight streaked through the leaves in pale golden bars. Mount Fuji loomed through the foliage, tufts of cloud ringed under the peak like a hula hoop. The cat stopped to lick itself. The wind in the leaves sounded like ghosts laughing.
“It’s lovely,” Unathi said, surprised. That was before she saw the bodies hanging from the trees like gruesome Christmas decorations. Their faces were black, their eyes popping out. Asphyxiation does that.
They were hanging from belts or cables or the kind of mesh straps you might use to secure a mattress to the roof of your car, which Unathi had done only a few weeks ago when helping Corporal Suzuki move into his new apartment pod.
“The suicide forest,” the cat mused. “Second only to the Golden Gate Bridge in the self-murder popularity stakes. Partly inspired by the tragic double suicide ending of the novel Kuroi Jukai or Black Sea o
f Trees.”
“I didn’t know you could talk,” Unathi said.
“I can’t,” said the cat. It licked itself huffily and gave her a black look from beneath its eyebrow whiskers.
“Why are they all bald?” mused the writer.
Unathi started. He was right. Whatever state of decay, whether their faces were still intact or the birds and squirrels had eaten their eyes and lips, whether their clothes marked them disgraced salaryman or despondent housewife or lovesick teens playing out Kuroi Jukai, every corpse had one thing in common: their heads were entirely shaved.
“Something weird is going on,” Unathi said, subconsciously reaching for her joystick and the diplomatic power of the Reaver auto-cannon’s 20mm uranium-depleted tank-killer bullets the size of milk bottles.
“No shit, Sherlock,” the cat said and then pretended like it hadn’t, earnestly rubbing a saliva-moistened paw over one ear and then the other.
“Shhh. What’s that sound?” Haruki said. Unathi listened. There was a buzzing whine, like a sick lawnmower or the purr of her Hello Kitty vibrator when it was running on maximum speed.
“This way,” she said, and ran off between the trees, quiet as a ninja in a library.
The buzzing sound was emanating from an electric hair clipper, wielded by a young man in a neon-green jumpsuit. He was dangling from abseil gear with his feet wedged on either side of the unfortunate corpse he was shearing. It was a young mother, judging by the burp cloth still draped over her shoulder. No doubt the victim of the social shame inflicted by one of the cruel mom cliques that ruled the city’s playgrounds. As the dead woman’s long black hair parted company from her scalp, it came to life. It writhed and twisted, so that green jumpsuit guy had to wrap it round his wrist to keep it from slithering away into the sky.
“Hey, you skabenga! What are you doing?” Unathi yelled, which was perhaps not the most prudent of plans. The young man startled so badly that he lost his grip on his anchor line. The rope screamed through the carabiner. He grabbed for it but it burnt through his palm and came free, dropping him out of the air. He landed on his neck with a sickly crunch. The spasming hair wriggled free of his wrist and slithered away into the mossy hollows between the tree roots.
“Is he?” the writer asked.
“Dead,” Unathi confirmed, kicking the corpse. The hair clipper was still buzzing in his hand. “Now what?”
“You could always follow the extension cable,” the cat said.
“We could always follow the extension cable,” Unathi said, ignoring the cat. She yanked at the electric cord attached to the vibrating hair clipper and started reeling it in.
The cable wound between trees, over glens and at some point, with little heed for electrical safety, right through a babbling brook.
“I wonder why they didn’t use batteries,” Haruki said, jumping over the brook. The cat was back to riding his shoulder.
“We ran out,” a voice replied from the shadowy glade up ahead. Unathi and the writer stepped into a ring of trees to find a slight man with glasses and a rumpled suit sitting atop an oozing mound with Mickey Mouse ears, pointy fangs and gargantuan cartoon eyes swivelling in opposite directions. Bright paint leaked down the sides of the thing and saturated the grass beneath it in camouflage whorls of color. It grinned at them and rolled its eyes.
Beside the mound an oversized generator hummed happily, a tangle of extension cords like medusa dreadlocks running away from it to feed power to other hair clippers in other parts of the forest, shearing other suicides of their bewitched locks.
Gathered around the mound were young men and women in various shades of neon and states of industry. They’d formed an assembly line of sorts. On the far side, apprentice hipster artists in gray jumpsuits sat at workbenches besides boxes and boxes of bowling balls. They removed the balls, stripped off the paint, sanded down the surface and delivered them down to the next workbench where a girl with bright-pink hair and huge goggles airbrushed the iconic smiley flower designs onto the balls.
The flower balls piled up next to her, blinking happily, while they waited their turn at the next station, which aptly resembled a sumo ring. Several huge men and women wrestled with tangles of writhing suicide hair to wrap it onto the flower-faced bowling balls. The hair resisted. As they watched, a tentacle of hair squirmed out of one man’s grasp. “Look out!” he yelped. The hair slapped him aside. He flew out of the ring and landed with a fleshy thud at Unathi and Haruki’s feet. “Urrrgh,” he said.
Back in the ring, an artist in a red jumpsuit grabbed the end of the hair and cracked it like a whip. The hair collapsed limply to the ground, stunned. Two other artists leapt on it and wrapped it round the flower face before it could recover.
The final stage was a wooden platform raised like a dock. Cute artist boys and girls in school uniforms released the finished artworks into the sky. “Byeee! Sayonara! Get big and strong, you hear! Have a nice life!” They waved their hankies in salutation as the hairballs drifted off like balloons, already springing gnashing mouths and spined tentacles.
It was horrible.
It was brilliant.
The man atop the mound gave the mecha pilot and the writer (and the cat) a chance to take it all in. Then he stood up and threw his arms wide. “Welcome. I am Takashi. And this is my heap. I am king of it and all artistic endeavor.”
“So you’re the guy?” Unathi snarled.
“Ob-vious-ly.” The cat rolled its eyes.
The slight, bespectacled man smirked. He stood up and skidded down the side of his mud creature, leaving behind a swathe of blues and greens. It groaned and swivelled its eyes to watch him. “It depends,” the man said. “By ‘the guy’ do you mean one of the most challenging and thought-provoking artists of the 21st century? Who innovated the superflat style combining the best of otaku culture and Japanese pop aesthetics? Whose factory puts Andy Warhol’s little art manufacturing industry to shame? Whose art has the capacity to shock, to titillate, to overturn the world as we know it?”
“I meant, are you the fucker responsible for ruining my boots?”
“Your boots?” Takashi shifted his gaze from Unathi’s tits to her patent boots which were no longer remotely white. They were splattered with blood and mud and spinal fluid and bits of writhing, haunted hair. “Is that whale penis leather?” Takashi admired them.
“Killed it myself,” Unathi beamed.
“Divine.”
Unathi turned grim. “And one of your hairball creatures has destroyed them. Along with half of Tokyo. And the whole of Saiko Squadron. Although, technically, they’re replaceable. I mean, we have new academy graduates practically begging to be recruited.”
“What can I say?” The artist shrugged. “Good art should exact a toll.”
“Hamba’ofa! Exact this, motherfucker,” Unathi said, as she pulled out her ladies size .357 Magnum from the holster on the side of her boot and pressed it to his temple.
“Wait!” yelled the cat and the writer at the same time.
“You got a better idea?” she said, her finger itchy on the trigger.
“Don’t you know anything about art?” Haruki said. “Look at him.”
Unathi looked at Takashi, beaming lunatically like one of his flower balls.
“He wants to die.”
It sunk in. “Fuck. And then his art will live forever.” Unathi eased her finger off the trigger.
“And grow bigger and more infamous and ravage the whole world!” Takashi crowed.
“Shut up,” Unathi said, lowering the gun and jamming it up against his crotch. “Unless you want to bleed to death slowly from a bullet hole in your hairy balls.”
“Even more sensational! I’ll take it!” Takashi grinned.
Unathi ignored him. “This writing you do, Haruki ….”
“Yes?”
“Ever do art critiques?”
“I haven’t … but I see where you’re going.”
“What?” Takashi said, panicky. “No, n
o, no, no. This is a time for action, not words.”
“I’m thinking this suicide hair thing is interesting, but, you know, in my opinion …”—Unathi paused for effect and rolled her eyes—”it’s sooooo derivative.”
“No!” Takashi yelped.
“Shock for shock’s sake.” Unathi continued. “So tired. So very ….”
“Don’t say it. Don’t you dare.”
“So very Damien Hirst,” she finished.
“Aaaaaagh!” Takashi tore at his hair. “I am nothing like that hack. You can’t do this to me!”
“Already doing it,” Haruki said, tapping away at his phone. “I’m uploading a scathing review to all the arts sites right now.”
“Have mercy,” Takashi moaned.
“Sorry, friend,” Haruki shrugged, not looking up from his screen. “I guess the text message is mightier than the mass-produced pop-art gimmick.”
Takashi grabbed Unathi’s hand, wrenched the gun up to his temple and, before she had time to react, pulled the trigger. A bright twist of blood arced away from his temple in slow motion. The artist’s lips twitched in the faintest of smiles and then he keeled over sideways, revealing the bloody mash where the back of his head had once been. His blood started to mingle with the swirl of colors on the grass, muddying the bright hues.
Unathi looked down at the body. “Eish,” she said. “That’s done it.”
“Watch out,” said the cat. Unathi and Haruki stepped back just in time to avoid being knocked down by the scramble of neon jumpsuits fighting each other to get to the top of the globulous, seeping heap of color.
The battle was ugly. The hungry young artists climbed over each other, dragged each other down, punched each other in the face and the throat. And then they broke out the knives. After a while it got too messy to tell who was actually wounded and who was just slathered in paint.
“We should leave,” the cat said. “The succession fight is only going to get nastier.”
“But the whole world is fucked. Takashi’s dead.” Unathi gave the body a kick to emphasize her point, adding some of the artist’s blood to the congealed stain on her boot. “His reputation is going to grow; the haunted hairballs will only become more powerful ….”
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