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Authors: Steve Bein

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BOOK: Disciple of the Wind
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And now he uses all his tricks, Mariko thought. His terrorist recipe book went beyond high explosives and ricin. He cooked MDA too, a psychedelic amphetamine he distributed widely to his Divine Wind cultists. It heightened his godlike status—or demonlike, if that was how they thought of him. Mariko didn’t understand all the ins and outs of the cult. She didn’t feel the need. He was recruiting cultists and bending them to criminal purposes; that was enough for her to do her job.

“We believe he inherited his mother’s gift of foresight,” Furukawa said. “Imagine what that power would do in a mind already given to hallucinations. Many schizophrenics suffer from delusions of grandeur, even delusions of their own immortality. The difference for Koji-san is that some of his hallucinations occasionally come true. Is it any wonder he thinks of himself as a god? Would you or I not come to the same conclusion?”

“So you used him,” Mariko said. “You had a very sick man and you propped him up as a phony cult leader. You guys keep getting better and better.”

“The cult of the Divine Wind was entirely his idea. And your moral pronouncements are wearing thin.”

“Hey, you’re the one who called me, asshole. If you want someone
who doesn’t give a shit about right and wrong, maybe law enforcement isn’t the best place to go looking for new recruits.”

“Thin and getting thinner, Detective. And fraying at the edges too. Can you hear your own hypocrisy? I seem to remember an intelligence asset of yours. Shino, I believe, though you called him LeBron. Did your partner have him killed on purpose? No. He sent the boy into harm’s way, and all the while he lulled himself into thinking he was doing the right thing.”

Mariko didn’t need the reminder. She could still picture Shino’s body, sprawled facedown in the basement of Joko Daishi’s covert headquarters. His face was as red as the worst sunburn, the result of cyanide poisoning.

“And what did your lieutenant do, noble man that he is? He kept your partner in the field as long as possible. Then he promoted him to detective again at the first opportunity. And your captain? He was complicit in that promotion. He demoted you without cause. And lest we forget, he has been deliberately deceiving this city for a week straight. Jemaah Islamiyah!” He scoffed. “There isn’t a journalist in the country who could make that story stand—not without evidence, and of course there isn’t any. Only a policeman could get away with such a lie.”

“Look, I told him not to say that stuff—”

“Oh, yes? You and how many others? Where are the legions of officers coming forward to speak the truth? Hundreds could do it, and how many have we seen? Not one. To a man, they stand behind your captain’s lie. And you preach to me about the
ethics
of your profession.”

Mariko’s cheeks burned. He was right. She could have gone straight to the press with what she knew, but she’d chosen silence instead. This was not the first time Furukawa had showed her an ugly truth about her profession that Mariko hadn’t seen herself. Maybe she’d suspected its existence, but she’d always chosen to look away rather than stare it in the face. She asked herself—not for the first time—how this man could know her own job better than she knew it herself.

“I’ll thank you to listen,” Furukawa said, “and to think carefully before you speak. We did
not
have a deranged cult leader to abuse as we saw fit. We had a brilliant young man who appeared to have his schizophrenia fully under control. He cultivated that appearance very carefully over the years. You must understand, Detective, Koji-san is a master manipulator. In his presence, you believe what he wants you to believe.”

“Bullshit. I’ve seen him. I’ve talked to him. He’s out of his mind.”

“You saw what he wanted you to see. You underestimated him, you let him loose, and he made you pay the price for that. I do not say this as an insult, Detective Oshiro. He duped me just as he duped you.”

“Then you’re not half as smart as you think you are. I only talked to him once. You worked with him for decades. How did he fool everyone in your organization?”

“By getting results.” As if to accentuate the point, Furukawa sank the eight ball with a hard, stabbing shot. “You must understand, Detective, the border between genius and lunacy is a hazy line at best. True, Koji-san’s methods were unorthodox, but so long as he delivered everything we asked of him, what need was there to question his motives?”

“Come on. The guy founded a cult. That didn’t make you a little curious?”

“Oh, quite the contrary: we marveled at it. It was a ploy so ingenious that it never occurred to any of the
shonin
. Koji-san’s principal task in recent years was to upset the balance of power in the drug trade—a regular occurrence, you understand. Routine maintenance.”

“Sure. Like an oil change.”

Furukawa ignored her cynicism. “The black market is like any other market: supply and demand reign supreme. Tinker with one or the other and everything changes. Koji-san adopted a radical new approach: the Divine Wind. So long as the cult’s allegiance was to him and not to profit, it could act in unprecedented ways. You saw one instance of that: by flooding the streets with the drug known as
Daishi, he flipped the entire amphetamine trade on its head. Ordinarily such gross actions draw scrutiny, and that is something the Wind prefers to avoid. But this new cult leader was not a hidden power to be rooted out; he was an easy mark. If an underboss like Kamaguchi Hanzo took advantage of him, no one would question it.”

“But he didn’t just play Kamaguchi. He played you.”

“It shames me to admit he did. Such is the force of his personality. When he looks you in the eye, you have the distinct sense that he can see into your soul.”

Mariko rolled her eyes. She didn’t believe in souls. She knew all about that zealous look, though. She remembered standing nose to nose with Joko Daishi, gripping two fistfuls of his wiry black beard, looking him in the eye behind that eerie mask of his. Furukawa was right: Joko Daishi’s eyes were different. Darker. Deeper. Like bottomless wells. But Mariko didn’t see genius in there. She just saw a whole lot of crazy.

“Imagine it, Detective. Imagine how he must seem to those already of a malleable mind—the sort of people who seek the comfort and camaraderie of a cult. Unmedicated, this is a man who believes he is a god. With his hallucinations under control he is a virtuoso of deception, master of the Wind’s innermost secrets. We believed that Koji Makoto was the actor, and Joko Daishi the mask. He convinced us that his growing power was no threat to us.”

“But?”

“The truth was quite the opposite. It was not Joko Daishi who taught Koji-san how to imitate a god, but Koji who taught Joko Daishi how to imitate a man. He learned just what to say and how to say it. Koji Makoto became the mask.”

A wry laugh escaped Furukawa’s thin lips. He shook his head, scornful of himself. “It’s so obvious now. That was the language he used: actors and masks. I should have seen it coming. Even as a boy, he was obsessed with ancient relics—no thanks to your sensei Yamada, I might add. It was Dr. Yamada’s love for the past that made
him the ideal archivist, but it led to the rediscovery of artifacts that even the Wind had long since forgotten. Better for us all if that demon mask had remained hidden. But no. Yamada found it, Koji-san fell in love with it, and now look at what it’s done.”

“It? Hell no. You. You did this.”

Furukawa picked up the cue ball. His eyes grew so cold that she thought he might throw it at her. “
I
argued for its destruction.
I
saw to it that it would stay far away from Koji-san forever. And then . . .” He dropped the ball back on the empty table with a loud, sullen crack. “Then I allowed other things to become more important. I forgot the mask. We all did—everyone but Koji-san.”

“But it came back. You must have known. When we arrested Joko Daishi, we impounded the mask. That went in the computer, and I know you guys can hack our records.”

“We can,” he said dejectedly. “We did.”

“Then why didn’t you steal it from us? Or let it get lost in the system, or—I don’t know, whatever the hell you people do. Make the damn thing disappear.”

“We tried. But the Divine Wind was far more resourceful than we anticipated. They have people within your system.”

“So do you,
neh
?”

“Of course. But Koji-san knows ours and we don’t know his. I told you: we thought he
was
ours. We gave him access to everything he needed to betray us.”

“Which you didn’t figure out until he tried to blow up that subway station,” Mariko said.

Furukawa nodded. His head and neck seemed to sag under the weight of his remorse. “All of the balls were in place. We never saw it. We just handed him the cue and he ran the table. There is one thing left for you to understand, something you’ve misunderstood from the beginning: not even the
shonin
could have prevented the Haneda bombing. That responsibility falls to Professor Yamada.”

“Don’t you dare!” Mariko wanted to snatch his pool cue and break it over his head. “Don’t you dare blame that on him.”

“How can I not? I told you earlier that Yamada denied us when we courted him. It was his friend Shoji-san that convinced him to join our ranks. She foresaw that only the person who wields Glorious Victory Unsought could kill her son. Yamada agreed to become our archivist, and named Glorious Victory Unsought as his price.”

“So what? That doesn’t set off any bombs in an airport.”

“When I learned of Shoji’s prophecy, I assumed Dr. Yamada was being noble. He would see to it that his friend’s son died painlessly. If he were a samurai,
bushido
would demand nothing less. It was my mistake: I saw his fascination with the sword and his strong moral stance, and I assumed the two went hand in hand.”

“They
did
,” said Mariko. “I don’t have to listen to this.”

“You do if you want to understand the truth. Right after the Haneda bombing, we sent six assassins after Joko Daishi. He killed five of them. The sixth escaped with her life, and with his mask. She says he took three bullets that night, including one to the head that the demon mask deflected. Any one of those three rounds should have killed him. Why does he still live?”

Because ballistics is a weird science, Mariko thought. Because the human body can be pretty damn stubborn when it wants to be. But she knew where Furukawa was headed. “You think it’s fate. You think only my sword can kill him.”

“I think that is one part of the truth. There are deeper secrets about Koji-san’s remarkable resilience, secrets I can share with you only if you join us. But what matters for the present is what
Yamada
believed. He trusted Shoji. That’s why he claimed the sword for his own: so none of our people would kill his friend’s only son.”

“Come on. Aren’t you supposed to be a ninja master? Why didn’t you do some ninja stuff? You could have stolen the sword, killed Joko Daishi, and returned the sword before anyone knew it was gone. Hell, you wouldn’t even have to be a ninja for that. You just have to be in a good heist movie.”

“Don’t think it didn’t occur to us.” Furukawa re-racked the balls as he spoke. “But Professor Yamada assured us that your heist movie
antics weren’t necessary. He said he had a new protégé. He said
you
would do what he could not.”

“What? That’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard.”

“Is it? He was a deadly swordsman. You are a deadly marksman. Both of you have had occasion to prove it. And both of you accept that killing one to save ten is undoubtedly the right thing to do.”

“It’s not—”

Mariko didn’t even know how to complete that sentence. She killed Fuchida to save her sister; that was one for one. Why not one for ten? It seemed simple. She killed Akahata to save herself and fifty-two others. Given the chance to do it again, the only thing she’d do differently would be to shoot sooner. It seemed simple, and yet it wasn’t. It was the hardest thing she’d ever done. She still had nightmares about it. So killing one to save ten? Maybe it was the right thing to do, but it wasn’t
undoubtedly
so. It was still a hard choice.

There was one choice before her that wasn’t hard. “Why are you telling me this?” she asked. “So I’ll kill Joko Daishi for you? Well, guess what? I’m not doing it. Shoji’s my friend. Even if she weren’t . . .” Mariko threw up her hands. “I don’t even know how to get this through your head. I took an oath to uphold the constitution. You’re asking me to commit premeditated murder. Those two things don’t go together. End of story.”

“And yet you will kill him. Shoji-san has already seen it. The only question is how many must die between now and then.”

“No. You trained him. You deal with him. If you’re so convinced that I’m the only one who can kill him, here’s an idea: maybe you
could try
not assassinating him
. Tase him, cuff him, and give him to us.”

“Oh? And then what? Watch your people let him slip away again?”

“I don’t know.” This conversation was giving her a headache. “What happened to your stupid magic phone calls? There is no evidence the Wind cannot fabricate,
neh
? Give us something solid enough to hold him without bail.”

“To what end, Detective Oshiro? So he can find another lawyer? Tie up the system in endless appeals? The Divine Wind will live on. You are the only one who can behead it.”

“No.”
Mariko wanted to wring his scrawny neck. “You’re looking for a hit man. I’m a cop. That’s all there is to it.”

Furukawa sighed. “You’re worse than Dr. Yamada. I hadn’t expected such intransigence from you.”

“I’ll take that as a compliment.”

She left without another word. Her headache lingered, but a surge of self-confidence put a spring in her step. She’d never been so proud to be Yamada-sensei’s student.

32

A
s she went to sleep in Shoji’s spare bedroom, wearing the camouflage Bape sweatpants Endo Naomoto had purchased for her, Mariko thought the best thing about being suspended was that she’d be able to sleep in as late as she wanted.

BOOK: Disciple of the Wind
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