Read Sayonara Slam Online

Authors: Naomi Hirahara

Sayonara Slam (8 page)

The last thing Mas wanted to do was get back in his car, drive to Little Tokyo, and then take the 10 to the 405, notoriously the worst vehicle intersection in the nation. It was Saturday, but these days traffic on the weekend could be just as bad as during weekday rush hour.

“Gardenin'. No drivin' work for me today,” he told the reporter.

“I suppose I can get a taxi.”

“Go on, get a taxi,” Mas told him in Japanese. Didn't the Japanese newspapers have budgets for these kind of things?

“All right, I will.”

Yuki sounded put out, but Mas was dead tired.
Hell,
I'm close to eighty
, he thought.
It's a wonder I can do what I'm doing
.

“Well, tomorrow is the game,” Yuki said, emphasizing the need to arrive at the stadium on time. “The deciding one between Korea and Japan. This determines the championship.”

After they agreed on a time to meet tomorrow, Mas closed his phone.

Juanita switched into waitress mode. “Do you want anything to eat?
Lomo saltada
? Ceviche?”


Pisco
?” G.I. said, grinning.

Mas shook his head and pulled himself up to his feet. No, absolutely no liquor at this time of day. “So you'zu really leavin'?” He repeated the same question he'd asked when he first arrived. This time he directed it to Juanita.

“Yep,” Juanita answered. “Japan has a population problem—not enough people. They're happy to give long-term visas to those of us with Japanese blood.”

“Even if we are the ugly stepchildren,” G.I. added. “Hey, you should visit us sometime in Tokyo.”

Juanita gave a toothy grin. “Really, Mas, really. Don't look so sad. You know nothing stays the same.”

Before Mas left Antonio's, Juanita squeezed his forearm and whispered, “Call her. I'm sure if you tell her how you feel about her, she won't stay mad.”

Mas sat in the Impala for a good five minutes, watching
mothers and their young children carrying baskets of clothing into the laundromat. He wasn't sure what he was going to say, but he knew he couldn't keep silent. Every day that passed without any contact with Genessee meant it would be that much harder to reopen the closed door to their relationship. He flipped open his phone and pressed Genessee's name. The phone rang and rang until her voice came on—not her live voice, but a recorded one. She spoke slowly, definitively, as if each word was essential and important. Mas couldn't leave a message. His attempt would be an embarrassment, evidence that he should be forgotten and not pursued.

Mas was hoping to avoid any discussion of his relationship with Genessee when he arrived home on McNally Street, but no such luck. Mari was waiting for him, ready to pounce. “What happened last night, anyway?” she asked as she scooped rice into a small bowl for her father. “Genessee didn't look too happy with you.”

“Nuttin'.”

“Dad, you know it's okay. You can get married again. Genessee is good for you.”

Mas thought he'd be relieved that his daughter was giving him permission, but it actually made him feel worse. “Whyzu I get marry again? I'zu ole man.”

“Haruo did it. And he seems very happy for it.”

“Anyways, wiz you all in my house, no room for nuttin' else,” Mas declared, causing Mari's mouth to drop open. He was sure she'd have something to say to that, but rice or no rice, he wasn't going to stick around the kitchen to find out.

Chapter Seven

T
he next day, Mas was ready. He didn't have the same
Nippon Series
polo shirt, but he had a similar type that he'd gotten free at a pesticide workshop. He figured that Yuki wouldn't notice the dead-garden-snail insignia, especially as it was covered by his jacket, and he was right.

As soon as he got in Mas's car at their rendezvous spot in Little Tokyo, the boy opened the laptop he was carrying and announced, “I know why Itai-
san
was killed.”

Mas felt like a stone dropped into his gut.

“This is big,
Ojisan
, bigger even than baseball itself.”

Isn't that what Itai had said? That he had information that would shake up international relations?

Mas continued driving up through Chinatown, passing a newsstand manned by an old Asian man wearing a cap.

“It's about Jin-Won. The old lady who we saw at the press conference at the Bonaventure? That's his grandmother.”

Mas waited to hear more. Surely that in itself wasn't earth-shaking.

“She's reported to have been an
ianfu
.”

Mas had heard or read that Japanese word,
ianfu
, maybe a few times on television from Japan. Here in America, people said “comfort women.” They were women, mostly from Korea and other Asian countries, who were taken to provide sex for Japanese soldiers during World War II. Had the Korean woman who'd said “
konnichiwa
” to him in Dodger Stadium endured such an experience? She looked like an ordinary Asian grandmother. But then didn't Mas and Haruo fall in the same category? Who could have imagined that they had survived the beast of the Bomb and the black rain that followed?

Mas couldn't put words to his thoughts, but it didn't really matter. Yuki would fill up the Impala just fine with words of his own. “She hasn't gone public yet, but Itai-
san
believed that she was going to announce it here in Los Angeles.”

“Don't make sense,” Mas murmured. Wouldn't she do that in her home country?

“Itai-
san
wanted to be the first to break the news. There's not many of them left anymore. The
Nippon Series
is one of Japan's more liberal publications, you know. Even more liberal than the
Asahi Shimbun
.”

Mas didn't know about such things. Besides the TV broadcasts, all he read was the Japanese American newspaper in Los Angeles,
The Rafu Shimpo
. Yuki went on to explain that the newspapers in Japan, along with the politicians, were in a sense at war with this issue. “Some maintain that the women went along willingly to make money. That they
were prostitutes.”

Mas frowned. That grandmother in the Korean jacket looked about his age. What fifteen-, sixteen-year-old would volunteer for such a miserable fate? He felt sick to his stomach.

“On Itai-
san
's calendar on this computer, it says he was supposed to meet someone after the first Japan-Korea game. He didn't say who, but he wrote that it was related to a ‘book publisher.'”

A publisher about the
ianfu
?

“This is not something to take lightly. You should see what these people write on the internet,” Yuki added. “The mayor of Nagasaki was shot some years ago by a nationalistic fanatic. You never know what some of these people will do.”

Mas felt shivers go down his spine.

“But he wasn't killed,” the reporter clarified.

And that's supposed to make me feel better?
Mas was beginning to regret agreeing to help Yuki in the first place.

“Some files in here have been erased, too,” Yuki said, looking at the laptop screen. “There's an empty folder called ‘
Gurippu
.' I wonder what that's about.”

Maybe “grip” in English?

Yuki was on the same wavelength. “Maybe Itai was looking into baseball-bat grips. I'm not sure. He was a diehard baseball fan, though. Came out for spring training to see all the Japanese players on the major league teams. Sometimes he toured the minor leagues and even the independent leagues.”

“Hawaii too?”

Yuki closed Itai's laptop. “I know what you're getting at,
Ojisan
. Neko had nothing to do with Itai. Or his death.”

Since they got to Dodger Stadium a few hours early, Mas had no problem getting a special press parking space. As he got out of the car, he noticed Yuki bringing Itai's laptop. “Youzu takin' dat wiz you?”

“I can't let anything happen to it.”

Mas had a very bad feeling about the computer. It held secrets that even empires might kill for.

Once they were on the press-box level, Yuki said, “Go get something to eat, Arai-
san
. I'll be back soon.”

In the distance, Mas saw the two detectives walking toward them, and he was only too happy to avoid another encounter with them.

Mas had actually eaten at Dave's Diner, the press-box dining room for special people, once with Lloyd and Mari. He felt funny going in there, but he had an official pass, compliments of
Nippon Series
. He just wished he wasn't wearing a polo shirt advertising a pesticide that kills snails.

Pork chops were on the menu, and Mas chose that, along with mashed potatoes and lentil soup. Having come straight from Japan, Chizuko had been a terrible cook at the beginning of their marriage, but she eventually mastered potatoes and red meat. Pork chops were her specialty. He was savoring Chef Dave's version when a thin giant sat down at his table. It was the pitcher with the strange Arabian-sounding name. Soji Zahed.

“So you're a reporter, too,” Zahed said. Close up, he
looked more Japanese to Mas. It wasn't only the curve of his eyes but the shape of his mouth. And, of course, he was also speaking impeccable Japanese, much better than Mas's.

“No, I just drive,” Mas said.

“Oh. But you knew Itai-
san
.”

Mas shook his head.

“Your friend has Itai-
san
's computer, I noticed. Where did he get it?”

“You familiar with Itai's computer?”

“Well, he had that funny sticker on the back of it. It had the Japanese characters ‘
teia
.'”

Depending on how it was written,
teia
could have different meanings. Zahed borrowed a pen and napkin from the kitchen staff and wrote it down for Mas.

Mas studied it.
Curious
. It could mean “emperor of Asia” or something like that. He didn't notice that writing on the back of the laptop. He'd have to check.

“Police finished taking a look,” Mas finally told him. “Why, you worried about it?”

“No, nothing like that. Just wondered if they know what happened to Itai-
san
. He was my friend.”

Mas was astonished. How could this mixed-race teen have anything in common with a
kuso
-head like Itai?

“I went to his same high school in Kyoto. Ryukokudai Heian. It's a baseball powerhouse.”

Even Mas had heard of it. His own school in Hiroshima had its own impressive baseball reputation, always performing well in Japan's World Series for high school students. But the Kyoto school, he grudgingly admitted, had an even
more stellar reputation.

“He's been writing about me ever since junior high school.”

Mas didn't know quite what to make of Itai. He had a terrible personality yet he was obviously a
hatarakimono
, hard worker. He had always admired anyone who put sweat into his job, no matter what it might be.

“Not everyone was supportive. You know how Japan is. Hard to be a
hafu
over there. Especially as a kid.”

Mas didn't ask Zahed what his non-Japanese half was. None of his business, he figured.

But Zahed volunteered the information anyway. “My dad's Iranian. Operates a little corner store in Kyoto with my mother. Itai-
san
knew my parents. They were shocked by his death. I still can't believe it.”

Mas wondered if Yuki knew of Itai's close relationship with Zahed. He hadn't mentioned it before.

Just then the Latino photographer wearing his trademark vest joined them at the table. He had a pile of lettuce on his plate, which was a surprise. Mas would have guessed that the large-framed man was a cheeseburger-type guy.

The photographer sensed what Mas was thinking. “Diabetes runs in the family,” he said with a sad smile.

“Well, see you later then,” Zahed said to Mas in Japanese and got up.

“Tall guy.” The photographer watched Zahed leave before taking a bite of his lettuce. After a few chews and a wipe of his mouth with a napkin, he said, “It's been a wild series, hasn't it? Just spoke to the detectives. For the second time.”

“Oh, yah.” Mas hoped they wouldn't find him again.

“Told them the exact same thing that I told them the first time. I saw him take his pill. Right before he collapsed. Took it right out of his suit pocket.”

Sunny was telling the truth then. Itai carried his pills with him.

“He told me he always takes his medicine at the same time. Seven o'clock in the morning, Tokyo time. Which makes it, what, around three here in L.A. We ate together that afternoon. In this room, in fact. Nobody seemed to want to sit with him. Not well liked by other reporters, I guess.”

“Whatchu talk about?”

“Nothing much, really. Our health problems. He did ask me some questions.”

Mas finished his soup but kept dipping his spoon in the empty bowl.

“About why I worked for a Japanese American newspaper. And that he was curious about the Japanese over here. The Nisei specifically. He wanted to know where their allegiances would fall. Japan or America. America, I told him.”

Mas hadn't picked up a napkin, so he wiped his mouth with the side of his hand.

“Are you Nisei?” the photographer asked.

Mas nodded. “I'zu Nisei. Kibei Nisei.”

“The ones who were born here and went to Japan for their education. I know about you guys.”

Mas wasn't sure what he was insinuating by saying “you guys.”

“So what do you think? Am I right?” Another bite of
lettuce.

Mas didn't know why people asked these kinds of questions. What did it matter whether he felt American or not? Didn't change anything. He was more interested in what happened the day that Itai died.

“So after he eat, heezu orai?”

“Well, I had to get going to check the flash on my camera. One of the baseball players actually came by to talk to him when I was leaving. He didn't seem too happy.”

Mas jerked his head up. Which player?

“It was the Japanese guy with the blond dye job. What's his name? Tanji?”

Yuki never made it to Dave's Diner. Mas got tired of waiting; besides, he felt like he stuck out like a sore thumb. After the photographer left, there were only bigshots at the other tables. Bigshots who Mas revered. It was surreal to even be in the same room as them.

Mas stumbled out of the restaurant and almost crashed into another old man. Smitty Takaya. “Mas! Good to see you again. Looking forward to the game this afternoon?” Smitty looked exactly the same as the time Mas had met him. Dazzling white hair, perfect dentures, and an erect back. He could have been in a television commercial for hemorrhoid suppositories or retirement annuities.

Other books

Hitting Back by Andy Murray
Phoebe Finds Her Voice by Anne-Marie Conway
To Love a Lord by Christi Caldwell
The British Billionaire's Baby by Cristina Grenier
Fanny by Erica Jong
Gestapo by Edward Crankshaw
Little Square of Cloth by Sean Michael


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024