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Authors: Peter Tieryas

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BOOK: United States of Japan
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The electricity ravaged him, stretching out the aches in his body that were dying hundreds of cells at a time, predigested in frozen bits and pieces, warehoused and packaged into caskets. The minutes and years and seconds were excised into pieces of chalk and exhaust pipes that failed to pass through the ravages of age. Division of the ritualized itinerary of the persecuted. It was a sandbox devoted to the minutiae of agony, where the ruler and abacus reigned as the emperor and empress of an antiquity in some misbegotten golden age of misery, stacks of spiraling uncertainty as implacable as a pillaged mausoleum. Ben knew he couldn’t die. Not yet. Not without keeping his promise to Claire. Her faith was a million firecrackers stuffed into one big explosive setting off at once even though there wasn’t a special occasion, her presence being cause enough. She channeled her beliefs into the game.

“I’m as guilty as my father,” Claire had said. “I have to die.”

“How are you guilty? You did nothing wrong.”

“Even after I found out the truth, I didn’t do anything to bring justice for Mom.”

“None of us did. We’re the ones who are guilty.”

“If you read half the things I uncovered about San Diego,” Claire said, “you would not be able to sleep.”

“That’s why I choose not to read most of it,” Ben admitted. “This game is bigger than that.”

“Is it? No one’ll even play it.”

“I’ll make sure it gets out there,” Ben assured her. “I’ll put it in every game I censor and, since I’ve approved them already, no one else is going to check them until it’s too late.”

“What’s going to happen the morning the Tokko comes knocking on your door?”

Ben uneasily touched his wrist. “I’ll pray to your Christian God and get my poison capsule ready.”

“Not funny.”

“I’m not joking. Besides, they’ll most likely blame your father.”

“He’s going to be furious. All he cares about is his legacy.”

“This’ll end it.”

“Not completely,” Claire said. “I’ll make sure I’m the last of his line.”

“You don–”

She stopped him. “What about my father?”

“What about him?”

“You have to deal with him after I die.”

“What do you mean?” he asked.

“You know what I mean. Promise me.”

“I’ll never promise that.”

“Ben.”

“Forget it.”

“Ben! Promise me.”

“He’s your father and my sempai. How can you even a…” But before he finished his question, he knew the answer. “This is unfair of you.” At the same time, he did not want her guilty of her father’s death.

“You’ll do it?” she asked, even though from the way she looked at him, she knew she already had her answer.

Was it his resentment at having been forced to agree to do the unthinkable that had led to all their ensuing arguments? Shortly after, she told him she was leaving Los Angeles and they never talked again.

The currents increased. His body felt like an earthquake with the epicenter at his feet. It was a constant trembling that triggered fibrillations in his heart as well as delusions. There was a point where pain stopped hurting and became a condition, where the aching became a drug. He swore he was at a carnival and that the voltages were invoking memories. The alternating currents were ripping Lichtenberg figures in his calves, muscular contractions brainwashed by the insurrection of neuropathy. Someone pulled the plug.

                              8:46PM

Ben felt like a crumpled wrap. It took a few calls from the voice above to wake him.

“Wake up, Ishimura.”

“G-general?”

“Odd to meet again under these circumstances,” Mutsuraga said, in his deep commanding voice. “You don’t look so good.”

“You look old, sir,” Ben replied.

“I wanted to see you before they killed you.”

Ben was strapped into his chair. They’d removed the bowl of water and no one else was in the Congressional hall. Mutsuraga still looked like a bear, only one that was older and more domineering. His brows were gray and he wore the chimera-like clothing of all the Americans, rather than the uniform Ben was accustomed to seeing him in. He still had his traditional samurai sword though and the sheath was meticulously pristine.

“Why are you here?”

“You should know, sir,” Ben said, feeling tired, anger giving him a second wind.

“I’m no longer your commanding officer, Ishimura. Did you take care of Claire’s funeral rites?”

“You’re acting like you’re the savior here, when you’re the one who caused all this to happen in the first place.”

“San Diego was going to happen, regardless of what I did. Tokyo Command could not accept sedition of that kind.”

“Your personal jealousy gave them the excuse to wipe out the city.”

“This city was doomed before I was ever here. Tokyo Command wanted to make an example out of them to show the Nazis we meant business,” the general said.

“The Nazis?”

“Don’t you view your own simulations? The Nazis have wanted to take over the western half of the Americas, especially Texas, for the oil lines. The Empire needed Texas, even if it was only to prevent the Germans from getting their hands on all that fuel. The Nazis wanted to see how we’d handle San Diego. If we would have let it spiral out of control, they would have known we were weak.”

“Funny you still refer to the Empire as
we
.”

“You always were a smart ass.”

“Is that what you call people who make smart observations?” Ben asked.

“It’s what I call people who make pointless observations to make themselves feel smart.”

“What do you call people who are responsible for the massacre of an entire city?”

“You’re calling me responsible?”

“You knew how volatile things were,” Ben stated. “Did you think the George Washingtons could blindly accept the death of one of their leaders?”

“You and Wakana insist I did what no man could fathom. This is my wife you’re talking about.”

“I was there when it happened.”

“So was I,” Mutsuraga said.

“You want to deny responsibility, fine. But I know what really happened. This farce disgusts me.”

“Not so shy with your words anymore, are you?”

“I kissed your ass back then because I had no choice,” Ben said honestly.

“I gave you an opportunity that you wouldn’t have had otherwise. You took it voluntarily.”

“I didn’t know what kind of man you were.”

“You wanted to see your game out there,” Mutsuraga said stridently. “You got it.”

“And I assisted a madman take the reins.”

“Now I’m a madman?”

“You’re hiding with the same people you helped destroy.”

“The Empire can’t last forever,” Mutsuraga stated. “This is a perfect base of operations for the Americans and I can help them.”

“Wakana had a potential compromise for them ten years ago when it would have mattered.”

“Why didn’t you object then? Why didn’t you expose me when you had the chance?”

“I’ve asked myself that question every day since,” Ben said.

“Wakana was smart. He kept his mouth shut. You were too. Got you a comfortable job, didn’t it?”

“Couldn’t you have waited until after the compromise?”

“To know the woman I loved betrayed me for one of them.” Mutsuraga became meditative. “She used to sing every night. I was so consumed by my work, I got annoyed and told her to be quiet. I should have listened to her more back then.”

“Are you looking for redemption?”

“I had no idea things would turn out the way they did,” the general said.

“You wanted as many of them to suffer as possible,” Ben accused him. “You made sure of it.”

“What did you do to my game?” Mutsuraga asked.

“It’s not your game,” Ben said, before coughing blood on his chest.

“You set it up. I’ll give you that. But since then I’ve changed it, molded it in my image. I’ve created new worlds, designed games that have taken gamers to places they could never imagine. That abomination you’ve created, the
USA
that everyone is saying I did – is that your revenge?”

“Why do you think it was me who did it?”

“You think I wouldn’t recognize your handiwork? Your utopian vision of what America was. You paint a world that never existed. America, land of the brave and the free? Hardly. They arrested loyal Japanese because of their race and, when the war started going bad for them, they tortured tens of thousands of people, executed a quarter of those in the camps. You give people a false dream through the
USA
.”

“And you gave them the worst massacre in their history.”

“I will pay for what I’ve done. I’ve already had everything taken away from me.”

“I doubt that.”

“That game has spread everywhere and the Empire thinks I made it. I had to leave everything behind to come here.”

“It was your daughter who designed the game.”

“What?”

“Claire created the
USA
.”

Mutsuraga glowered incredulously. “H-how’s that possible? Why did she make it?”

“Atonement for her father’s sins.”

Mutsuraga flinched. “She knew about Meredith?”

Ben noticed the admission by implication even if the general didn’t. “She’s a genius at the portical. Of course she knew. She found out everything she could about the case and demanded the rest from me.”

“You told her?”

“She already knew,” Ben replied.

“But you confirmed it?”

“Yes.”

“And you helped her make the game?”

Ben didn’t feel the need to reply to the obvious. Mutsuraga’s hands were behind his back as he paced. Ben took deep breaths because his migraine was getting worse and it was hard for him to focus.

“All this time I thought it was you,” the general said. “The
USA
has all your marks, which, to be honest, surprised me. I thought you the most loyal soldier, that you would die for the Empire. But Claire – I never would have suspected she harbored so much anger and discontent, or that she was so naive.”

“She believed in something. Unlike you, using your power for personal vendetta.”

“I entrusted her to you because I had to send her away and you were the only person
she
trusted. I thought you could take good care of her.”

“I tried, but she was too much like her father.”

“What do you mean?” he asked.

“Impossible to anticipate.”

Mutsuraga grunted, though Ben didn’t know if it was acknowledgment or annoyance. “You shouldn’t have helped her make it.”

“If I hadn’t helped her, she would have been arrested long ago and put to death.”

“Did you love her?” he wanted to know.

“I acted as her custodian,” Ben said. “And honored her wishes as my senpai’s daughter.”

“There was nothing be–”

“Nothing,” Ben immediately affirmed. “You shouldn’t even have to ask. I would never betray your trust that way.”

“I heard rumors.”

“You heard wrong. I loved her as a sister. She had boyfriends and I made sure they treated her well.”

“I’m sorry that I brought this up.”

Ben tested the rope that held him in place, but it was too tight. “One illicit relationship already caused too much death and destruction.”

“We were going to fight that war to the bitter end whether I was there or not.”

“And we, as officers, should have fought against that. If the Germans attacked us, the Americans would have helped us against the Nazis. No one wanted to be under their rule. But because of what we did in San Diego, we’re no different from them.”

“Whose side are you on?”

“Not yours,” Ben said.

“If you came here just to accuse me, stop wasting my time.”

“I came here for you.”

“What do you mean?” Mutsuraga asked.

“I promised Claire your head.”

“What for?”

“For her mother’s death.”

Mutsuraga gripped the arms of the chair. The veins on his forehead bulged and his eyes tightened into slits. He looked ugly and vicious, impetus clashing against the convoluted mess of revelation. “She hated me that much?”

“No,” Ben answered. His vision was blurry and it looked like the general’s head was double its size. “She loved you. She couldn’t forgive you for what you did, but she couldn’t hate you either.”

“And that’s why you’re here for my head instead of taking care of her funeral rites?”

“This is part of her last will.”

“Then she really committed suicide?”

“She wanted the Mutsuraga line to end with her. When I tried to convince her not to, she left.”

“Why didn’t you tell me any of this?” Mutsuraga asked, this time not as a soldier or commanding officer, but as a father.

“What could I have said? Your daughter wants you dead because you executed her mother?”

Mutsuraga paced again. “I’ve spent the last few months with these Americans. They’re a strange breed. They believe in strange things. But I can understand their allure. The world would have been an interesting place if they hadn’t lost the war, even if we would have been their slaves. The USJ army has sent an invasion force to attack the GWs. They’re on the border of San Diego and they’ve already started their assault.”

Ben remembered Kujira’s report earlier. “What’s the point?”

“To celebrate the anniversary, show Tokyo they’re still in control. But they’ll be defeated.”

“How?”

“The
USA
game has an open version of the simulator.”

“The one we use?”

“A more advanced version. I’ve helped set up the parameters to predict USJ tactics. Plus someone – I assume you? – set up multiple scenarios on how they could attack the Americans based on strategies we devised long ago as potential threats.”

Multiple stages were based on strategic analyses Ben had recorded with Claire that were literally the USJ’s worst tactical nightmares. “I updated them with the new defensive grid.”

“A damn fine job you did too,” Mutsuraga said. “These George Washingtons are going to give the Empire a beating they won’t forget.”

A group of Americans entered the room.

“George Washington has requested your presence at the front,” one stated.

Mutsuraga put his hand on Ben’s shoulder. “I tried to have you spared, but these Americans are insistent on their quaint rituals. They’re going to baptize you with electricity so at least you won’t remember any of this. I’m sorry you weren’t able to keep your promise to Claire.”

“I’m not dead yet.”

Mutsuraga patted Ben on the shoulder. “Goodbye, Ishimura.”

Mutsuraga followed the Americans out. Three others brought the electrocution machine and a bowl of water to continue their baptism. Their faces were a nebulous haze and his consciousness was blurring. All that electricity had caused the portical of his brain to break into disparate pieces and he was unable to retain coherent thought.

“Lincoln said to finish him off. Raise the voltage to three thousand.”

“I wish barbecued flesh didn’t stink so much. My lady won’t come within an inch of me until I shower like a hundred times.”

“Your girlfriend wouldn’t come within an inch of you even if you sho–”

A spray of gunfire ricocheted around Ben and a laser beam melted the face of the American in front of him. The two others began to run, but were shot down.

“I’m sorry it took me so damn long to find you,” Akiko said, as she hurried to his aid. Behind her, there were several dead Americans. “The–” She gasped when she saw his blackened flesh. “Our soldiers are attacking San Diego. They nearly shot me.”

“They’re heading into a trap. We have to get Mutsuraga.”

“You’re in no condition. The–”

“I have to get him!” Ben cut her off.

“Can you even stand on your feet?”

Akiko loosened Ben’s rope. He stumbled to the ground, unable to keep his balance. He tried to rise, but was too weak. His arms and legs were an electrocuted nightmare of ash baked on flesh.

“Give me your arm,” Akiko ordered.

“Why?”

“Just give it to me!”

Akiko unlatched the syringe in her pack, searched for a vein on Ben’s arm. She injected him with her last capsule of steroidal enhancers. It took a minute before energy swelled through his body. The hurt was muted, suppressed by chemicals that spurred hormonal growth and inhibited the pain receptors.

“Do you have the portical I gave you?” he asked.

Akiko handed it to him. Right as she did, someone fired at them. Both took cover behind the chair, though it didn’t provide much protection. Akiko let loose a huge burst from her laser, aiming as best she could. She killed the assailant, but she cringed, her shoulder muscles all tensed up.

Another GW entered and fired. Akiko fired at him, but the pain in her shoulder caused her to shake and miss. Fortunately, the shot hit the ceiling, causing part of it to fall. It provided enough of a reprieve for them to find better cover through a doorway and into a room without a window – a dead end. As soon as they entered, a volley of bullets poured in their direction. Akiko’s elbows were bleeding and the gun arm appeared loose, the muscles having torn. She’d been shot on the way in. Ben accessed the portical, trying to recollect the codes for the missiles guarding the building. He wished his brain cells hadn’t been addled because he couldn’t remember them.

“Ishimura,” Akiko called.

“What?”

“You need to help me prop my arm up.”

“Why?”

“I think I broke a bone because I can’t lift it.”

The gun was very heavy and Ben wondered how she had been able to carry it this far. He raised it in the general direction of the GWs and she winced, biting her tongue. A bone cracked and more muscles tore. Akiko ignored the pain and fired. The recoil caused both of them to stumble back. Ben peeked out the door, but couldn’t determine how many of them were left. He heard them yelling to each other and presumed they were going to try to flank them. Bullets continued their diatribe. Ben searched the portical again and tracked the missiles he’d seen earlier by manually searching for older kikkai connections, ones that wouldn’t show up on automatic searches anymore. He found one with an antiquated designation number, a series of codes he remembered from a decade ago. He was able to disrupt the password easily and take control of the guidance system. There were two automobiles within proximity of Congress leaving at a fast pace. He released the trigger on both, then aimed another missile back at the building, finding the conglomerate of human heat signatures opposite of them. He fired and said to Akiko, “We need to get outside.”

BOOK: United States of Japan
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