Bad Blood (12 page)

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Authors: Anthony Bruno

Tags: #Suspense

BOOK: Bad Blood
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D'Urso sat back and extended his hands. “Look, Nagai, I can see that you're making yourself sick over this, but the only thing we can do right now is ride this thing out.”

“I don't understand you. You're not even worried.”

“Sure, I'm worried, but we can't overreact. You're assuming that this guy Gibbons knows all about the slaves. But what has he got? A piece of hose and a Coke can. What's that? Nothing. I really don't think we have anything to worry about right now. If he comes back asking more questions, pointing fingers . . . well, then we'll have to figure something out.” He looked up at his brother-in-law. “Won't we, Bobby?”

Francione smirked, his eyes half-closed. “Don't worry, Nagie. I'll take care of this Gibbons guy if it comes to that.”

Nagai's eyes shot open. “Him?” He pointed at the idiot brother-in-law. “You're not serious, are you?”

Francione pointed right back at him and started yelling. “Hey, look, Nagie, you ever wonder why the hell that fed was down at the
docks in the first place? You ever think maybe it was because of that VW they found in the river? Maybe that's what he was investigating. If you and Mishmosh had gotten rid of those two bodies the way you were supposed to, we wouldn't be in this situation now. Maybe it's
your
fault that this Gibbons guy was snooping around.”

“Well, maybe you're right. Maybe it is my fault.” Nagai stood up, went over to the VCR, and ejected the video tape. “If it's my fault, then I'll fix it.
My way
. It's the only honorable thing to do.” He brandished the tape in Francione's face like a knife.

“Hey, come on, sit down, Nagai,” D'Urso said. “We'll handle this. Don't—”

“No, no, no.
I
will take care of this.” He headed for the door with the tape in his hand. The idiot brother-in-law started to get up to stop him, but he shoved the punk back down as he passed by. The nausea had settled down. It was his head that was throbbing now. When the time was right, Mashiro would take care of the brother-in-law, too. D'Urso would never have to know.

Francione yelled after him. “Leave that tape here. You fucking hear me, Nagai? I'm telling you.”

“Nagai,” D'Urso called to him. “Come back and sit down. Can't we just discuss this like rational people?”

Nagai paused out in the hallway. “Let him go, John,” he heard Francione say. “How's he think he's gonna find this guy Gibbons? Call up the FBI and ask for his address? Stupid fuck.”

Nagai heard Francione's snide laugh as he headed for the stairway. Asshole. He thinks he knows everything. He'll see.

The smell was overpowering when he got to the first floor. The noise was deafening, the shuffle of the slaves' feet combined with the machinery as they hustled all those dead chickens through the plant. He felt like he was going to puke again. Walking fast toward the back door, he glanced to his right and saw a procession of whole plucked chickens hanging from stainless-steel hooks dipping down one after the other into a murky bath. Standing over the vat was a slave, staring dead-eyed at him. Half the slave's face was purple with bruises, one eye puffy and closed. It was that kid who burst into the back room the other day, Takayuki, the one Mashiro beat up. Ballsy son of a bitch.

“What're you looking at?” Nagai snapped.

Takayuki kept working, washing those stinking chickens, staring at him with his good eye.

Nagai couldn't take the smell. He turned away and rushed out before he started gagging.

Mashiro sat on his knees on the concrete floor, candlelight flickering over his back, his sword in his belt. Nagai rubbed his cold hands and peered over the samurai's shoulder. A wooden board was laid out in front of him, a jar of Welch's Grape Jelly off to the side. A dark line of jelly had been painted down the length of the board. Mashiro, Mashiro. Nagai shook his head. The samurai was testing his own patience as well as his accuracy with the
katana
. He was waiting for cockroaches, perfectly calm and perfectly still in the cold, darkened warehouse. Nagai stepped closer and could make out the broken bodies of two cockroaches stuck to the jelly. He knew Mashiro could keep this vigil for hours, waiting endlessly for the cautious insects to feel secure enough to come scuttling out again and take the sweet bait.

Nagai quietly found a seat off to the side on a box of Dole Canned Crushed Pineapple and held the camcorder he'd brought in his lap. Two hungry bugs were testing the edges of the board. Mashiro was stone. The roaches climbed the board and stopped, their antennae twitching and twirling. Mashiro was the darkness. The first roach found the jelly, took a reading, and stepped right into it. The second one paused a moment, then dashed for the sugar. They dipped into the jelly like deer at a stream. Suddenly the sword flashed and flashed again. Two more hacked bodies littered the board.

“Very good,” Nagai said in Japanese.

Mashiro didn't turn around. “Never good enough,” he said in a soft grunt.

“Good enough for me. More than good enough.” Mashiro had to be. He was the only one he could turn to now.

Nagai looked into the viewfinder of the camcorder. The FBI man was in there. Like a cockroach in a box. If only the nosy bastard really were in there, dammit. He pressed the rewind/search button and Gibbons started moving jerkily, rushing backward to the Honda, skittering around it like a bug. He went to the trunk, pulled the air hose out of his pocket, and put it back in. Nagai ran the tape back to the point where Gibbons used his keys to open the trunk.

“Mashiro.”

“Hai.”
Mashiro stood up and walked over to his lord. No sign of
pain or stiffness in his legs. And he was three years older than him. Remarkable.

“Here, look at this.” He hit the play button and handed the camcorder to Mashiro who took it and peered into the viewfinder. “That man is a cop, a federal government agent, FBI.”

Mashiro nodded with the camcorder stuck to his face, his other eye squeezed shut. “He's taking an air hose out. He knows about the slaves?”

“He must suspect something.”

Nagai watched Mashiro watching the tape for a few moments. Then Mashiro started nodding again. “Interesting . . .”

“What?”

“This FBI man is not so young. Surprising.”

Nagai shrugged. He thought of Reiko. What's old? What's young?

“Why are you showing me this?” Mashiro asked.

“Study his face. I want you to do something.”

“Kill him?”

“No. According to D'Urso and the punk, it's a bad idea to kill cops in America, especially federal cops.”

Mashiro put down the camcorder and scowled. “A poor excuse for cowardice, I think.”

Nagai shrugged. “Perhaps.”

“D'Urso's people are supposed to take care of the police. That's their part of the bargain.”

“I know, I know, but he doesn't want to do this one. He says killing him would make things worse for us.”

“Do you believe that?”

“I'm not sure.”

“Then why shouldn't I kill this man? Just to make sure.”

Nagai thought about it. “They might be right, I don't know. It's their country, they should know.”

“So if you don't want me to kill this man, why are you showing me this?” Mashiro was so up-front, so matter-of-fact. He was beautiful.

“I want you to find this FBI man and hurt him in such a way that he will never be able to testify in court as to what he found at the docks.”

Mashiro shrugged. “I could cut out his tongue.”

“No. No blades. Hands. Can you do something to him that will
incapacitate him without killing him? You know, like a permanent coma.”

Mashiro nodded once.

Nagai was ashamed to be skeptical, but he had to know what Mashiro had in mind. He had to know that it would work. “What can you do?”

Mashiro held out his hand in the karate blade-hand position and looked at his lord. Then without a word, he walked to the back wall of the warehouse where his ancestor's armor hung. Nagai hadn't noticed it when he came in. It loomed in the flickering candlelight like a ghost. Mashiro gathered up an armful of boards from the floor, clear pine about two feet long and a half-inch thick, just like the one he'd smeared the jelly on. He set them up on two cinder blocks, laying them down one by one. “Ten,” he finally said, pointing to the neat stack.

Nagai went closer and Mashiro took his stance behind the boards, feet apart, slowly taking aim with his blade-hand, touching the top one and raising his hand, touching and raising, touching and raising until he was ready.

“Haaaiii!”

His hand smashed down on the stack . . . and nothing happened.

Panic shot through Nagai's gut. It was the first time he'd ever seen his samurai fail. Fear grabbed him around the neck. “What—?”

Mashiro calmly held up one finger, then proceeded to dismantle the stack of boards, one by one, examining each one. They were all solid, untouched. Nagai felt sick.

Then Mashiro picked up the bottom board. One end dangled at a right angle from the other it was cracked so badly. Splinters jutted from the break. He'd broken the bottom one but left all the others intact. How the hell—? Nagai's smile hurt he was so relieved.

“When I worked for Toyota, there was a young tiger in my division making aggressive maneuvers for rapid career advancement. He rose quickly, and in no time I found him over my shoulder, eyeing the job I was in line for. Our boss liked this young man very much. I had a bad feeling that I would be passed over. One night after work I followed him to a bar and watched him drinking with his young associates. When he went to the bathroom, I followed. He was standing there taking a piss when I delivered this same blow to his neck. For some reason, I was afraid to kill back then. I could do it easily,
but I was afraid to. I don't know why. So I practiced, calibrated my attack so that my hand would fall just short of death. The young tiger became a vegetable. As far as I know, he still lies in a back room in his parents' home, permanently asleep. Four years now. He will never recover. His parents punish themselves needlessly by keeping him. I will silence the FBI man the same way,” Mashiro said. “No killing. No problem.”

Nagai grinned. His throat ached so much he couldn't speak. He knew all along that Mashiro could do it for him. Mashiro could do anything, anything. Who needs the fucking Mafia? Who needs Hamabuchi's fucking hitters? Who needs any of them? A tear squeezed out of the corner of Nagai's eye as he laughed.

“Do you know where I can find this FBI man?” Mashiro asked.

Nagai reached into the pocket of his jacket. “Our man down at the docks that day was smart enough to follow him home. Here's his address.” He handed him a slip of paper.

“Gib-
bons
,” Mashiro pronounced, staring at the paper.

“That's his name. Gibbons.”

Mashiro nodded, looking at the address, sizing up his task. He bowed to Nagai, then turned on his heel and bowed to the shadowy armor hovering over them. “Gib-
bons
. . .
hai
.”

Nagai swallowed over the hard lump in his throat, closed his eyes, and let out his breath.
Sayonara
, Gib-
bons
.

ELEVEN

LORRAINE WAS AT the stove putting the kettle on. Gibbons watched her from the living room. As he zeroed in on her backside, he suddenly remembered that knockout blonde he saw at the Auld Sod the other day with Tozzi. That girl was something, yeah, but she didn't have anything on Lorraine. Not really. Lorraine still had a nice figure, and when she wore her hair down—long, dark, and loose—she was a Renaissance dream. The blonde would be very lucky if she looked this good at fifty-one. Lorraine's hair was tied back tight now, though. She was still pissed at him.

“What's this?” Lorraine said as she pulled down a box from the kitchen cabinet shelf where the Lipton tea bags usually were. Gibbons came in from the living room and looked at the box in her hand. There was a picture of a Mandarin prince on the front. The prince had long, curling fingernails and a thin, curlicue mustache. Lorraine narrowed her eyes skeptically. “Oolong?”

“Yeah, oolong.” The fluorescent bulb under the counter buzzed softly.

“But this is commie tea. You told me you don't buy commie products.”

“You
like commie tea. It's not for me. It's for you.” He put the last of the dirty dishes in the sink and went back into the living room. Damn. He was just trying to be nice, thinking of what she likes for a change. Suspicious of everything, these damn Italians.

The water in the kettle started to simmer. She took down two mugs and made tea for them—oolong for her, Lipton for him—then cut a few slices of the zucchini bread she'd brought from home and laid them on a plate. She was still mad at him for going back to work. She said she wanted to at least be a part of the “decision-making process.” What she meant was that she wanted to have the veto. You're no kid for God's sake, she kept reminding him, you really shouldn't be working out in the field anymore. It's too dangerous. You can't keep up with Michael. It was the friendly reminders like these that made him ignore her and opt for the unilateral decision. She dunked the tea bags a few more times and tossed them into the sink. That's why he was getting the cold shoulder now.

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