“Because he murdered the only eyewitness who can put him on the scene.”
“Yep.”
Han was crestfallen. “So the same circumstantial shit that lets me keep my badge—”
“Gets Joko Daishi off the hook, yeah,” said Mariko. She broke down the rest of the details for him. “In the end, we’re thinking—hoping—the terrorism charges will stick, but that’ll be a federal thing, out of our reach.”
Mariko hadn’t thought it possible for Han to deflate any further. His color drained from him; he seemed to diminish in his chair.
Mariko knew the feeling.
Somehow, through heroic effort, Han mustered the energy to speak. “So what the hell did we accomplish?”
“A lot,” Sakakibara said, “and don’t you dare lose sight of it. You’ve both been at this far too long not to have figured this out by now: we don’t have the luxury of total victories in this profession. You think we’re in Narcotics so we can put a stop to illegal drugs? No. We stop one dealer. Then we go stop another one. If the first guy’s out on the streets already, we go back and get him again. This is the game, boys and girls—the game you signed up to play. And you know what happens next?”
Han’s gaze shifted from Sakakibara to Mariko and back, wavering, just as unstable as his own resolve. But Mariko felt steadier. She’d lost her composure when she couldn’t pull the trigger on Joko Daishi, felt it crumble, shot through with a million fractures. Even her victory over Akahata wasn’t enough to restore it. But Sakakibara’s words were like glue, seeping into the cracks, bleeding deeper into them, finding more, binding it all together, making her stronger.
“I do,” she said. “I know what happens next. Their team gets the ball back. They try to get one by us again. And we block it, again and again.” She looked at her partner. “Narcs, patrolmen, paper pushers, it doesn’t matter. It’s all the same job. We’re goalkeepers, Han. This is what we do.”
Han slumped. “And I was always a baseball guy. I guess I’m not cut out for soccer.”
“Han,” Mariko said, “you know that’s not what I mean. I’m trying to say—”
“I get what you’re saying. But the truth is, this goalie got benched, and now he’s getting reassigned to direct traffic in the parking lot. It’s fine. Seriously. It’s no more than I deserve.”
“Han—”
“No, Mariko. I’m out of the game for a little while. But I guess there are traffic violations in the parking lot too. I don’t know how important they are, but someone’s got to crack down on them.”
“Take the rest of the morning off,” Sakakibara said, as abrupt as ever. He stood up to leave. “Get your heads clear. Then put all this crap behind you. Get it out of your mind so you can do your damn jobs. Frodo, I’ll see you at noon. Han, I guess I’ll see you when I see you.”
“Yes, sir,” Han said. He stood up and gave the lieutenant a deep bow. “Thank you, sir. You taught me everything worth knowing about being a cop.”
“Don’t get weepy on me.”
“Sorry.” Han gathered himself and bowed again. “It’s been an honor, Lieutenant.”
Sakakibara gave him a curt nod and walked out.
Mariko finished her coffee and set it on the table with a loud clack. “Let’s go to my place,” she said. “I have something I want to show you.”
• • •
Han prodded Glorious Victory’s pommel with a single cautious finger. “Whoa. Are you sure you should keep this thing hanging over your bed?”
“What’s the big deal? You’ve been here before. You saw my sword rack.”
“Yeah, but not with the sword in it. I mean, look at the size of that thing.”
Mariko rolled her eyes at him. “That’s not really what I invited you over to see.”
He craned his head under the rack like a plumber peeking under a kitchen sink. “You’re sure these screws can take the weight?”
“What are you, a carpenter now? Just read this, okay?”
She handed him one of Yamada-sensei’s notebooks, with her thumb marking a page referring to Joko Daishi’s iron mask. He reached for it blindly, his eyes still on Glorious Victory Unsought. “Aren’t you afraid it . . . I mean, earthquakes and all . . . seriously, Mariko, hang it somewhere else.”
“Where? Look around this great big penthouse of an apartment and show me another wall long enough to mount that sword.”
Han didn’t have to be a detective to see her point. “Well, I don’t know . . . prop it up in a closet or something.”
“Just look at the notes, will you?”
She explained who Yamada was—who he was to her, who he was to the study of history—and then explained about his notebooks. “See, none of this stuff ever makes it as far as the public eye,” she said, “but I’m telling you, that mask is important.”
“Even though I won’t see a word about it in any history book?”
“Especially because you won’t see it in any history book. I think Yamada-sensei’s Wind and Joko Daishi’s Divine Wind are the same thing, and if I’m right, then they’ve been around for a long, long time. We haven’t seen the last of them, and we haven’t seen the last of that mask.”
Han leafed through the notebook. “Are you for real? A five-hundred-year-old ninja clan in Tokyo?”
“Maybe, yeah.”
Han’s face lit up. “That is so cool.”
“Men,” she said, accidentally reverting to English. “It doesn’t matter how old you get; you’re all just eight-year-old boys.”
“Huh?”
“Never mind.” Exasperation clung to her like a wet cloth. At least he was studying the notebook a little more closely now. Not much progress, but it was progress. “Help me look through all these boxes,” she said. There was no need to point at them; they were stacked four and five high along the back wall of her bedroom, taking up a lot of valuable floor space. “I need another pair of eyes on this stuff.”
“Why?”
“Don’t you get it? I should have seen the connection to Glorious Victory. I should have remembered it the second I saw the mask. If my memory was a little better, maybe they never would have stolen my sword in the first place.”
Han looked up from the notebook. “You can’t beat yourself up over this kind of thing. If your crackpot ninja theory is right, then there was nothing you could do to keep them from breaking in.”
He stopped himself for a second—maybe to think of something more comforting to say. Mariko could have used it. But no. “I mean, can you imagine what kind of totally badass tools they must have invented over the last five hundred years? Relocking a door chain from the outside would be, like, the tenth coolest thing they could do.”
Great. The eight-year-old boy was back.
“In case you haven’t noticed, Han, I’m feeling pretty fallible right now. I can’t afford to overlook details like this anymore. We’ve got a cult running around our city with high explosives. If these notes can help us find them, then I need someone else reading them, someone to help me connect the dots—”
“And now that I’m not working as a detective, my workweek is about to get a whole lot shorter, neh?”
Mariko sighed with relief. She felt the tension seep out of her shoulders. They were thinking along the same lines again, and that was a blessed thing. “I figured maybe a couple of nights a week?”
Han flipped through Yamada’s notes again. “I don’t know,” he said. “Looks like pretty dry reading.”
“Maybe over a few beers?”
“Getting better.”
“I’ll give you the play-by-play of my goaltending duties.”