Linnear 03 - White Ninja (60 page)

Read Linnear 03 - White Ninja Online

Authors: Eric van Lustbader

Tags: #Fiction, #Action & Adventure

The tanjian kept their silent vigil, careful not to interfere, waiting for some sign of the emeralds. What else was there to do?

Zhao Hsia had been telling the truth at the falls. His grandfather, and So-Peng's, was slowly dying an agonizing death. He needed the power of the emeralds, which were like a magnifying glass or a mantra engine: they absorbed energy from the kokoro membrane and stored it. Within those emeralds was the energy of the millennia, growing, bouncing from perfect facet to perfect facet, from gem to identical gem, the repetitions expanding like ripples upon a lake.

The number nine was significant since that number of emeralds set up a complex three-dimensional figure whose angular harmonics actually multiplied the energy from the kokoro membrane. On the other hand, any number below nine would create another figure, whose discordant angles would actually attack the membrane, robbing it of energy, and eventually threatening its very fabric...

'What would happen if the kokoro membrane were to shred?' Shisei asked.

Senjin looked at her. 'Death would happen,' he said.

'Its tone would permeate the silent echoes we hear and which guide us. Death and more death.'

Shisei was seeing someone. It came as a shock to Senjin that time hadn't stood still while he had been away in Zhuji. He was so self-absorbed that it was difficult to believe that events were not held in limbo when he was not there to affect their outcome.

Senjin never said a word against Shisei's boyfriend; he didn't have to. She could feel the oiled steel of his aura darkening like the fall of night, contracting like an adder whenever Jeiji was around.

Jeiji was in his last year of law at Todai, the country's most prestigious university. He was in the top ten in his class. He was the lucky beneficiary of two of the most important bonds in Japanese society, gakubatsu, between classmates and kyodobatsu, between townsfolk: his father went to school with the law school dean, his mother came from the same prefecture in Nara-as the head of Tokyo's most prestigious law firm. This man had already pledged to hire Jeiji upon his graduation from Todai. And Shisei was in love with Jeiji. Jeiji had everything, except what he needed most - Senjin's approval.

Jeiji openly adored Shisei. Of course. This was a prerequisite for any relationship she might enter into. The adoration she felt at a distance when the rich spotlights fell upon her must be replicated in more intimate detail, so that she could run her hands over its each and every contour in order to satisfy herself that it really did exist.

Jeiji was made to order for this role. When she met him, he had been devoted to only one thing: his career. In no time, he had become devoted to Shisei as well. But this was not enough for her. This was perfectly clear to Senjin, although he doubted very much whether it was to his sister. She still saw herself in that exalted

virginal state of childhood that existed for them both in Asama; she could not imagine that she had yet within her the seeds of good and evil, let alone the power to wield them. Senjin, of course, knew better.

He watched with studied interest Jeiji's slow slide into wretchedness. Oh, he was sure that Shisei did not fully understand what effect the projection of her will, that seductive coil of perfume, had on someone such as Jeiji. In fact, Senjin became convinced that she did not even know she was flexing her aura each time Jeiji was drawn deeper under her spell.

Jeiji's disintegration, the utter dissolution of his sense of himself, came as a delight to Senjin, especially because he saw the young man as a threat, an interruption of the psychic continuity he sought with his sister. And it pleased his heightened sense of irony that he needed to do nothing but sit back and watch Shisei destroy that which she coveted.

Thus it came as a shock to her when Jeiji was thrown out of Todai for his failure to attend classes, hand in the requisite number of papers, participate in the highly intensive series of debates on matters of law that were an integral part of the senior year curriculum.

Was it possible that Shisei did not understand that her beloved Jeiji could only be in one place at once, that if he were with her he could not be at school or studying or writing his papers? Apparently not. And Jeiji, for his part, had given up all interest in the law. His adoration of Shisei was now slavish; the more he gave her, the more she wanted.

Senjin observed with fascination her sucking him dry. She was as wanton, as reckless, as a whore. She flaunted her gift without even knowing it. She was as unconscious about this as Haha-san had been about aspects of herself. The parallel was striking, and the more Senjin thought about it, the more convinced he was that he must save Shisei from herself.

That was when he decided to kill Jeiji.

Well, not just kill him - that would have been useless; worse, foolish - but to do it in a meaningful manner, a manner which would bring Shisei out of childhood, which would open her eyes to the reality of what she was, and what her gift might cause her to become. After all, he thought (unconsciously, inevitably taking on the mantle of Haha-san), it is my duty. Who will take care of her if I fail to?

And what was going through Shisei's mind during this time? Was she as oblivious to her effect on Jeiji as she seemed to be? Or was she deliberately blinding herself to the truth of her needs?

What she thought of during this time was neither Jeiji nor Senjin. The impending storm of them both being in her life was beyond her powers of observation.

Her mind was dominated by the monster of Haha-san - whom she loved, whom she still considered running to; climbing upon her lap, pressing her face into the pillows of her breasts, to listen to that slowly beating heart, to close her eyes and to sleep in blissful silence.

And yet, like a scrim pulled across a theatre stage, the bursts of Haha-san's emotional violence followed her, pulsing in the darkness of her bedroom, filling the end of the night with pieces of the enigma, bludgeoning her with questions she could not answer: How did I fail her? How could I have pleased her? Does she love me? Does she love me?

And each time an unanswerable question assailed her, in reflex she asserted the sinuous perfumed coils, drawing them ever tighter around Jeiji.

Long before Senjin. decided to kill Jeiji, Shisei was bent on destroying him, but how could she know that? She would not have believed anyone - even Senjin, had he been foolish enough to point it out to her - had they told her. Would she understand that she needed to destroy

Jeiji, who adored her so, in order to save herself from the wintry monster of Haha-san which still blew through her heart, shutting down a part of her each time it asserted itself? Not yet. But soon.

Senjin determined that if Jeiji's death were to serve a purpose, it would have to serve Tau-tau; it would have to excite the energy at the membrane kokoro, the heart of things.

As he set to work, it was not lost on Senjin that Jeiji was in many ways the perfect sacrifice. He was, if not a physical virgin, pure in other ways. His adoration of Shisei was without ulterior motive. When Shisei had met him, he had been a rather arrogant young man, as certain of his superiority to others as he was of his place in the world. Shisei's sinuous coils had stripped him of his arrogance, of all artifice, in fact; ironically, at the edge of destruction he was a more virtuous human being.

. When Senjin killed him, he was as unprotesting as a lamb. Until the last, he was immersed in his adoration of Shisei, oblivious to any and all unrelated stimuli.

Senjin had spent much time deciding on the moment of Jeiji's demise. But, in retrospect, he thought that perhaps he had failed to take into account the effect it might have on his sister.

Senjin had a perfect view of working limbs and pumping buttocks as he climbed upon the bed in which they were industriously making love. He would never forget the look in Shisei's eyes when he wrenched Jeiji's head right around, snapping the third and fourth cervical vertebrae. He was reminded of saplings snapping in a stiff wind.

Shisei's eyes were pale, which they always were when she was making love, and they stared into Senjin's with a combination of shock, disbelief and horror. It was this last that, later, made Senjin think that he had made a mistake in his timing.

The truth was in this he had been selfish, wanting this

much for himself, to interrupt forever the one act Jeiji could perform with Shisei that was forbidden him. It was a dream he created out of smoke and spun thought, as he pushed Jeiji off Shisei, rising over her so that his shadow fell across her naked body, entering its mysterious hollows as his body could not.

Shisei covered herself as if he were some leering stranger, and this hurt him terribly, so that now he tasted only his own bile in his mouth, and he considered giving it up, throwing away this opportunity to gather power to him, to teach his sister about herself, to force her to grow up.

She spat in his face, and Senjin hit her. Then, because she was becoming unaccountably hysterical, he bound her wrists behind her back, her ankles with strips ripped from her own silk pyjamas.

The chanting of the ancient runes had already begun in his head. Now he spoke them, the repetitions turning the air dark, setting it vibrating. He worked to prepare them both for what was to come, as Shisei stared wide-eyed at him, shouted invective at him. That was repetition, too, and served his purpose, so he did not hit her again. Besides, she would, soon enough, understand what she might have become without his intervention.

This was at a time before he had forged his own blades. He used a factory-made knife, kneeling before Jeiji's corpse and ritually stripping the flesh from it. Shisei's eyes bulged, she made little choked clicking noises in her throat. Then she vomited. But she could not avert her gaze, could not even voice her opposition to what he was doing.

It had already gone too far. She, too, close to kokoro, felt the reverberations as its energy was excited, bouncing off the membrane at the heart of things, creating the presence in the room that was power, that was much more

than power, that made them what they were, more than the others all around them.

Gasping, Shisei slipped her bonds and, as if in a fever, extending across the bloody bed, her muscles flexed in spasm, reached out for Senjin.

They had crossed the boundary that separated those who were aware of kokoro and those who used it. Yet this was not Kshira; nor was it Tau-tau. It was something else, something new, something of their own creation.

On that day in 1980, a severe earthquake hit Japan. Tokyo was its epicentre. The violent paroxysm of the earth took seismologists completely by surprise.

Across the ocean in China, the tanjian elders, locked away in their sanctum in Zhuji, felt the convulsion at kokoro and looked wordlessly at one another.

One, Mubao, especially was filled with dread. He was remembering the casting of the runes, and what the fire-induced cracks on the etched tortoiseshell foretold: A flood, a torrent, a rage of thunder, a detonation of energy. And after the deluge, death. Its tone permeates the silent echoes we hear and which guide us. Death and more death.

BOOK III

Before Dawn/Akegata

The man who fears nothing is as powerful as he who is feared by everyone.

Friedrich von Schiller

SUMMER, PRESENT

Tokyo/Washington/West Bay Bridge/New York

When Nicholas returned home he found that it had been turned into a battlefield. The house and grounds were surrounded by concentric circles of officers from the Tokyo Metropolitan Police Force. They did not recognize him, and so detained him at the outermost ring until someone in a position of authority could be contacted to tell them what to do.

His first thought was for Justine, and his heart froze in his chest. 'Can anyone tell me what's going on?' he asked, but they couldn't, or wouldn't. They just stared at him, with stony, colourless eyes.

The longer they held him here at the perimeter, away from his house, away from knowing what had happened there, whether Justine was safe or... the more agitated he became.

Then he saw Tomi emerging out of the throngs of police officers, and he called out to her. She was heading his way, saw him and hurried up.

'Linnear-san?'

'Hai. You look surprised to see me, Detective.'

'Not surprised; curious. You look different.'

He rubbed the back of his hand over his furry cheek. 'It's the beard or the windburn.'

'And something besides,' Tomi said, peering into his eyes. 'This is a happy moment. Your coming now must surely be a sign from heaven. Your expertise is sorely needed.' She nodded to the men barring Nicholas's way,

and they stepped dutifully aside.

'What's going on here?'

'I will take you to Nangi-san,' Tomi said. 'He's inside the house.'

'My wife,' Nicholas said breathlessly. 'Is she all right? What's happened?'

Tomi glanced at him. 'Every bad thing. But do not fear, your wife is unharmed.'

'Then she's inside with Nangi-san?'

But Tomi was busy threading their way through the phalanxes of policemen. They went up the steps of the engawa, through the door guarded by two officers wearing riot helmets and bullet-proof vests and holding machine pistols.

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