A Lonely Resurrection
shook her head as though she couldn’t believe it.
“Oh, merda.”
“Tell me what happened.”
She looked at me. “They came for me at the club tonight. They told me I had to leave with them but wouldn’t say why. I was really scared. They made me take them here, up to my apartment. Murakami had a dog with him. He told me he would turn it on me if I didn’t do exactly what he wanted.”
She looked at me, afraid, I thought, of what I might be thinking.
“It’s okay,” I said. “Keep going.”
“He told me he knew I’d been seeing you outside the club, that he knew I had a way to contact you. He told me to call you and ask you to come over.”
“He was probably bluffing,” I said. “Maybe the bugs picked it up when you gave me your email address that first night, and he played on that. Or maybe Yukiko sensed something and told him. It doesn’t matter.”
She nodded. “He asked me what language we used when we were together. I told him mostly English. His English isn’t so good, but he told me if he heard anything wrong, anything that sounded like a warning, he would feed me to the dog. He was listening right next to me. I was afraid if I tried to warn you, you might say something back and he would know what I had done. But I tried to tell you, in a way you wouldn’t notice or comment on right away. Did you notice?”
I nodded. “‘Would love to,’” I said, pronouncing it the way she had.
“Sim.
I’m sorry I couldn’t do more. I was too scared. He would have known.”
I smiled. “That was perfect,” I said. “It was good thinking.
Obrigado.”
I was cradling my wrist in front of me and she looked at it. “What happened to your arm?” she asked.
“Murakami’s dog.”
“Jesus! Are you all right?”
I looked at my forearm. The leather jacket had kept the animal’s teeth from breaking the skin, but the area was purple and badly swollen and I thought something might be broken.
“I’ll be okay,” I said. “It’s you I’m worried about. There was a triple murder outside your building just now. As soon as someone finds one of the bodies, which isn’t going to be hard to do, the police are going to subpoena the security tapes from every building in the area. They’ll see you getting escorted by a guy with a white dog, the same white dog that’s getting cold now with its master a few meters from your building. You’re going to have a lot of questions to answer.”
She looked at me. “What should I do?”
“If you get picked up, tell the truth. You won’t want to mention that you opened the door just now—it’ll make you look complicit. But don’t deny that someone came up here and tried to get in. They’re going to see me on the security tapes, although I was careful to hide my face.”
She nodded. “Okay.”
“But the police aren’t your real problem. Your real problem is going to be the associates of the men who came here tonight. They’re going to come after you, either for revenge, or as a way to get to me, or as both.”
The color drained from her caramel skin. “He would have killed me tonight, wouldn’t he,” she said.
I nodded. “If I had shown up as he hoped, they would have killed me and then eliminated you as a potential witness and loose end. My not showing up made you less of a liability. In their minds, killing you became not worth the trouble. It’s that simple.”
“Meu Deus,”
she said, swallowing. She was pale.
“Pack a bag,” I said. “Do it quickly. Take a cab to Shinjuku or Shibuya, someplace where there are still people around. Get another cab there. Stay at a love hotel, someplace with automated check-in. Use cash, no credit cards. First thing in the morning, take a train to Nagoya or Osaka, someplace with a major airport. Get the first flight out. It doesn’t matter where it’s going. Once you’re out of the country, you’ll be safe. You can find your way home from there.”
“Home?”
I nodded. “Brazil.”
She was silent for a long moment. Then she took my good hand in both of hers. She looked at me. “Come with me,” she said.
Looking into those green eyes, I almost could have said yes. But I didn’t.
“Come with me,” she said again. “You’re in danger, too.”
And then, in that instant, I realized I’d created a new nexus, another Harry or Midori, that a determined pursuer like the Agency or Yamaoto might follow as a way of getting to me. And this one was heading straight to Brazil. Where
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher