The Last Assassin
your oyabun, and yet at the first sign of trouble you insult me with your doubt!”
The men dropped their heads in shame and Yamaoto went on, shouting now. “Do you have any idea of the trouble you’ve caused with your incompetence? You say you were set up, and maybe you were. But whose responsibility is it to prevent such things?”
The men, heads still bowed, said in unison, “Our responsibility, kumicho. ”
Despite his outward anger, Yamaoto was calm within. He had already decided how to resolve this, and there was no longer anything to be angry about. But if he showed his inward calm to these men, they would understand what was to happen. Better that they should believe him angry, which would indicate he was still undecided. That would keep them focused on how they could manage his anger and try to lessen the penalty for the situation they had placed him in.
What he needed to do now was shame them just a little more. They would welcome that, believing if Yamaoto were inclined to punish them with shame, he might be willing to forgo something more severe. More important, it might also cause them to bow lower, perhaps even to assume chinsha, the most apologetic bow of all, where the offender drops to his knees, his palms wide in front of him and his forehead to the ground.
“Yes, your responsibility!” Yamaoto exploded. “Yours! But now I’m left with the burden of cleaning it up! All because you failed to do what I entrusted you with! And then you compounded your mistake with this shameful lack of confidence in your oyabun !”
As one, the men cried out, “Moushiwake gozaimasen!” and dropped down into chinsha.
Yamaoto grasped the hilt of Kuro’s daitou and snatched it clear of the stand. In an instant he had reached the two prostrate men, his fingers naturally and automatically tightening around the hilt in a two-handed grip as he moved. Barely slowing, he pivoted to his right, hips leading the way, elbows and wrists following like the trailing edge of a whip, creating the optimal combination of chopping and cutting that had been drilled into him in long hours of battoujutsu training.
Kito started to come up, perhaps sensing in some primitive way that something was amiss, but too late. The sword sliced through his massive neck and was blurring skyward again even before the man’s cleanly severed head had fallen to the floor. Blood sprayed onto Sanada’s face, but before the startled man could react the sword had completed its second lightning arc and his head, too, was on its way to the ground.
Yamaoto stepped to the side, away from the spray. Without thinking, he wiped down the blade on one of the men’s wide backs, reversed the sword in his hand, and prepared to resheath it in a scabbard he suddenly remembered wasn’t there. He walked over and handed it hilt first to Kuro, who took it with trembling hands without even rising from his seat.
Yamaoto looked for a moment at the fallen men. Their bodies had remained in chinsha, the heads on the floor beside them. Blood pumped vigorously from their severed necks. Lost your heads, indeed, he thought.
He turned to Kuro. “I assume you have ample cleaning supplies in this establishment?” he asked.
Kuro, his skin pasty white, nodded wordlessly.
“Good. Have someone bring them and take care of this mess. And call the Taiwanese who can identify these men. Have him come here immediately.”
24
A HALF HOUR LATER , two of Kuro’s people escorted a nervous-looking Taiwanese man into Kuro’s office. Kuro’s staff had already mopped up the remarkable quantities of blood the sumos had lost and laid out the enormous bodies on plastic tarps. The next step would be to take them to a food preparation establishment friendly with Yamaoto’s organization, an establishment with heavy equipment used in more ordinary circumstances for grinding fish into fishcake.
The Taiwanese saw the bodies and flinched. When he looked over at Kuro’s desk and noticed the actual heads propped up there, he turned and tried to flee. Kuro’s men blocked the door.
“Do you recognize these men?” Yamaoto asked in English.
The man struggled for another moment, to no avail. He turned and looked at Yamaoto, his eyes wide, but didn’t answer.
“Do you recognize these men!” Yamaoto shouted, but still the man was mute.
Kuro repeated the question in Chinese. After a moment, the man stammered, “Y-Yes. I recognize.”
Yamaoto nodded to Kuro. Kuro took out his mobile
Weitere Kostenlose Bücher