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hushed tones so no one outside could hear. All this time, Ushikawa’s corpse had lain
there on the table, like a sample at an industrial machinery convention. Rigor mortis
had set in on the corpse, and it would be another three days before that broke and the
body was pliable again. Everyone shot the occasional quick glance at the body as they
discussed several practical matters.
While they were discussing things there was no sense—even when the talk turned
to the deceased—that they were paying respects to him or feeling regret for his
passing. The stiff, stocky corpse simply reminded them of certain lessons, and
reconfirmed a few reflections on life. Nothing more. Once time has passed, it can’t be
taken back. If death brings about any resolution, it’s one that only applies to the
deceased.
Those sorts of lessons, those sorts of reflections.
What should they do with Ushikawa’s body? They knew the answer before they
began. Ushikawa had died of unnatural causes, and if he were discovered, the police
would launch an all-out investigation that would inevitably uncover his connection
with Sakigake. They couldn’t risk that. As soon as the rigor mortis was gone, they
would secretly transport the corpse to the industrial-sized incinerator on the grounds
of their compound and dispose of it. Soon it would become nothing but black smoke
and white ash. The smoke would be absorbed into the sky, the ash would be spread on
the fields as fertilizer for the vegetables. They had performed the same operation a
number of times, under Buzzcut’s supervision. Leader’s body had been too big, so
they had “handled” it by using a chain saw to cut it into pieces. There was no need to
do so
this time, for Ushikawa was nowhere near as big. Buzzcut was grateful for that.
He didn’t like any operations that got too gory. Whether it was dealing with the living
or the dead, he preferred not to see any blood.
His superior asked Buzzcut some questions. Who could have killed Ushikawa?
And what was Ushikawa doing in that rented apartment in Koenji, anyway? As head
of security, Buzzcut had to respond, though he really didn’t know the answers.
Before dawn on Tuesday he had gotten the call from that mysterious man (who
was, of course, Tamaru) and learned that Ushikawa’s body was in the apartment.
Their conversation was at once practical and indirect. As soon as he hung up, Buzzcut
immediately put out a call to a couple of followers in Tokyo. They changed into work
uniforms, pretending to be movers, and headed out to the apartment in a Toyota
HiAce van. Before they went inside, they made sure it wasn’t a trap. They parked the
van and one of them scouted out the surroundings for anything suspicious. They
needed to be very cautious. The police might be lying in wait, ready to arrest them as
soon as
they set foot in the place, something they had to avoid at all costs.
They had brought along a container, the kind used in moving, and somehow were
able to stuff the already-stiff body inside. Then they shouldered it out of the building
and into the bed of the van. It was late at night, and cold, so fortunately there was no
one else around. It took some time to comb through the apartment to make sure no
telling evidence was left behind. Using flashlights, they searched every square inch,
but they found nothing incriminating, just food, a small electric space heater, a
sleeping bag, and a few other basic necessities. The garbage can was mainly full of
empty cans and plastic bottles. It appeared that Ushikawa had been holed up there
doing surveillance. Buzzcut’s sharp eye noted the indentations in the
tatami near the
window that indicated the presence of a camera tripod, though there was no camera
781
and there were no photographs. The person who had taken Ushikawa’s life must have
also taken the camera away, along with the film. Since Ushikawa was dressed only in
his underwear, he must have been attacked while asleep. The attacker must have
silently slipped inside the apartment. It looked like Ushikawa had suffered horribly,
for his underwear was completely saturated with urine.
Buzzcut and Ponytail were the only ones in the van when they transported the body
to Yamanashi. The other two stayed behind in Tokyo to handle anything that might
come up. Ponytail drove the entire way. The HiAce left the Metropolitan Expressway,
got onto the Chuo Highway, and headed west. It was still dark out and the expressway
was nearly deserted, but they kept their speed under the limit. If the police stopped
them now it would be all over. Their license plates—both front and rear—were stolen,
and the container in back contained a dead body. There would be no way to talk their
way out of that situation. The two of them were silent for the entire trip.
When they arrived
at the compound at dawn, a Sakigake doctor examined
Ushikawa’s body and confirmed that he had died of suffocation. There were no signs
of strangulation around the neck, however. The doctor guessed that a bag or
something that didn’t leave any evidence must have been placed over the victim’s
head. There were no marks, either, to indicate that the victim’s hands and feet had
been tied. He didn’t appear to have been beaten or tortured. His expression didn’t
show any signs of agony. If you had to describe his expression, you would say it was
one of pure confusion, as if he had been asking a question he knew wouldn’t be
answered. It was obvious that he had been murdered, but the corpse was remarkably
untouched, which the doctor found odd. Whoever had killed him may have massaged
his features after his death, to give him a calmer, more natural expression.
“Whoever did this was a real professional,” Buzzcut explained to his superior.
“There are no marks on him at all. He probably never had a chance to even scream. It
happened
in the middle of the night, and if he had yelled out in pain, everyone in the
building would have heard him. This is the work of a professional hit man.”
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