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Ushikawa’s normally misshapen head looked even more lopsided. He must have
suffered terribly.
“I’m sorry about this,” Tamaru said. “I didn’t do it because I wanted to.”
Tamaru used his fingers to relax the muscles of Ushikawa’s face, straighten out the
jaw, and make his face more presentable. He used a kitchen towel to wipe away the
drool from Ushikawa’s mouth. It took a while, but his face began to look a bit better.
At least a person looking at it wouldn’t avert their eyes. But no matter how hard he
tried, he couldn’t get Ushikawa’s eyes to shut.
“Shakespeare said it best,” Tamaru said quietly
as he gazed at that lumpish,
misshapen head. “Something along these lines: if we die today, we do not have to die
tomorrow, so let us look to the best in each other.”
Was this from
Henry IV
, or maybe
Richard III
? Tamaru couldn’t recall. To him,
though, that wasn’t important, and he doubted Ushikawa wanted to know the precise
reference. Tamaru untied his arms and legs. He had used a soft, towel-like rope, and
he had a special way of tying it so as to not leave marks. He took the rope, the plastic
bag, and the heavy-duty rubber band and stowed them in a
plastic bag he had brought
with him for that purpose. He rummaged through Ushikawa’s belongings and
collected every photo he had taken. He put the camera and tripod in the bag as well. It
would only lead to trouble if it got out that Ushikawa had been conducting
surveillance. People would ask who he was watching, and the chances were pretty
good that Tengo Kawana’s name would surface. He took Ushikawa’s notebook, too,
crammed full of detailed notes. He made sure to collect anything of importance. All
that was left behind were the sleeping bag, eating utensils, extra clothes, and
Ushikawa’s pitiful corpse. Finally, Tamaru took out one of Ushikawa’s
business
cards, the ones that said he was Full-time Director, New Japan Foundation for the
Advancement of Scholarship and the Arts, and pocketed it.
“I’m really sorry,” Tamaru said again as he was leaving.
. . .
Tamaru went into a phone booth near the station, inserted a telephone card into the
slot, and dialed the number Ushikawa had given him. It was a local Tokyo number,
Shibuya Ward by the look of it. The phone rang six times before someone answered.
Tamaru skipped the preliminaries and told him the
address and room number of
the apartment in Koenji.
“Did you write it down?”
“Could you repeat it?”
Tamaru did so. The man wrote it down and read it back.
“Ushikawa is there,” Tamaru said. “You are familiar with Ushikawa?”
“Ushikawa?”
Tamaru ignored what he said and continued. “Ushikawa is there, and unfortunately
he isn’t breathing anymore. It doesn’t look like a natural death. There are several
business cards with Full-time Director, New Japan Foundation for the Advancement
of Scholarship and the Arts on them in his business card holder.
If the police find
these, eventually they will figure out the connection with you. That wouldn’t be to
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your advantage, I imagine. Best to dispose of everything as soon as you can. That’s
what you’re good at.”
“Who are you?” the man asked.
“Let’s just say I’m a kind informant,” Tamaru said. “I’m not so fond of the police
myself. Same as you.”
“Not a natural death?”
“Well, he didn’t die of old age, or very peacefully.”
The man was quiet for a moment. “What was this Ushikawa doing there?”
“I don’t know. You would have to ask him the details, and as I explained, he’s not
in a position to respond.”
The man on the other end of the line paused. “You must be connected with the
young woman who came to the Hotel Okura?”
“That’s not the sort of question to which you can expect an answer.”
“I’m one of the people who met her. Tell her that and she’ll understand. I have a
message for her.”
“I’m listening.”
“We’re not planning to harm her,” the man said.
“My understanding is that you are trying your best to track her down.”
“That’s right. We’ve been trying to locate her for some time.”
“Yet you’re telling me you don’t plan to harm her,” Tamaru said. “Why is that?”
There was a short silence before the response came.
“At a certain point the situation changed. Leader’s
death was deeply mourned by
everyone. But that’s over, finished. Leader was ill, and, in a sense, he was hoping to
put an end to his suffering. So we don’t plan to pursue Aomame any further regarding
this matter. Instead, we would simply like to talk with her.”
“About what?”
“Areas of common interest.”
“That’s just what
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