Prefecture D by Hideo Yokoyama
Prefecture D by Hideo Yokoyama
Prefecture D by Hideo Yokoyama
PREFECTURE D
Six Four
Seventeen
HIDEO
YOKOYAMA
PREFECTURE D
An imprint of
Quercus Editions Ltd
Carmelite House
50 Victoria Embankment
London EC4Y 0DZ
An Hachette UK company
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
C on t e n t s
Season of Shadows
1
Black Lines
121
Briefcase
169
The room was shut away from the wind and the myriad sounds of
spring. The windows were permanently closed, concealed behind
heavy, tightly drawn curtains. The air conditioning seemed to
be on, but a brief session at a desk was enough to realise that it
barely worked, despite the racket.
The Administration annexe was a little over sixteen square
metres, located on the first floor of the north building of the Pre-
fecture D Police Headquarters. To mark the fact that it was not
in common use, it was often referred to as ‘the spring house’ or
‘the retreat’. These terms were, of course, only used by the staff
of Administration. The rest of the force chose to feign disinterest
and call it simply ‘Personnel’, some with a knowing grin, others
with a hint of trepidation in their eyes.
They’ll be up there now, barricaded in Personnel.
That was what they all said.
With internal notification due in five days, the work on com-
piling the annual list of transfers was in its final stages. With no
more than 3,000 career and non-career officers under review,
and an even smaller number of these actually up for transfer,
the pieces of the puzzle would, in any normal year, have already
fallen into place.
But there had been a delay, following an inauspicious call from
As he made his way back along the dark corridor, Futawatari felt
like burying his head in his hands. While Shirota hadn’t exactly
said as much, it was evident that he wanted Futawatari to fix the
situation. Osakabe’s plans aside, those of the force were already in
motion. Futawatari would have no choice but to hand the man his
notice. That much was unavoidable. Isn’t this your job? Futawatari
had suppressed the urge to comment. He’d already known how
Shirota, always quick to protect his own interests, would have
responded: You, more than anyone, know the background to this post.
Six months prior to Osakabe’s scheduled retirement a group of
construction companies had approached Administration with a
proposal to establish a foundation to monitor industrial dumping.
It hadn’t been chance that the timing had coincided with a spate
of corruption charges being made against the industry. Having
wracked their brains as to how to improve relations with the
Prefectural HQ, the companies had come up with the idea of
establishing a foundation and offered up the post of executive.
Administration had, for its part, welcomed the idea. They were
always in need of good executive-level positions and that year had
in fact been struggling to place a number of senior officials who
were due for retirement but had nothing in the pipeline. While
the division did not expect to grant any special favours should
10
11
12
13
14
15
pride and disavow the force? Sell himself to industry and wade
in their corruption?
For Director Osakabe to do this . . .
‘Ridiculous,’ Futawatari muttered, turning away from the
main building, which was now in almost complete darkness.
There were only five days remaining until internal notification
of the executive transfers. Whatever this is about, I’ll see him first
thing tomorrow. Futawatari picked up speed as he walked towards
the parking area, feeling an apprehension quite different to that
he’d experienced going into Director Oguro’s office.
16
17
18
19
in the distance, it was probably safe to assume that this was the
office of the managing director. There was no one behind the
partition’s frosted glass.
As expected.
A young woman wearing a suit, model-like in her good looks,
greeted him with flawless manners. Behind her came a nonde-
script older man who had appeared from somewhere behind one
of the potted plants. After a brief exchange of business cards the
man who had introduced himself as Director General Miyagi
gave Futawatari a sceptical once-over. No doubt his image of the
police was conditioned by Osakabe, his closest point of reference.
‘I’m very sorry, but the managing director is out on business,’
he said, not sounding in the least bit apologetic. He gestured
towards a couch at the back of the room, his expression suggesting
he could perhaps be of use instead.
Although this was the first time Futawatari had met Miyagi
in person, he knew the man’s background. He had, Futawatari
recalled, spent a long period in the Prefectural Government as
a section chief in Environmental Sanitation. The construction
industry had offered the post of managing director to the police,
and it appeared that they had not neglected those working in
government. Whether that was true or not, Futawatari felt sure
Miyagi’s position was also one that had been arranged, and that,
as such, he would be closely monitoring developments around
Osakabe’s refusal to step down. He might even have a sense of
the reason behind it.
‘Do you know where he is?’
‘I think . . .’ Miyagi mumbled, casting his attention to the map
on the wall. ‘Yes, he’s on a site inspection in the north, although
I couldn’t tell you exactly where. The director, as I’m sure you
know, is a very energetic man.’
20
‘A site inspection?’
‘That’s when we investigate areas where we’ve had cases of
illegal dumping.’
Of course. The pins in the map were there to mark dumping
sites. The sheer quantity was astounding; hundreds at a glance.
Futawatari had heard stories of lorries turning up with waste
from the cities, but it was hard to fathom an operation on this
scale.
Why was Osakabe conducting the inspections himself?
Futawatari considered the foundation’s mission statement,
which he’d read three years earlier. Their first responsibility was
to educate, providing the private sector with guidelines on how
to avoid unethical disposal companies while also distributing
pamphlets appealing to the general populace to report cases of
dumping. They were also responsible for on-site inspections when
such reports came in. In certain cases, when their survey revealed
unusually high levels of waste, or found it to be in the region of
a water source, the foundation would compile their findings and
request an official police investigation.
Osakabe’s passion for the inspections was clear from Miyagi’s
tone. And yet a quick glance around the office was all it took to
see that the foundation did not lack younger men, and men who
seemed to have plenty of time on their hands. Even supposing
they did lack the requisite manpower, it would still be odd for
their managing director, who was sixty-three this year, to be
dragging himself out in person.
‘Does the director usually conduct the inspections himself?’
‘Ah, well.’ Miyagi looked vaguely uncomfortable. ‘Yes, almost
every day.’
‘Almost every day?’
‘For a year now, or thereabouts. I have suggested he get
21
22
23
Force of habit.
Hurrying to the scene after a civilian tip-off. Combing through
the detritus, finding a clue that might lead to the source. It was
all too similar to the work of a detective. Fixing a map to a wall,
adding pin after pin to mark the sites of investigation. The pic-
ture was an exact match to that of an Investigative HQ tracking
down its quarry.
Once a detective . . .
He couldn’t help thinking it. Futawatari saw again the topo-
graphical map, only now it was overlaid with the dazzling career
he’d reviewed the previous evening. Was the man having some
kind of breakdown? The idea sent a chill down his spine.
I don’t know anything for sure. Not yet.
Shirota threw him a look when he walked back into Admin-
istration. Futawatari guessed it meant the director wanted to see
them. He was getting ready when he saw the coffee, still there
on his desk. A thin gathering of dust sat on its surface. Leave it on
my desk, I’ll drink it later. He felt his tension subside. He narrowed
his eyes and saw Officer Saito, sitting perfectly straight, her back
facing him. He couldn’t comment on her qualities as a woman
but he suspected she would do well for herself in the force.
He took a sip of the drink, hot five hours ago, then hurried
out after Shirota. With nothing to report, he steeled himself in
preparation for the director’s mood, which no doubt would be
bitter, like the coffee.
24
25
26
27
Shit.
It dawned on Futawatari that he could no longer sit and wait.
Now he knew that Osakabe was outside, it would be rude to
stay in the guest room drinking tea. He bowed his head to
Osakabe’s wife and started towards the front door, guessing
he’d already lost the mind game. Coming to the end of the
short hallway, he noticed a collection of traditionally wrapped
wedding gifts in a darkened room. Which meant . . . Osakabe’s
youngest must be getting married. He would have to arrange
an official gift from the force, make sure the department heads
prepared messages to be read at the reception. Current situa-
tion notwithstanding, Futawatari’s thoughts returned briefly
to procedure.
Outside, the black sedan was raised on a jack, the driver
crouched down with a wrench. Osakabe was standing like a rock
to the side.
Imperial.
It was rare for a man to truly fit such an old word.
‘Sir. It’s good to see you.’
Coming to a stop, Futawatari bowed from the waist. Sir. He’d
used the word without even thinking. Anything less would have
been presumptuous. Similarly, he couldn’t refer to the man as
Director, as that might be taken as affirmation of his current posi-
tion. Futawatari was here to make sure the man stepped down.
The impassive features came around.
‘I guessed it’d be you.’
It was the tone Osakabe reserved, without exception, for those
who ranked below him. Futawatari had been thirty the first time
he’d been on the receiving end. Too accustomed to the courtesies
of life in Administrative Affairs, it had struck him like a phys-
ical blow. But it wasn’t the tone, heard now for the first time in
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
suffering. He had lost his job, become withdrawn, grown old. The
one ritual he maintained was that of browsing the classifieds in
the morning paper. Futawatari remembered hurrying home after
his graduation from police school. You don’t need to worry about me
any more. I can look after myself now. He’d planned the words for
his father but his mother had beaten him to it. Darling, Shinji did
it. He’s going to be a fully-fledged member of society. His father hadn’t
so much as grinned. And where does that leave me? His eyes had
clouded under a mix of bitterness and envy of his own son. It
was the moment Futawatari came to see clearly the flaws of man.
The moment he pledged never to let himself become like that.
There was something in Osakabe that reminded him of his
departed father. It was part of the reason behind his antipathy
for the man.
There was, perhaps, a part of the man’s sentiment that was
understandable. Osakabe’s interest was not in the title, nor was it
in having gainful employment. His focus was on being in active
service. His insistence on staying on made sense, at least in that
context, and particularly with the upcoming wedding compli-
cating matters. Getting married at thirty was late, whatever the
current trend. Something had happened to Megu and this had
brought about the delay. When the subject was a young unmar-
ried woman, there were, Futawatari suspected, very few scenarios
that could be summed up in the way Maejima had expressed it.
All of them involved a man, and all ended in tears.
Megu was Osakabe’s most cherished daughter. She’d suffered
and was now finally on the verge of attaining happiness. Over-
whelmed with emotion, Osakabe wanted to give her the best
celebration possible. He would stand proud, in active service, as
he guided her through her special day.
Futawatari’s throat was dry. It was possible he was on the
36
wrong track. Yet Osakabe had himself said the words only two
hours earlier. It’s none of your concern. Had he wanted to say it
didn’t concern the force? That it was, instead, a family matter?
That – because she’d gone through hell – it was all for Megu?
Could the wife of an officer ever be happy? The question was
one Futawatari had decided to ignore. He lacked the courage
to ask it of his wife, who lived under the constant scrutiny of
those inside and outside the force, who had given her life to him
and the closed-off community, where the claustrophobia could
push you over the edge. That was why the wish was there: At
least, for my daughter. She was in her fifth year of primary school,
chest already developing. She would be asleep by now, breathing
softly through her metal braces. Futawatari wished her a life free
from such constraints, one in which she could explore the world
as she saw fit, never knowing the smothering pressure the force
had exerted on her parents. He wished for it with all his heart.
‘He’s a father, too,’ Futawatari muttered to himself. For the
first time, Osakabe came across as a flesh-and-blood human, as
something more substantial than an ogre locked up in the confines
of Criminal Investigations.
‘Of course,’ Maejima said, speaking for the first time since his
slip of the tongue, his voice freeing up, cracking a little.
‘Still, I’m pretty sure family wasn’t a major factor when he
was in the force.’
Maejima muttered another ‘of course’, his tone darkening just
a little.
‘What was he like when he was director?’
‘Glorious.’
‘How so?’
‘In every way.’
‘So, some kind of superman?’
37
‘Pretty much.’ Maejima was kind enough to skip the part that
said, Not that anyone from Administrative Affairs would understand.
Instead, he said, ‘Here’s something: criminals never return to the
scene of the crime.’
‘What’s that? Something he said?’
‘Exactly.’
‘But they do, don’t they?’
‘Truth is, they don’t. I checked ten years of case history. Not
once did the perpetrator go back to the scene of the crime.’
‘So he shares this revelation and stuns you all. That it?’
‘You’re missing the point,’ Maejima said, sounding a little
worked up. ‘You grow up watching detective shows and you’re
conditioned, like you, to think it’s in a perp’s nature to return to
the crime scene. Now, imagine you’ve just committed a crime.
There’s no way in hell you’re going back. Why? ’Cause you’re
scared shitless you’ll be caught. Make sense?’
‘I suppose so.’
‘What he was telling us was that, in our line of work, we can
never take anything we know for granted. It’s hard to fathom
just how much information is leaked to the outside these days.
Investigative techniques. Forensics knowledge. There are people
out there who have more know-how than us detectives. Osakabe
was telling us that we had to let go of our pride, let go of our
preconceptions. That only then could we truly call ourselves
detectives.’
Encouraged by the drink, Maejima became increasingly
talkative. The anecdotes he gave concerning Osakabe were all
fascinating. Futawatari realised, noting as he did a twinge of
envy, that Maejima had in Osakabe a superior officer whom he
adored without question, one whom he could talk about with
nothing but respect.
38
With the vague promise that he’d come again soon, though
unsure as to when that might be, Futawatari left the apartment.
His chest felt warm as he walked against the cold wind. Gone
were the jagged sensations of anger and humiliation from his visit
to Osakabe. He’d told himself he’d come here to gain leverage,
but it was possible he’d simply wanted to catch up with a friend.
Maybe that was the real reason he’d come.
Cutting through the parking area, Futawatari came to a sudden
halt. Under the glow of the mercury lamps, he saw a woman’s face
in the window of an estate car he recognised by the gaudy strips
on the side. He saw two small heads bobbing playfully alongside
her. Maejima’s ‘little ones’. The engine was off but there was no
sign of anyone getting out. You sly bastard. Futawatari turned to
face the light coming from Maejima’s apartment. The man had
asked his family to wait outside. He’d set it up so he could talk
in private with Futawatari. It was transfer season. It was only
natural that he would want to know what was in store for him.
Would he be up for transfer? Would he be staying? Did he need
to pack, get ready to move? Did he need to think about which
school his kid would attend?
Futawatari’s work had consequences.
Perhaps the kids had been taken for a chocolate sundae.
Futawatari put his foot on the accelerator and kept it there,
holding his breath until the estate car had disappeared from the
rear-view mirror.
39
40
been out gathering wood for a fire. Her fiancé had been at the
campsite with her. It was hard to imagine what the two must have
gone through after such an event. In the end, the engagement had
been called off. This was what Maejima had meant when he’d
referred to ‘all that other shit’.
Fucking hell.
Futawatari let out a deep sigh. It wasn’t that he hadn’t consid-
ered rape as a possibility, but to have it confirmed like this felt
like taking a bullet in the chest.
‘Was the offender arrested?’ Futawatari asked, trying to main-
tain his composure.
Sasaki shook his head. ‘Nah, the guy wore a stocking on his
head. We know he was getting on a bit, but that’s about all. Never
got any evidence. He didn’t even ejaculate.’
Futawatari was starting to feel sick.
If the man had left any fluids, they could have got his blood
type, maybe performed a DNA test to bring him in. Futawa-
tari remembered Osakabe’s words, relayed to him by Maejima
the previous night. Here was a man with the know-how neces-
sary to circumvent current investigative methods and forensics
technology, one willing to commit a crime yet keep his most
powerful urge in check to evade arrest.
‘What did Osakabe do? I can’t imagine how he—’ Futawatari
began, but Sasaki just looked away, snorting as though to say,
How the hell should I know?
The man had spent a long time working in the prestigious
world of Violent Crime. He’d been proud of the work, calling
it the key function of Criminal Investigations. He’d been ranked
assistant inspector, two levels below his contemporary Futawa-
tari, but he’d worn it as a badge of honour. Then, four years ago,
he’d received an abrupt transfer out. To this day he remained
41
convinced that Osakabe had been the man behind the change
in his fate.
Sasaki was silent now, sipping at his coffee, his expression
that of a man who had, at some point, abandoned any hope for
advancement in the force. There were a few like him in every
department, men who showed no signs of apprehension during
transfer season.
The sound of laughter prompted Futawatari to glance out
of the window. A group of officers from Transport walked by,
cracking up at something.
Futawatari couldn’t stop himself from trying to imagine
Osakabe’s feelings. His beloved daughter had been raped and the
predator was still at large, and this despite the fact that he had
himself led the investigation to hunt the bastard down.
Futawatari thought of something, recalling a detail from Osak-
abe’s file. Five years ago. That was the year of Osakabe’s promotion
to director. Which made it the same year as the murder of the
female office worker.
Sasaki was getting ready to leave but Futawatari raised a hand
to stop him. ‘Five years ago. Wasn’t that the same year as the
murder of the female office worker?’
‘Yep. Not that I worked on that one. That was Maejima’s team.’
‘So Osakabe’s daughter was attacked in the same year . . .’
‘There were seven cases like it.’
‘Seven?’
‘Seven cases of rape with no ejaculation. The last one ended
in murder.’
‘Were they all the same man?’
‘No one knows. The perpetrators all wore stockings, so that’s
a match, but we never got any hard evidence.’
‘But it’s probable, right? Considering the last one was when
42
the woman was killed. Perhaps she’d seen his face and he ended
up killing her. That would have scared him off, convinced him
he had to stop.’
‘Sure, maybe. But cases are never that simple.’
Futawatari bid the man farewell at the entrance to the north
building. Sasaki returned down the stairs towards the dimly lit
basement, moving his neck in lethargic circles. He’d discussed the
case, showing glimpses of his past as an investigator, yet he’d failed
to consider the first question any real detective would have asked:
why was someone from Administrative Affairs showing an interest?
Futawatari’s mind was racing as he made his way upstairs.
He took slow steps, as though putting the brakes on the obvious
conclusion.
A case Osakabe had failed to close. A perpetrator who had
probably raped his own daughter. Having failed to bring the man
to justice, what would someone like Osakabe, with his forty years
of experience in Criminal Investigations, seek to do?
The answer had been there right from the start.
Track him down.
Osakabe was still on the case. He was continuing his work as
a detective. He would bring the offender in and he would do so
before his daughter’s wedding in June.
It was clear now why he was refusing to step down. He was
making full use of his position in the foundation. His home had
been surrounded by photinia, leaving no space to park. Meaning
– he didn’t own a car. Maybe it was more than that. As a veteran
of an age when detectives traditionally used bicycles and motor-
bikes to get their work done, it was possible he didn’t even hold
a licence. He couldn’t give up the car and chauffeur. He needed
them for his investigation, to enable him to spend his days moving
unchecked around the prefecture.
43
44
45
46
that they, too, were police. And their greatest weapon in this was
Personnel. That was why they could not permit the insurrection.
At the same time, Futawatari knew he had no intention of
telling Oguro what he’d learned about Megu. Perhaps it was
policemen’s honour; he couldn’t be sure. He had a daughter of his
own. That would be part of it. And there was his natural desire
to resist. Oguro was the very embodiment of the career officer,
the kind who considered their own self-interest above everything
else. Osakabe was making trouble, but he was family. Oguro – a
distant relative at best – had no right to interfere.
This is our concern.
Once Futawatari had been dismissed, his next move was to
check in at the retreat. Uehara was busy at his keyboard, his look
of misery gone. The captain had approved the redrafted transfer
plans and work had now shifted to phase two: the reshuffling of
officers ranked assistant inspector and below.
‘Everything’s in order?’
Uehara gave a cheerful nod then frowned when he remem-
bered something. ‘Sir, how is the other issue?’
Show that kind of consideration in battle, and you’ll go far.
With this thought in mind, Futawatari left the building and
hurried towards the parking area. He would take Osakabe down.
It would mean stripping the man of his armour and taking
hold of his beating heart. But Futawatari had made up his mind,
and he had a plan.
47
48
Good.
The towering stack of road maps was the first thing to catch
his attention. There had to be at least twenty. There were urban
maps with residential markings, standard road maps, even maps
charting mountain areas resembling the type Forestry might use.
Futawatari flicked casually through a few of them.
He let out an almost audible groan.
The pages were covered with red. The lines were everywhere,
running in all directions, just as they had on the map in the
foundation. There were more lines, if anything, covering more
detail and more routes.
Futawatari was tempted to study them further but something
caused him to look up. His eyes caught the driver’s in the rear-view
mirror. The man didn’t look bothered, but it was clear he wasn’t
happy. He had timid features. His grey-speckled hair had given
Futawatari the initial impression of a man considerably advanced
in years but it was possible he was little more than fifty. The man
would know Osakabe’s routine inside out. Futawatari had the fifteen
minutes it would take for them to reach the Prefectural HQ.
He struck up a conversation as soon as they set off.
The driver introduced himself as Aoki and told Futawatari he’d
been doing the job for almost a year. He’d been a taxi driver but,
at his age, the night shift had begun to take its toll. He’d had a
spell driving for Director Miyagi after the man had broken his
arm and following this had been invited to drive full-time for
the foundation. His daughter’s fiancé owned a yakitori bar, and
he’d been thinking about helping out there for a while but had
decided in the end that driving was all he was good for.
With this, Aoki gave a brief chuckle.
‘Surely this is harder work than driving a taxi? It’s the director
you’re driving around, after all,’ Futawatari said.
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
they had, but the lack of progress – and the resulting lack of
suspects – meant it wasn’t being put to use. Getting a blood type
would at least allow them to tighten the investigative net. They
might even get a lead. Those were the official reasons cited when
they submitted the sample for testing.
But there had been more to it than that.
Osakabe’s retirement had been a contributing factor, albeit an
invisible one. Prior to a senior officer’s retirement, detectives liked
to do all they could to close any cases that were still open. It was
all but tradition to make a special effort to mark the departure of
a respected officer. Further complicating the matter in this case
was the fact that they had believed the murderer responsible for
the rape of Osakabe’s daughter. Emotion had taken hold and, as
a result, First Division had rushed too soon into the process.
The results had been crushing.
They had sacrificed their only sample and all they learned was
that the offender was blood-type A, which applied to four out of
ten people. The hair was found to have fallen naturally from the
man’s head. As such, it had lacked the pieces necessary for DNA
processing. The analysis had yielded no further information.
‘Maybe it would have been too much to ask for something like
Rh negative. But AB, at least, right?’ Maejima’s voice sounded
downcast in Futawatari’s ear.
Why lie?
Futawatari recalled what Osakabe had said on the way back to
headquarters. Why claim to have evidence where none existed?
Had it been some kind of bluff? Just another way to deflect
Futawatari’s questions, more of the man’s signature smokescreen?
Could the words have carried some other kind of meaning?
Thinking about it now, much of what Osakabe had said didn’t
seem to make sense. Futawatari couldn’t even tell if Osakabe had
56
meant what he’d said. It was possible he’d only said whatever he
thought necessary to get Futawatari to back off.
Futawatari tipped his head in response to the duty officer’s
salute as he walked into the Prefectural HQ. He felt physically
and mentally heavy. I can’t see tonight going well. Not at this rate.
He had braced himself for the director’s rancour upon entering
Administration but the office was almost eerily quiet.
Shirota came over and whispered the words, ‘Director Kudo
has announced he won’t be taking the position.’
Futawatari opened his eyes and looked the man in the face.
He was grinning.
‘Turns out he’s been having some health issues.’
‘Health issues?’
‘Right. Anyway, we’re in the clear.’
‘A job well done.’ A deep voice sounded behind them. Oguro’s
smile reached all the way to his eyes.
Futawatari felt like he’d fallen into a well. The question of
Osakabe’s refusal to step down had resolved itself. Just like that,
with no harm done.
Don’t you see what this means?
He felt the urge to scream the words. Osakabe had intervened
and Kudo had followed his bidding, removing Futawatari from
the equation.
Laughter came from inside the director’s office. Futawatari
clenched his hands to extinguish the shame, which now burned
more strongly than ever.
57
10
There’s no need to get flustered. Once this is done, it’ll be like nothing
ever happened.
It was as Osakabe had predicted. The calm in the office seemed
to suggest that the whole debacle had never even taken place. Nei-
ther Oguro nor Shirota mentioned the subject again. The fruits of
Uehara’s labour were officially announced and the transfer season
quickly passed. The only event of note was when the disgraced
captain of Station S came by, dipping his head in gratitude as he
made the rounds to thank everyone for his new post as chief of
Licensing.
Administration had a transfer of its own. Officer Saito was
reassigned to Criminal Investigations in Station W. She had a stub-
born streak that belied her appearance, and Futawatari suspected
she might give Maejima a run for his money. Futawatari, too,
had started to move on. In the weeks and months that followed,
the plans to rebuild the headquarters were beginning to come
together. He was busy negotiating with the various departments,
as well as laying the groundwork in the prefectural assembly, and
the memories of Osakabe’s face and voice were beginning to fade.
Yet every now and then Futawatari still found himself asking
the question.
Is he out there now? Working on the case?
58
59
Oguro and Shirota watched him go from the side of the office
door. Futawatari overheard a quiet, bitter-sounding voice.
‘He could have at least apologised for all the fucking trouble.’
Had he agreed to step down?
Futawatari jumped to his feet. He made a beeline through the
office and started to jog down the corridor.
Why?
He picked up speed as he made his way down the stairs, leaving
the building via the main entrance. Osakabe was already inside
the black sedan, which was still in its parking space.
‘Sir!’
Futawatari pressed his hands on the window. Osakabe turned
to face him.
‘Sir. What changed your mind?’
‘. . .’
Osakabe’s eyes appeared to cloud over. In the next moment
he issued an instruction for his driver to pull out. Something
seemed out of place.
It . . . isn’t Aoki.
In his place sat a young man wearing silver-rimmed glasses.
The maps, too, were gone. The back of the car held none of the
towering stacks he’d seen before. The car pulled sharply away, as
though to emphasise the youth of the new driver.
Futawatari remained where he was. His pulse was pounding in
his ears. The clouded-over look. The new driver. The disappearance of
the maps. The images flashed by in quick succession. The discrete
facts began to come together, as though magnetised, joining to
form clumps and eventually coalescing into a single realisation
that thumped against the inside of his skull.
Impossible.
Futawatari broke into a run, almost knocking over the stunned
60
61
11
62
63
64
leaving the job. But his daughter had been due to get married in
September the following year. He’d have needed the money. So
he’d forced himself to keep going, despite the increasing anxiety.
No doubt it had happened something like that.
That was when Futawatari had appeared with his mission
to talk Osakabe into giving up his position at the foundation.
Osakabe had shunned contact at first, convinced he would only
get in the way of his investigation. But Futawatari had persisted.
He’d even begun to suspect that Osakabe’s desire to stay on was
in some way connected to the murder. Osakabe had been forced
into making a decision. He could continue his surveillance of
Aoki, applying gradual pressure, as before, or he could take a risk
and use Futawatari’s unscheduled appearance to his advantage.
He’d decided on the latter.
That was why he’d told Futawatari to continue when he’d seen
his reluctance to talk in front of Aoki, making sure the subject
of the murder came up. His next play had been taboo. He’d told
Futawatari the force had a sample, a hair, when none existed.
He’d said the case would be closed, and soon. The words had,
of course, been for Aoki. And Futawatari’s blind stumbling had
made him complicit in the entrapment.
Aoki would have been terrified. A retired police officer and an
on-duty inspector were discussing a murder that he’d committed.
Osakabe was also claiming that the force had hard evidence in
the form of a hair. That would have panicked Aoki. He’d have
thought about leaving the job. But that would only arouse sus-
picion. He’d have realised that, too. His thoughts would have
turned to disappearing. But that would be tantamount to con-
fession. He would become a wanted man, spend the rest of his
life on the run. What would become of his wife? Of his daughter
and her wedding? He’d spent sleepless night after sleepless night.
65
With each passing day, he’d increased the dosage of his sleeping
pills. He’d have been haunted by images of Osakabe. By those
sunken eyes, unwavering, fixated on his back.
The eyes that were now trained on Futawatari, their only pur-
pose, it seemed, to dig into a man’s soul. They had watched Aoki
relentlessly for the six months following Futawatari’s return to
everyday life in Administration.
But was that all that Osakabe had done? There was one more
question Futawatari felt he had to ask.
Osakabe’s wife came in with tea and knelt on the floor to serve
it. She would not, Futawatari knew, reappear until it was time
for him to leave. He waited for her footsteps to fade before he
broke the silence.
‘Did you get a confession?’
‘. . .’
‘Did he admit to his crimes?’
Osakabe closed his eyes. He sat like that for some time.
Futawatari sighed. Warm afternoon sunlight bounced off the
water in the ashtray, flickering over the sliding doors.
‘What do you intend to do now?’
Futawatari had meant to ask two questions with this. What
will you do after the foundation? And: What will you do to process all
that’s happened?
‘Sir, Aoki is dead.’
‘. . .’
‘The bastard’s dead. There’s nothing more you can do.’
‘No,’ Osakabe whispered.
‘Sir?’
‘Maybe the bastard’s dead. The moment you say that is the
moment you’re done as a detective.’
‘. . .’
66
‘The bastard’s out there, having the time of his life. That’s
what we’re here for. Understand?’ Osakabe closed his eyes again.
He might have been asleep, except there was no peace in his
expression.
He hadn’t heard Aoki confess. Futawatari was sure of it now.
Which meant that the man would live on, his guilt never proven.
It was time to leave.
Osakabe’s wife saw Futawatari to the door, remaining in a deep
bow until he had disappeared from view. He walked to the patch
of open land next to the river.
Osakabe would not celebrate Aoki’s death. Despite his convic-
tion that Aoki was the culprit, he had not requested a background
check. He’d had Megu to consider. She was newly married,
finally happy. News of an arrest would only drag her back into
the nightmares of the past. Not wanting that, he would have per-
haps chosen to run the man into a corner, force him into taking
his own life. Perhaps that had been his plan all along. It was one
he wouldn’t forgive himself for. Get the bastards in cuffs – that
was the duty of a detective.
Futawatari gazed up at a clear sky. The cost projections for the
new helicopter would be on his desk in Administration. Their
pilot was getting old. Perhaps, for the next one, they could train
up someone in the force. Still, the safe bet was probably to arrange
another transfer from the self-defence forces.
He stretched up, reaching for the blue.
Maybe I’ll pay Maejima’s ugly mug a visit, once today’s done.
He remembered something. Hurrying back to the car, he began
to rummage through his overstuffed briefcase. It was in there
somewhere; it had to be. Forgotten until now, he looked for the
gift his wife had given him six months earlier to celebrate Mae-
jima’s eldest starting school.
67