highly illegal in. Japan, and that if Kito and Sanada had tried to leave, Kuro would have used it.
The men looked up when Yamaoto entered. They both shot to their feet and bowed deeply.
Yamaoto stood silently, looking from one to the other. Eventually they straightened and met his eyes.
'What the hell happened in Wajima?' he asked. 'And where the hell have you been?'
The men looked at each other, then back at Yamaoto. They were plainly terrified.
Kito spoke first. 'We… we're not sure,
Sanada added, 'We arrived on schedule. The Chinese signaled from off the coast and came ashore. We walked over to do the exchange, then… something happened.'
Yamaoto said, 'What?'
Kito said, 'We think someone shot us with a drug. Each of us felt a… a slap in the neck. Then we were waking up in the mud. It was dark, but we saw two men. We tried to fight them, but we were groggy and they shot us again. When we woke up the second time, the Chinese were dead and the shipment and payment were gone.
Sanada stuck his chin high and gestured to his neck. '
Yamaoto looked at Sanada's massive neck. The skin was indeed discolored in two places, and there were red marks in the center of the discolorations, like the result of a hornet's sting. But what did that mean? They could have made the marks themselves.
'And here,' Kito said, lifting his shirt and exposing a planet-sized belly. He had an identical mark there.
'You didn't get a good look at the men?' Yamaoto asked.
'No,
'Nothing that could help us identify them? Did you hear them talking?'
The men looked at each other. Sanada said, 'I think I did, I remember hearing yelling, but I was confused from the drug.'
'Was it Chinese? Japanese?'
'I think Japanese, but also there were parts I couldn't understand. Maybe some English. At one point…'
'What?'
'At one point, I thought one of them was yelling 'I love you' in Chinese. But I… I'm just not sure,
Yamaoto wondered if the man was becoming unhinged. Or perhaps they had indeed been drugged. 'Did you tell anyone beforehand about the meeting in Wajima?' he asked.
'No,
Yamaoto looked from one to the other as though having trouble believing their story. As indeed he was. 'Why did you wait to come in?'
The men looked at each other, then back to Yamaoto. Sanada said,
Kito added, 'In our fear, we lost our heads. But then we decided, we must leave this matter to our
Kito's reference to Yamaoto as their
Yamaoto began pacing the room as though in frustration. He walked past Kuro's desk, admiring as he always did the beautiful Kamakura era
Yamaoto paused before the sword stand and turned to face the two men. 'You 'lost your heads'?' he said, his voice rising. 'I pay you to think! You say I'm your
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,
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