detective with a lab tech to sort out how much speed they’d seized in the packing plant raid and how to find a line on who cooked it. All of them reported to Mariko.
But there was one lead on the Kamaguchi-gumi that Mariko had to follow herself. She took a deep breath to steel herself, poised her finger over her phone’s keypad, then thought better of it. “Han, you know I hate this guy.”
Han blew his hair away from his face and took a sip of coffee. “Think of it as cultivating a contact,” he said. “This is police work, not a social call.”
And you’ve been coloring outside the lines, thought Mariko. As far as she was concerned, Han’s judgment about good police work was suspect. But in this case he was right. She sighed and dialed the number.
“Well, well, well,” said Kamaguchi Hanzo. “My hot little
Mariko already wanted to hang up. “I need you to tell me about your chemical supply company,” she said.
“Fuck that. When are you going to give me my mask?”
Mariko squeezed the phone; the plastic crackled in her grip. “We’re working on it. Tell me what you sold the Divine Wind.”
“Hexa-something. Why ask me? Don’t you detectives keep a notepad or something?”
“Just the hexamine? Nothing else?”
“Nothing else.”
“Don’t hold out on me, Kamaguchi. This is important.”
“Look at the balls on you! What, you want me to sell them something else? I got girls, I got guns, I got whatever. Tell me where these cocksuckers are holed up and I promise I’ll deliver something they won’t forget.”
Mariko rolled her eyes. “Did you sell them sodium cyanide?”
“Hell, no.”
“You sound pretty sure for a guy who only runs a front company. You can’t tell me you memorized every item in your inventory.”
“You’re irritating as hell, you know that?”
“The feeling’s mutual.”
Kamaguchi snorted. “I remember the cyanide because they asked me about it, okay? And I’ll tell you what I told them: I don’t deal in that shit.”
“Why not?”
“Prohibited substances list. There’s no money in it.”
“Why not?”
“
She cupped the phone against her shoulder. Whispering, she said, “Han, can I please hang up on this asshole now?”
Han gave her a wink and a thumbs-up.
“Good-bye, Kamaguchi-san.”
She resisted the urge to hurl the phone at the wall. Instead she crushed it like a stress ball, squeezing more little crackling noises out of the plastic. “Tell me you got something good on the house,” she said.
Han grinned. “Grand slam. Turns out it belonged to a cult member. She willed it to the Church of the Divine Wind right before she died.”
“Not to Joko Daishi?”
“If only. At least that way we’d have the dude’s real name in the will. But get this: the family got pissed that they didn’t get the house—”
“Figures,” Mariko said. “It’s a nice house.”
“It’s a damn expensive house. So one of the sons gets uppity and demands an autopsy. The rest of the family doesn’t go for it, but they okay some blood work. Guess what? The old bird tested positive for amphetamine.”
A little thrill rippled down Mariko’s spine. “MDA?”
“Can’t say. Can’t say on cyanide either—they didn’t test for it—but she was a geezer; it wouldn’t be that hard to induce a heart attack with a little speed.”
That thrill chased itself up and down Mariko’s spine again. She felt a little guilty too; it was macabre to take pleasure in a hunch when that hunch was confirmed by a homicide. Nevertheless, she couldn’t help feeling encouraged; this murder reinforced her suspicion that the Divine Wind was willing to use cyanide-laced amphetamines to kill. “What else have you got?”
“On the house? Let’s see.” Han reopened a window on his computer and drained the last of his coffee. “Five hookahs, thirty-eight jabs of heroin, big thing of cyanide. Everything says these guys split in a hurry,
Mariko nodded. Perps didn’t leave evidence behind if they could help it, and they almost never left expensive evidence behind. Whoever had been in that house, they’d left immediately after killing Shino. The only part Han had wrong was that it was admissible evidence; she and Han had gotten onto the house in violation of Akahata’s civil rights. She was glad they had evidence to draw inferences from, but nothing on Han’s list was worth a damn thing in court.
“How about you?” he said. “You get anything?”
“Pulled a couple of good prints from this,” she said, and she produced a carefully folded Ziploc bag from her back pocket. In it was the little fold-up Giants schedule she’d found next to the heroin on Joko Daishi’s altar.
“Nice grab,” he said, clearly surprised to see the thing. “Where’d you get the Ziploc, by the way? Please don’t tell me you walk around with one in your pocket all day. If you’re going to go all TV cop on me, at least make it an evidence bag and carry a pair of tweezers.”
“You’re a smart-ass.”
“Guilty as charged.”
“I swiped it from her kitchen,” she said. “And by the way, if anyone asks,
“Pull that schedule out and tell me what you make of it.”
He did as he was told, and crinkled his eyebrows just as Mariko did when she tried to make sense of the scribbles written on it. “What is this, some kind of prayer?”
“That was my guess too.”
“Look, today’s game is circled. I’ll bet somebody’s got tickets—and hey, if that prayer is for the Giants to win, maybe I’ll start praying to Joko Daishi too. They could use any help they can get.”
“Go back a second,” Mariko said. “Tickets? For today’s game?”
“Yeah, but if you’re thinking we might pull a lead out of that, you’ll have to tell me how we’re going to identify one nut job in a crowd of forty-two thousand.”
Mariko’s fist renewed its stranglehold on her phone. She willed her fist to loosen, then took back the schedule and made a point of folding it slowly and precisely before bagging it again. She hoped it might calm her a bit. It didn’t work.
Neither did angrily jamming it back into her pocket. “Han, I’ll be honest: I’m nervous. My gut tells me these guys are dangerous—a lot more dangerous than they’re letting on. And we have nothing. Akahata’s in the wind, and we haven’t so much as laid eyes on Joko Daishi, whoever the hell he is.”
“So what’s our next move?”
Mariko shrugged, wishing she had more to go on, wishing the caffeine she’d been slamming would hurry up and give her brain the kick-start it needed. “Kamaguchi tells me cyanide is too heavily monitored for him to trade in it.”
“Do you believe him?”