Here are a few more scenes from the detective novel I'm writing:
(previous posts can take you back to the beginning. It's worth it!)
A clamor unusual
for Roppongi after midnight began to swell outside the jazz club, and as Sato
and Endo entered in the vestibule, ready to go, Endo wondered what the buzzing
sound was. He got his answer when they opened the front door and found
themselves in the midst of a throng of reporters and photographers. The
uniformed officers had been able to corral the scrum off to one side, but were
overmatched once Endo and Sato appeared.
Endo saw the reporters make a rush to corner Sato, and he
tried to put himself between the Sato and the crowd to forge ahead to the police
cars. Sato pushed his way forward as he announced the department would be
issuing a release soon, to check with the usual people there. One glance back
at Sato and Endo could see the disappointment in his eyes.
“Who died?” a young, well-dressed woman shouted as she thrust
a microphone at Sato.
Sato ignored her.
“Who died, officer?” she repeated.
“We are notifying the victim’s relatives so I have nothing to
say,” Sato replied.
“We heard it was a waitress,” she asked. “A university student.”
“We heard it was a waitress,” she asked. “A university student.”
Endo
turned toward her voice and saw the face that went with it: a strikingly pretty
face, framed by an expensive haircut, and as he glanced down at the rest of
her, he could see she was dressed too well to be a newspaper stiff working in
the middle of the night. He pegged her as young, ambitious and out for a big
story. She must have scored a tip on what happened at the Down Low. She had an
ANK TV sticker on her microphone. He looked for television cameras, and saw
more than he cared for.
The
woman glanced at Endo but turned her attention back to Sato. She saw he was
looking directly at her.
"There
will be a press release soon," Sato quietly replied as he struggled to get
through the scrum; the officers were outnumbered, the sea of bodies quite
unwilling to yield.
"What about the girl?” the young woman shouted. “She was a student at Waseda?”
"What about the girl?” the young woman shouted. “She was a student at Waseda?”
Sato
then realized the woman may have been one of the customers, or knew someone who
had been inside.
“How
did she wind up in a back alley?” she shouted. “Do you have any suspects?"
"There will be a press release in a little while," Sato repeated as he followed Endo, who finally managed to force an opening in the crowd.
Encouraged by the eye contact, the woman elbowed her way past two reporters an quickly stepped in front of Sato. “Were there any foreigners involved? Everyone knows the club attracts many foreigners. And GIs.”
"There will be a press release in a little while," Sato repeated as he followed Endo, who finally managed to force an opening in the crowd.
Encouraged by the eye contact, the woman elbowed her way past two reporters an quickly stepped in front of Sato. “Were there any foreigners involved? Everyone knows the club attracts many foreigners. And GIs.”
“The press release …” Sato began.
The crowd then pushed in on him, spinning him around as the
woman’s voice shouted: "Was it a gangster killing?" He saw Sato ever so briefly stop and stare at her.
“Were any
yakuza involved?” she shouted, pushing ahead, sure she had Sato’s attention. “The
place is supposed to be owned by Jun Fujimori. Ses Fujimori’s son. Is he a
suspect?”
“No…” Sato began, but the reporter saw the flicker of
recognition in Sato’s eyes. Ses Fujimori, boss of a crime syndicate entrenched
in all levels of business, politics, government. A man with a world-class mind
who started as a gifted safe cracker and bank robber before moving up to gambling
rackets. Once Ses’ father, Key, cultivated his gifts of leadership, there was
no stopping him. The millions he extorted during construction boom in Shinjuku
made Fujimori wealthier than he could have imagined.
And as a child, Ses was Sato’s closest friend. It was a friendship
Sato spent years hiding from the department, especially the one time he went to
Ses for help in arresting one of his men. Ses agreed, knowing Sato would be in
his debt, a fact never far from Sato’s mind.
The reporter heard the briefest of catches in Sato’s voice before
he recovered and muttered something about the news release before turning away.
The reporter knew she had something.
So did Endo.