Date: Fri, 22 Feb 2002 20:32:07 -0000 From: Ben Erikson Subject: The Bergman Files No 2 Episode 4 The Bergman Files: No 2: The Japanese Garden A story by Ben Erikson Episode 4 Back at the house in Venice. We all three felt whacked out after the trip to Beverly, the strain of the trip back. When I'd caught up with James outside the Tedai mansion, he was sitting in the front of the BMW, fretting about me, what I was up to. Toru was fast asleep on the back seat. I'd told James briefly what I'd seen in the Japanese garden and instructed him to follow in the Ford back to his house. So here we were. I'd carried Toru straight up to his room and left him sleeping fully-clothed. It was nearly midnight. Now James lay next to me, leaning into me, concerned and tender, stroking my face, my hair as if I were a child. He talked in a low voice, not sex talk this time, not like last night although it was already beginning to feel like a replay - deja-vu all over again. This time when Toru appeared he was still fully clothed, as I had left him. His eyes were all puffy, his sweet face streaked with tears, his whole manner subdued. He surprised me by coming directly to my side of the bed, a little unsteadily. He tried to look brave and collected but his lower lip was already beginning to give him away. He took a big breath. "Grandfathers dead, isn't he?" It wasn't really a question, didn't really need an answer. Except my eyes. Toru stood there rooted to the spot, it seemed, not making any noise but starting to shake, his arms and shoulders first and then all over. Suddenly, all at once, the tears came. I swung myself out of bed and reached out to the boy. He let himself be pulled towards me and wrapped himself as best he could around my naked form. He was openly sobbing now and I knew enough to let him get on with it, get it over with, this first stage of grief and fright and shock and wonder at the world, its strangeness, its sudden shifts. I held him tight and rubbed the top of his head with my chin. James seemed pretty shocked himself. He reached over and rubbed my back in support. Like I said, he was a good kid. Gradually the crying subsided and was replaced by a kind of snorting sigh. I lifted Toru upright and began to undress him. "Come on" I said. "Help me out here." Numbly, he obeyed and helped me shrug off his coat, left it where it fell. I turned him round and sat him on my knee, reached down, got his shoes off, undid the clasp of his trousers and standing him up, slid them to his ankles. He was entirely passive now; wanting, needing to feel for one last time perhaps the controlling hands of adult care, attention and security in his new world of strangness, sudden shifts. He visibly regressed, even to the point of sucking his thumb in a vacant, automatic way while I lifted his feet one at a time out of his trousers. His other hand reached down and clasped his tiny cock through the fabric of his underwear, comforting himself as best he could. When he was naked, I sat him on my knee and cuddled him, rubbed his thighs, ran the end of my fingertips over the tear tracks on his cheeks, kissed him lightly on the head, brought him half to sleep. With one last effort of will he roused himself and pulled away slightly. "I want my Dad." "I know, love." I said. "I know." Tedai had explained to me on the Sunday how Toru's mother had been killed in a car accident when the boy was barely two years old; explained just how close he was to the father, to the old man himself. "I want my Dad. Where is he?" It was my turn to sigh now, sigh deeply. "I won't lie to you Toru." I said. "I don't know where your Dad is. Right now, I just don't know. But I know someone who does and tomorrow I'm going to go see him and he'll tell me. Believe me, kid, one way or another, he'll tell me and then I'll take you home. Take you to your Dad. OK?" "Promise." This wasn't a question; was a command. Definitely. My turn now to take a deep breath. "I promise, Toru. I promise." Now he let me lay him down, more or less on top of me at first. I held the orbs of his backside in my hands and kneaded them gently, stroked them, then just held them there. James had listened carefully and now leaned over, stroked Toru's head and whispered to him: "Go to sleep now. Try to go to sleep." Toru shifted round to look boldly at James. "I'm still not talking to you." he said and turned his face back into me, my chest. He was almost instantly asleep but mumbled something as he drifted off, already in dream. It was hard to tell but I thought I heard the single word "hippopotamus". ********************************************** I woke at 7.20, late for me and lay back listening to James and Toru breathing almost in synch, then out of synch, in synch again. I felt very warm towards them both. Somewhere in the night the duvet had been kicked away, was keeping us decent, not much more. Toru was turned into James' back, had an arm splayed out across his shoulder. I thought about the day ahead. I didn't anticipate any problems. After the messiness and blood of yesterday, the nerves and shock, a kind of clear-eyed calm had re-imposed itself overnight. Today would be the day. I'd hand Toru back, wash my hands of him and his family and walk away, $200,000 to the good. OK, so maybe I wouldn't find the man I needed to talk to, maybe he wouldn't know, wouldn't tell me; maybe Toru's dad was dead, was one of the twelve, maybe... "Mike. You OK?" James in a low voice. "Hi. Yeah, I'm good. I think so anyway. Sleep OK?" I nodded towards Toru, a silent comment on how he clung again to James. He bagan to stir himself now, sat up a bit. His expression was all sweetness and innocence though God knows what that hid, what strange ideas and fantasies were playing out in his little mind. I'd tried to shield him these past two days from what was going on but he always seemed to know somehow, how much down to intuition, how much from pre-knowledge I never did find out. Maybe I'm just a lousy liar. James stroked the hair out of his eyes for him and brushed his forehead tenderly. "I'll get us some breakfast, get you in the shower, yeah?" Toru reached over, cupping his hands to James' ear and whispered theatrically then giggled when James gave him that smile of his. "OK, you little tiger." he said. "Let's go!" What was that all about? I never did find out. Before they left to freshen up or whatever it was they left to do, Toru wriggled round on the bed and straddled me, actually pinned me down. His face became all serious as he gazed into mine. "Remember what you promised!" He waited, unwilling to let me go until the contract was complete. "I remember, Toru. I won't forget, OK?" The magic words said, the ceremony over, he bent his face towards mine and kissed me hard and passionately on the lips and went off with James with a big smile on his face. The pressure of his little body on top of mine had left my cock sticking straight up in the air just covered by the duvet. I don't think he'd noticed but by the sly grin on his face, I rather think that James had. ****************************************************** I'd planned to go it alone; this last stage it made sense. Why drag the two of them with me all this way, especially if I struck out. Alone, I could track down Toru's Dad, arrange a meet and get the business side of things sorted and not have to worry about them, leave them safely stashed away in the house. On the other hand, Toru was my responsibility, not James' and anyway I'd asked enough of him already. In the end I had no choice; they both kicked up such as stink about my plan that it soon became simpler to bring them along. One car though, this time. James didn't complain, he'd been fixing to get behind the wheel of the BMW since he'd first set eyes on it. I got him to park on 7th street near Macy's Plaza and now we were standing outside the entrance to the Home Savings Tower on 7th & Figueroa, above the Metro Center. It was a short walk from here and I was determined to do this bit alone. I figured James could entertain Toru for half an hour, maybe show him the Schoonhoven ceiling mural just the other side of the Home Savings door. A bit of culture might do them both some good. I'd left them with strict instructions, told James I'd call his mobile in 20 minutes and headed off to the discreet offices occupied by the late Mr Tedai's lawyers. Whether or not they'd witnessed what went down in Beverly Hills last night they ought to be expecting me; if they were thinking straight, doing their job, they would be expecting me, expecting someone at least. I was thinking hard how to play it, what I might have to say. I didn't expect James and Toru to follow me so I didn't check. OK, so I should have checked anyway. Maybe I'm getting too old for this shit after all. Old man. Motherfucker. And now I was being careful, on red alert since getting no response to the buzzer, having to bullshit my way past Heidi, the receptionist to the shipping insurance firm downstairs, (James, as it turned out, had to do exactly the same, God-bless-him) and finding the door to Mr Mitusake's 4th floor offices busted open. I'd pocketed my Smith & Wesson before leaving the house and got it out now, checked it briefly. I only had to follow my nose; the stink of sweat and fear and vomit. He was trussed to a chair in a corner, half-hidden; they'd used up about three rolls of packing tape, his eyes and mouth secured as well. He'd been given quite a seeing-to, both eyes blackened, his whole face split open; blood congealed, all that. His hair was matted with sweat and he'd shit his pants somewhere along the line, between beatings, between 1.00am and 2.00 or 4.00 and 5.00. what did it matter, what time? He'd been alone, all alone in a deep, black hole maybe all night. Maybe longer. He made a strange animal noise on sensing my approach. I pocketed my gun again and found a pair of office scissors in a drawer and started working on the tape. Part of his face around an eye began to peel away as I pulled it free so I gently replaced it, left it for the paramedics; might be something there that they could sew back on. His breathing was very shallow. He was in deep shock and I had to repeat myself to make him understand. But this was crucial. "Mr Mitusake, I'm getting you help, OK. It's all over now. You'll be OK now. My name's Bergman. You know that name, yes? From Mr Tedai? I work for him, you understand?" He gave a little moan, could have been yes, could have been yankee-doodle-fucking-dandy. "You have to tell me. It's very important you tell me where I can find Mr Tedai's son. You understand? I very much need to talk to him." "Ber...man..." he mumbled this spitting teeth and blood but he seemed to know the name. "Tell me..." I had to gamble here, gamble on going too hard on the poor fucker, gamble on going too soft. He moaned again and I bent my ears to his battered lips and held my breath. Then I asked him one more thing - just as crucial, more so even. "Did you tell them? Tell me the truth. It's important. Did you give them that address." There was no reply. The effort of speaking, of remembering, the shock of finding himself at least half-alive was too much, it seemed. Then slowly, but definitely he shook his head three times and let his chin drop. I caught the movement behind me and swivelled, moving automatically into a fighting stance. The one on the right, the one with the mean-looking scar on his chin had more or less levelled his gun, the one on the left, in the stained red undershirt, who was closer anyway, was only now raising his. They'd both come way too close for gunplay, should have kept their distance. My firearms instructor at police school would have had a fit, had us back for extra training after work. I moved into the one with the blood-stained shirt - Mitusake's blood, I guessed and used a bong sao movement to deflect his gun hand downwards and away, keeping hold of his wrist as I pulled his body between me and Scarface. I drew his arm out and smashed his elbow with my own, let him fall to his knees. Scarface had move a step towards us which was, frankly, stupid. He held the gun correctly, I'll give him that; good stance, both hands in position. Looked like he was ready to shout "Stop or I shoot" or some such nonsense. My kick caught his upper jaw and sent him flying into a hatstand before he could pull a face let alone a trigger. "Wow!" Toru. "Jesus!" James. "Shit!" Me. We looked at each other a second, maybe more than a second. "What the fuck are you two doing here?" I was collecting the guns off the floor where they'd landed, emptying them, giving the guys a quick once over for any hidden weapons. Neither were out cold but they weren't exactly looking forward to Round 2 either. "Call 911" "For them?" "No, though they'll both need hospital treatment. For him." I jerked my head towards Mitusake. "And you" I said to Toru "go sit over there and stay there. I'll join you in a minute. And don't look." "Look at what?" "Just don't look, OK?" I didn't want him to see the guy in the chair; the blood, all that. Scarface and Undershirt were stirring now, doing some moaning of their own. Suddenly I couldn't be doing with it; I figured it would be easier having them out of the way in any case. I dragged one then the other to the office door and unceremoniously booted them down the stairs, half-way down. One already had a broken arm, the other, a broken jaw; I didn't think they'd be back in a hurry and they could both walk, could find their own way to a nurse. I went over to Toru, sat down and fished out my own mobile. James was giving the address on his; seemed to have things nicely under control. I dialled in a number and asked for Detective Nat Davis, talked to him a while, filled him in on some things, stalled on others and promised to wait here for his arrival. "Time to go" I said when we were through. I gave Mitusake a final check, made him as comfortable as possible which wasn't very and dumped the two guns in the wastepaper basket, found a space in the filing cabinet for the ammo. We got a dirty look from Heidi who scuttled halfway out from her little cubicle. "I'm calling the police you know" she said. "That's alright ma'am, I'm a police officer myself." It sounded plausible enough to give me time - like maybe 20 seconds. She hesitated, clearly not convinced. "I'm calling them anyway" she shouted to our retreating backs. ***************************************************** I walked slowly through the lobby of the New Otani Hotel, working hard to get my breathing right. I stopped a minute to admire the waterfall sculpture, check the surroundings as discreetly as I could. Nothing there, nothing out of place. I'd pondered for some time before deciding to leave the gun in the car, the glove compartment. I'd pocketed the ammo though. The address I'd been given by Tedai's beat-up lawyer was right here in Little Tokyo, not 500 yards from Sunday's bloodbath. The New Otani Hotel, 23rd floor; Tedai Jr had a suite of rooms, the entire floor as it turned out. Now I was stepping out of the lift at Level 22, an elementary precaution. What did you expect? The excitement to go to my head? I headed for the stairs. Got my breathing right. They were not hotel-trained but whoever trained them, trained them very well. "I'm sorry, sir. That floor is restricted to private use, a private party." He'd got his body between me and the staircase up to 23 and blocked out even the light from the decorative chandelier. I'd seen sumo wrestlers wear smaller size jackets although never with smaller size automatic pistols stuffed down them. "I think you'll find I'm expected. My name's Bergman and Mr Tedai is expecting me." A shadow, a very big shadow appeared from halfway up the stairs and listened in, the way shadows sometimes do. "Mr Who? I'm sorry sir. I don't know any...what was the name again?" Like I said, well-trained. I hope his parents were proud of him. Their pride and joy. "It's about Toru. Tell Mr Tedai that it concerns the welfare of his son Toru. You might just save your balls from being sliced off if you get onto your walkie-talkie like right now and not in five minutes time." "I'm sorry, sir. I don't know any Mr Tedai. Maybe you're mistaken. Maybe you got the wrong floor, the wrong ho..." "OK." Shadow. "I'll handle this." They did a little dance on the stairs, swapping position; quite graceful under the circumstances. "Mr Bergman" "Yes" "You fuck with me you're dead man, you understand?" "Yes" "You better not be carrying, you dead man." With a nod from Shadow, Pride and Joy squeezed past again, pushed me up against the wall and frisked me none too gently. He pulled out a handfull of S&W bullets from my inside coat pocket, turned to Shadow with a puzzled expression, shook his head. "Search him again!" I could have taken him out, both of them. That's what I'd spent almost 30 years learning how to do, just in case I ever found myself wanting to join a private party on the 23rd floor. But I knew I had to play this cool, get them to accept me. I wanted an invitation. I wanted to be on the A-list. P&J shrugged his massive shoulders at the Shadow, put the ball right back in his court. There was half a minute almost could have gone either way. Eventually Shadow merged again into the background, the sound of his walkie-talkie drifting down. "You probably got the wrong floor." said P&J unnecesarily. Still in role. There was a crackle of interference from above and Shadow's voice, taking instructions. I really didn't want to do this the hard way. Honest. Honest to God. I wanted soft, as soft as I could get. I'd had enough of hard these past two days. Who needs hard? You need hard? No. Exactly. Point made. QED, whatever. Me neither. "Come." I had to edge past Pride and Joy who didn't seem that impressed, was determined, indeed, to show just how unimpressed he was; that riff-raff like me could breeze in like this when I hadn't even brought a bottle. He gave me the evil eye as our coats brushed. But Shadow had spoken and I was on my way up to Level 23. It was partytime. ************************************************************** Fifteen pairs of eyes. Hard eyes, curious eyes, they all stared at this gatecrasher - who the fuck invited him? I wondered briefly if this was the team responsible for Sunday night. I tried to force myself to remember just how dangerous these guys could be, just how far beyond normal human intercourse they were prepared to go. He was clearly the centre of attention, the planet around which these others, his satellites revolved. "You're Bergman." It wasn't a question. "You're Michio Tedai." I'd never seen him before but there was no mistaking him; the slight frame, the arrogant look. The spitting image. "Where is my son?" "Sitting outside in a car." He nodded briefly and someone behind me started for the door. "My team have instructions to take off if anyone...anyone...goes near the car." The footsteps paused waiting for the nod from Tedai. "I'm sure you appreciate my taking some elementary precautions here." There was an uneasy shuffling of feet, some heads went down and someone placed a glass on a table way too loudly. Probably spilled some. "What you want?" "I want to hand Toru over to his Dad safe and sound the way I promised I would. That's what I want." Tedai looked at me again, examined me with fresh eyes. Apparantly he had expected some kind of ransom demand. I carefully, and believe me I took extra care over this move, carefully picked out my mobile. "I'll call him up. He can't wait to see you. And he knows what happened - I think he knows all of it more or less. He knows his grandfather's dead." There was a tense moment as everyone took this in, considered it. Maybe they had kids of their own. They watched as I began to punch in the numbers, apparantly fascinated as to what would happen next; a band of stone-age tribesmen being shown for the first time how to rub two sticks to make fire. "No. Wait." Tedai. "Not here. Let's go outside." He snapped his fingers and was immediately in a huddle with four or five of his team, giving orders. They went on ahead and, showing great courtesy, Tedai gestured for me to go with him. The others fell in behind. "Mr Bergman. Have you ever seen a Japanese garden?" That almost made me choke on my peanuts, would have done if I'd been offered any. I wondered just how loaded a question it was but something in the tone of voice made me think it was genuine hostly small-talk. He didn't wait for an answer in any case. "Let me show you the "Garden in the Air." It's something very special. Very appropriate for a special occasion. You will agree." Apparantly I wasn't being offered the choice. When we had reached the terrace he made an expansive gesture with his hands and he wasn't wrong, you know; it was something special. As we strolled he told me the history of the garden, how it was based on a 16th century design; pointed out the red rocks quarried on the island of Sado in central Japan, some of them the size of a man's head, the colour of a man's dried blood. Finally he came to a halt, gazed towards the office blocks of Bunker Hill and turning, looked at me meaningfully. I took the hint and reached for my mobile. "Mike?" God, was I glad to hear James' voice. I'd had a moment of panic after the 5th ring, thinking they might have taken off for real at the approach of some innocent pedestrian. "It's cool, kid. " I said. "We're in the "Garden in the Air." Bring him up. It's OK, we'll still have time to make it to Hawaii." This last bit was a piece of code I'd insisted on - if I used the word "Hawaii", then everything really was cool; I wasn't speaking under duress, that kind of thing. "I'd still prefer Bermuda." This was James' code-word in answer, telling me that everything was right his end. I turned to Tedai. "Having a short vacation - when all this is over." "Hawaii? I own a couple of hotels there. Maybe I could help you out? Show you a good time? Show my appreciation." "That's very kind" I said. "It's...er...all booked. Everything. Thanks." He was looking at me strangely but let it go. Another 10 minutes went by and the small talk had dried up. Was probably time to start winding things down, dim the lights a bit, maybe put on a couple of slow, smoochy numbers to give people a hint; except it wasn't that kind of party, never had been really, let's face it. Even the goon squad were beginning to feign interest in the water feature. Finally, Tedai gave me a penetrating stare, seemingly coming to some kind of conclusion about me. His eyes held mine then shifted slightly and softened. His taut half-frown unfurled and was replaced by a dazzling smile. I noticed his good teeth. He really ought to try smiling more, it suited him. His gaze was now somewhere beyond my left shoulder and I turned round to follow it, was almost knocked over by Toru hurtling past. He threw himself into his father's arms and was swept up off the ground. I left them to it, checked out James who was following, escorted by Shadow and Pride & Joy. He was keeping his cool which is one of the things I'd worried about. "Bergman." All eyes again on Tedai. "Thankyou for taking good care of my son. I won't forget." "You should have seen him, Dad! Just one kick - like Jackie Chan. He kicked that guy's ass from here to fu..." Toru caught up in his sudden enthusiasm, his happiness, his family. Tedai gave me another strange look and then laughed. A real laugh though, not like his old man; the laugh of someone truly grateful to the world. To life. The others laughed too and the closest ruffled Toru's hair, patted his shoulder, seemed genuinely fond of him. I wanted out of here. "There's one outstanding matter" I said. All eyes back on me. "I had an agreement with your father. $150,000 on his safe delivery. That was the deal." All eyes back on Tedai. He thought about this, seemed to and suddenly his face darkened. "I know of no such agreement! Not my concern!" Once again I was looking into the face of his father, his father's snakeskin voice, his choking duststorm of a temper. Dollars. Wind. Dust. So that was that. "Toru" he said and urged the boy towards me. "Thankyou, Mr Bergman" he said sweetly and stuck out his tiny hand. We shook formally. "Thankyou, Ja...Mr Ozawa." They did the same and Toru went back to his Dad, grabbed his hand and watched solemnly as we were led away. The party over. ******************************************************* Back in the house, getting my things together and we still hadn't said much. James suddenly came up behind me and grabbed my ass, squeezed hard. "You gotta go? Stay a while, Mike. Just tonight." I reached for his wrists, pulled his arms upwards and, ducking back under them, threw him onto the sofa, got on top. I kissed his face hard, moved my mouth round his eyes, his forehead, back to his lips, all over. I came up for air. "I've been thinking. Maybe I'll go to Hawaii after all. I could use a break." "Oh right. OK. Er..." I looked at his face, all confused and unsure of himself, in many ways the face of a boy. I let him dangle a little longer before putting him out of his misery. He could get me back later, would do as it turned out. "I'm not going alone James. What d'you think I'm going to do? Sit in my hotel room and jerk off?" He still didn't quite get it. Didn't want to presume, wanted me to spell it out. I felt a sudden surge of love for him that caught me by surprise. Surprise at just how strong and implacable it was, an ocean wave breaking. I had the urge to cover him in thousands of tender kisses, those kisses that I had witheld from Toru out of...out of what, precisely, I didn't want to think about. I wanted most of all to make amends for the danger I had placed him in and to comfort both of us at the loss of our little guest whose absence we could still not bring ourselves to mention. "Remember last August - that night?" He smiled, remembering. "Let's fuck each other stupid, what you say?" "What now? Here?" "Yeah. To start with. Then we can pack a bag and carry on in Hawaii. What you say?" He didn't really say anything, just reached down and played with my zipper; got his fingers working on my cock, brought down his sweet young mouth. I kissed his head and carried on kissing; wave after wave after wave after wave after wave... The End