“Then my father realized,” Hiro continues, “that he was doomed. Because no matter what he said to the guards, they would consider him to have been a part of an escape attempt, and they would bring a sword and lop his head off. So, figuring that he might as well bring down a few of the enemy before they got to him, he took the gun from the first guard who had been hit, jumped down into the cover of the irrigation ditch, and shot another couple of guards who were coming over to investigate.”
Raven says, “The Aleut ran for the border fence, which was a flimsy bamboo thing. There was supposedly a minefield there, but he ran straight across it with no trouble. Either he was lucky or else the mines—if there were any—were few and far between.”
“They didn’t bother to have strict perimeter security,” Hiro says, “because Japan is an island—so even if someone escaped, where could they run to?”
“An Aleut could do it, though,” Raven says. “He could go to the nearest coastline and build himself a kayak. He could take to the open water and make his way up the coastline of Japan, then surf from one island to the next, all the way back to the Aleutians.”
“Right,” Hiro says, “which is the only part of the story that I never understood—until I saw you on the open water, outrunning a speedboat in your kayak. Then I put it all together. Your father wasn’t crazy. He had a perfectly good plan.”
“Yes. But your father didn’t understand it.”
“My father ran in your father’s footsteps across the minefield. They were free—in Nippon. Your father started heading downhill, toward the ocean. My father wanted to head uphill, into the mountains, figuring that they could maybe live in an isolated place until the war was over.”
“It was a stupid idea,” Raven says. “Japan is heavily populated. There is no place where they could have gone unnoticed.”
“My father didn’t even know what a kayak was.”
“Ignorance is no excuse,” Raven says.
“Their arguing—the same argument we’re having now—was their downfall. The Nipponese caught up with them on a road just outside of Nagasaki. They didn’t even have handcuffs, so they tied their hands behind their backs with bootlaces and made them kneel on the road, facing each other. Then the lieutenant took his sword out of its sheath. It was an ancient sword; the lieutenant was from a proud family of samurai, and the only reason he was on this home-front detail was that he had nearly had one leg blown off earlier in the war. He raised the sword up above my father’s head.”
“It made a high ringing sound in the air,” Raven says, “that hurt my father’s ears.”
“But it never came down.”
“My father saw your father’s skeleton kneeling in front of him. That was the last thing he ever saw.”
“My father was facing away from Nagasaki,” Hiro says. “He was temporarily blinded by the light; he fell forward and pressed his face into the ground to get the terrible light out of his eyes. Then everything was back to normal again.”
“Except my father was blind,” Raven says. “He could only listen to your father fighting the lieutenant.”
“It was a half-blind, one-legged samurai with a katana versus a big strong healthy man with his arms tied behind his back,” Hiro says. “A pretty interesting fight. A pretty fair one. My father won. And that was the end of the war. The occupation troops got there a couple of weeks later. My father went home and kicked around for a while and finally had a kid during the seventies. So did yours.”
Raven says, “Amchitka, 1972. My father got nuked twice by you bastards.”
“I understand the depth of your feelings,” Hiro says. “But don’t you think you’ve had enough revenge?”
“There’s no such thing as enough,” Raven says.
Hiro guns his motorcycle forward and closes on Raven, swinging his katana. But Raven reaches back—watching him in the rearview mirror—and blocks the blow; he’s carrying a big long knife in one hand. Then Raven cuts his speed down to almost nothing and dives in between a couple of the stanchions. Hiro overshoots him, slows down too much, and gets a glimpse of Raven screaming past him on the other side of the monorail; by the time he’s accelerated and cut through another gap, Raven has already slalomed over to the other side.
And so it goes. They run down the length of the Street in an interlacing zigzag pattern, cutting back and forth under the monorail. The game is a simple one. All Raven has to do is make Hiro run into a stanchion. Hiro will come to a stop for a moment. By that time Raven will be gone, out of visual range, and Hiro will have no way to track him.
It’s an easier game for Raven than for Hiro. But Hiro’s better at this kind of thing than Raven is. That makes it a pretty even match. They slalom down the monorail track at speeds from sixty to sixty thousand miles per hour; all around them, low-slung commercial developments and high-tech labs and amusement parks sprawl off into the darkness. Downtown is before them, as high and bright as the aurora borealis rising from the black water of the Bering Sea.
Chapter Sixty-Seven
The first poon smacks into the belly of the chopper as they are coming in low over the Valley. Y.T. feels it rather than hears it; she knows that sweet impact so well that she can sense it like one of those supersensitive seismo-thingies that detects earthquakes on the other side of the planet. Then half a dozen other poons strike in quick succession, and she has to force herself not to lean over and look out the window. Of course. The chopper’s belly is a solid wall of Soviet steel. It’ll hold poons like glue. If they just keep flying low enough to poon—which they have to, to keep the chopper under the Mafia’s radar.
She can hear the radio crackling up front. “Take it up, Sasha, you’re picking up some parasites.”
She looks out the window. The other chopper, the little aluminum corporate number, is flying alongside them, a little bit higher in the air, and all the people inside of it are peering out the windows, watching the pavement underneath them. Except for Raven. Raven is still goggled into the Metaverse.
Shit. The pilot’s pulling the chopper to a higher altitude.