Another Day, Another Problem Case File #4, “Every time you talk to them, it’s a gamble.”

January 19th, 2044

11:40 AM

Central Ward

Iron District

Nanbu Naoya

“I can’t believe this!” the heavyset Adachi sat in his office chair, one hand held to his forehead. In contrast to Yamato’s office, Naoya observed that Adachi didn’t hesitate to spend a little more on his own personal decorations. Adachi’s desk was a wide, bright red oak that seemed to be imperiously raised above the floor, with a large wide-backed leather chair. A small fan spun at the edge of the desk, directing the airflow towards the big man’s face. The carpets of the office were thick and bright white, while the walls were sky blue.

Adachi let out a pained sigh as he leaned back in his chair, clutching a rag to his face to soak up the blood pouring from his forehead. Apparently, when Shōki had barged into the office, Adachi had taken on the onus of confronting him. The rash act had earned Adachi a painful lesson but seeing that for all of his anger and his overbearing personality Adachi was willing to fight for his employees earned him a modicum of respect in Naoya’s eyes.

“Sakura!” the bleeding man shook his head in disbelief. “Out of all the people in this city, why her?”

“If I might, Adachi-san,” tall, slender, and dressed from head to toe in black, Yamato stood in front of Adachi’s desk. His shoulders were hunched, and his hands were clasped together nervously as Yamato assumed what Naoya understood as his “toady” persona.

“Perhaps we should think about getting you to a hospital. You are bleeding quite a bit.”

“You!” Adachi raised a thick finger and pointed at Yamato. “What the hell were you doing while all this shit was happening?”

“Please, Adachi-san,” Yamato nervously rubbed his neck. “I was halfway across town; I couldn’t have done anything if I wanted to. Besides, I struggle to imagine what you would expect me to do even if I were here.”

“I expect you to act like a man, you little pissant!” Adachi roared, not the least bit dissuaded from blaming Yamato for his current misfortune. “You’re here, worrying about me while those bastards have their filthy hands all over that girl! I’m bleeding? So what? What about her? What about what she’s going through?”

“What happened to Sakura-chan was my fault,” Naoya stepped in.

“You?” Adachi scowled, never one to hide his contempt for the delivery man. “What does a bunch of Tower goons kidnapping my secretary have to do with you?”

“It’s a long story,” Naoya held up his hands, trying to dissuade further questions. “To cut it short, a client of mine offered me a job, I reneged on the deal, and it turns out the Towers were behind it all. Since I didn’t give them what I promised them, they decided to go after everyone I’ve ever worked with.”

“You broke something, didn’t you?” Adachi shook his finger at Naoya in accusation. “Some idiot trusted you with a package for the Towers, and you broke it!”

“Look, it doesn’t matter what happened,” Naoya wasn’t in the mood to sit through another of the fat man’s tirades. “What matters is that they’ve taken Sakura to get to me.”

“And what are you going to do about it?” Adachi fixed Naoya with an angry glare, but both men already knew what came next.

“I’m going to get her back,” Naoya made that promise without hesitation. “No matter what it takes.”

“That’s right,” Adachi, for the first time, gave a look that had something resembling compassion. “That’s exactly what a real man would do. You see this, Kenji-kun? Take notes. In fact, go with him.”

“What?” Yamato blanched, turning his already pale face even whiter. “Adachi-san, you can’t be serious!”

“You’re damn right I’m serious!” Adachi slapped the desktop with his free hand, returning his ire to his subordinate. “Sakura’s a part of our team! We can’t leave her to Accident-kun; one of us has to go get her.”

“Wouldn’t calling the police be the best course of action?” Yamato tried to counsel reason in the face of Adachi’s machismo.

“Good luck getting the police to head over into Sin Ward and deal with the Towers face to face,” Adachi scoffed. “By the time the cops do anything, Sakura could be on a boat to China for all we know. We need to act now, damn it!”

“Mhhmmm-mmm,” a muffled voice intruded on the conversation, the speaker being the fourth man in the room. All eyes turned to the office chair propped up against the righthand wall and the man sitting in it. Shōki Tōzaburō sat in the office chair, covered in dry blood and half-draped in his pink fur coat. Rolls of tape purloined from the office served to tie the man’s hands together at the wrists, while adhesive straps held the man to his seat by his shoulders, and a final piece of tape held his mouth closed.

“This son of a bitch,” Adachi shook his head at the captive gangster. “What the hell are we going to do with him?”

“We should just turn him over to the police,” Yamato, again, suggested something rational.

“Whatever we do, we can’t leave him here,” Naoya gestured towards the tape holding the man down. “As soon as I’m out the door, he’ll tear himself free. Even the police wouldn’t be able to hold him.”

“This is giving me a migraine,” Yamato dryly observed as he rubbed his left temple with a long finger. “If only he wound up dead during your little scuffle.”

“Kenji-kun!” Adachi didn’t let the dark remark slip past. “What the hell are you saying?”

“Ah!” Yamato immediately wilted under his supervisor’s anger. “I sincerely apologize, Adachi-san; I’m just so upset and frustrated about what happened to Sakura-chan.”

“Let me take care of this guy,” Naoya glared at Shōki, and the gangster returned the look with interest.

“Do whatever you need to,” Adachi waved a hand towards the door. “Just get him out of here.”

Naoya didn’t wait a second longer; he took hold of Shōki’s chair and spun him around, wheeling the captive towards the door, while Yamato followed after him like an unhappy shadow. Stepping out into the office of the insurance agency, Naoya hastily walked down through the pathway between the cubicles, while men and women poked their heads out to glance at the pair and their captive. The visit from the Towers had kicked the hornet’s nest, and the employees of the insurance agency stood in huddled groups as they nervously spoke about the disruption in their daily routine. None of them had anything to say to the pair as they passed by, and they all looked at Naoya as though he was as much of an invader as the gangsters had been.

“Would it be too much to expect that you have some kind of plan?” Yamato asked in a hushed voice from over Naoya’s shoulder.

“There’s nothing to plan,” Naoya answered without looking back. “We’ve got to be direct about this. The Towers won’t respect anything else.”

“Why did I expect anything more from you?” Yamato asked with quiet exasperation.

“First things first, we need to have a little talk,” Naoya headed out into halls of the larger office building and headed out through the skybridge into the garage. The garage was a mess; blood and half-melted ice still covered the floor, and the remains of broken car parts were strewn across the room. He wheeled Shōki around, turning the chairbound gangster to face him. He snatched the corner of the piece of tape holding his mouth shut and he ripped it off with a deft flick of his wrist.

“Owww! Son of a bitch!” Shōki hissed through his teeth as the tape was ripped away. “You couldn’t be a little gentler?”

“Cry me a river,” Naoya tossed the piece of tape with several clumps of Shōki’s beard to the floor. “Tell me; where did Juzo and his cronies take Sakura?”

“Fuck you,” Shōki answered curtly.

“You’re doing all this shit to get to me, right?” Naoya laid his hands to his chest. “I’m right here. There’s no need to drag other people into this.”

“Yeah, that’s sweet of you. Still, fuck you.”

“Tell me where your boss is,” Naoya implored him, his frustration mounting. “Or whoever I need to talk to resolve all of this.”

“You think I’m going to tell you shit?” Shōki scoffed, shaking his head in mockery. “If you want to meet my boss, you just sit and wait while your world burns down around you. He’ll track your ass down when he’s good and ready.”

“Please, Nanbu-kun,” Yamato’s dryly lectured him as he stared at Shōki over Naoya’s shoulder. “No Tower that’s earned enough respect to wear a memorandum is going to answer questions from an outsider. It’s an honor thing.”

“Memorandum?” Naoya glanced back at the tall salesman.

“The tattoo, Nanbu-kun,” Yamato tapped his chest to remind Naoya of the mark on Shōki’s torso, his voice filled with soft annoyance.

“It’s not a tattoo!” Shōki snapped at the salesman, and he struggled to climb out of his seat, forcing Naoya to rest a hand on his shoulder and keep him down. “It’s metal, flesh, and blood! It’s a living piece of Tokyo that will never die!”

“Yes, yes,” Yamato sighed, clearly blind to the significance of the brand, and he kept his focus on Naoya, treating the gangster as though he wasn’t there. “Is it clear to you now that he’s not going to listen to reason?”

“I don’t understand why you have to make this difficult,” Naoya shook his head at the gangster, wishing that the world would stop and make sense once in a while.

“Look, we need to think about where we go from here,” Yamato stepped closer and lowered his voice, but it was impossible for Shōki not to hear him. “And more importantly, what we’re going to do with him.”

“And what do you suggest?” Naoya turned a skeptical eye towards the salesman.

“I already told you that handing him over to the police would be the wisest course of action,” Yamato reminded him, looking at the captive Shōki out of the corner of his eye. “So what if he escapes? Once he’s in police custody, our part in all this ends.”

“And how many people could he kill on the way out?” Naoya asked, looking back towards the gangster who smiled back with a sinister grin. “I’m not going to put innocent people in harm’s way to get this guy out of my hair.”

“Well, we can’t exactly call in the Bureau,” Yamato clicked his teeth in irritation, his red eyes boring into Naoya as he stood uncomfortably close. “They’ve got just as much reason to arrest you as they do him.”

“Is that really true?” Naoya looked down at his hands, considering the power that lurked inside them. “Are Shōki and I really no different?”

He thought about Suzume: what would she do if he called her? Would she see him as an enemy? He couldn’t answer that, and that terrified him.

“Listen to me, Nanbu-kun,” Yamato’s ruby eyes gleamed in the soft light of parking garage as he stared at Shōki out of the corner of his eye. “We can’t just let this man go; there’s no guarantee that he won’t just go around causing trouble as soon as you turn your back on him.”

“So, what do you suggest we do?” Naoya demanded, and Yamato immediately flashed a smile as he swapped into his slimier persona.

“Leave it to me, Nanbu-kun,” Yamato slipped an arm around Naoya’s shoulder in a gesture meant to show camaraderie, ignoring Naoya’s attempts to slip away. “You go ahead and try to track down Sakura. After all, between the two of us, you’re the fighter. While you’re doing that, I’ll manage our friend here.”

“Are you going to be alright with this guy by yourself?” Naoya looked at the slender salesman and had trouble imagining that he could protect himself against Shōki. The gangster was a hardened criminal and a Human Calamity; the only reason he remained stuck to the chair was because he was still crippled from the wounds Naoya had given him, but Shōki was healing faster than any ordinary man, and Naoya had no idea when the gangster would try and make his escape.

“Don’t trust him for a second,” Shōki sneered from his office chair. “Give me ten seconds, and I’ll fold your friend into a fucking pretzel.”

“Don’t worry,” Yamato ignored the threat and instead pushed Naoya towards his bike which stood nearby. “I’m a businessman, remember? Managing these kinds of delicate situations is what I do. Now, the longer you stay here, the harder it will be to get Sakura back, so you just get on your bike and leave this to me.”

Prevented from shoving Yamato away only by his desire to obey social niceties, Naoya reluctantly allowed himself to be led by the salesman. When Yamato let Naoya go, he hastily brushed his shoulder where the other man touched, as if to remove an unseen stain. Naoya mounted the bike and reached into his jacket, pulling out his Augur. Cracking it between his fingers, the device shifted itself into a pair of goggles, but Naoya didn’t put them on immediately. Instead, he looked at Yamato who was still hovering nearby, and then to the wrapped up Shōki.

“You’re sure about this?” Naoya couldn’t resist asking again, but Yamato didn’t betray an iota of doubt.

“Completely!” Yamato insisted, flashing Naoya a smile that couldn’t be less reassuring. “Haven’t I earned a little respect from you?”

“Respect?” Naoya didn’t know what to say to that notion. “Once I figure out where Sakura is, I’ll call you. Just try to stay alive until then.”

Naoya placed his goggles on and turned on the engine of his bike, which hummed to life between his legs. He felt Yamato’s eyes on him as he rode the bike away, and the feeling didn’t abate until he made it down to the road. He had no idea what Yamato intended to do, but he could “trust” that the other man knew what he was about. Instead, he focused on what he needed to do.

He sorely missed his helmet the moment he pulled out of the parking garage. With his protection destroyed in the melee with Shōki, Naoya’s head was left entirely unprotected from the fury of Hurricane Izumi. He keenly felt every drop of rain that struck his face, and the wind whipped his hair and whistled in his ears, almost deafening without the muting effect of his helmet. More pressing was the fear of getting into an accident, but that worry was transitory.

“I’m not even human,” Naoya reminded himself, though the thought was far from comforting. “A traffic collision is the least of my worries.”

He headed east, breaking the promise to himself as he returned to Sin Ward. Before he’d even entered the den of vice, he found himself feeling a sense of anxiety. He watched the streets of the Golden Mile, looking at the rare pedestrians and cars that he passed with suspicion. Who could say how far the Towers could reach? Anyone and everyone could be one of their informants, or opportunistic enough to try and claim whatever bounty the gang had put on his head. Heading into Sin Ward would only put him further into the Towers’ clutches, but he knew he couldn’t change anything by running away.

Sin Ward felt different to Naoya; the streets were quieter than he was used to, even in the middle of the day. A vortex had touched down on the ward somewhere on the border between Temptation and Decadence, and numerous roads had closed due to the flooding, forcing Naoya to take constant detours. The streets Naoya passed were largely empty, in contrast to the constant business Sin Ward usually drew, storm or not. Perhaps Izumi’s death throes were finally violent enough for the entertainment district’s customers to stay indoors. However, Naoya couldn’t help but see the empty streets as an ominous warning; a warning he felt was realized when he reached his destination.

Flashing red and white lights greeted Naoya as he paused at a cross street, grey and black buildings surrounding him on all sides. Ahead of him was a five-story red brick laminate structure that seemed tiny in comparison to its neighbors. Two white and red Civil Patrol cars sat parked in the middle of the street, cutting off all through traffic while an ambulance and a firetruck were parked on the curb outside the building.

Smoke poured out of the building’s first story windows, their glass panes having been blown out a fire that had already been put out. Around the broken portals, the walls of the building were blackened, and the laminate had peeled away to reveal the honest concrete beneath. Members of the Civil Services walked around the scene in their white uniforms and transparent raincoats, setting up silver beacons on the sidewalk to erect a holographic barricade to warn away passersby. As Naoya watched the emergency personnel tend to the scene, his eyes strayed up to the sign that hung over the front of the building: once upon a time, the banner over the business had been a salacious icon of a nude woman being constricted by a dragon, but the lower half of the lewd image had been melted and warped by flames.

Naoya cautiously pulled forward, not wanting to draw the ire of the men and women working to clear the scene, but he was unable to fight his sense of curiosity. He drove forward slowly, letting his eyes pass over the assortment of vehicles, trying to take in every detail that he could. The sound of the Bridge-Runner’s heavy wheels and the soft hum of its engine seemed to attract attention to him, though not from the Civil Services.

The back of the red and white ambulance was open, and a small gurney had been rolled out and a small figure sat on it beneath a thick blanket to shelter him from the downpour. The figure sat hunched over, breathing through a small canister and an oxygen mask, but as Naoya drew closer, the man looked up in his direction. With difficulty, the small man drew himself up and slipped off the gurney, stumbling towards Naoya as he clutched the blanket.

“Ichinose,” Naoya greeted the little man with vanishing warmth, and Ichinose returned the hospitality in kind. The skinny, short soapland manager stood in the rain, dressed in a thick brown sweater and a pair of off-white sweatpants. His stringy brown hair was matted down by the rain, and his face and clothes were stained with soot and ash.

“It’s about fucking time,” Ichinose spoke in a hoarse whisper, and he glared up at Naoya with palpable hate, his eyes reddened and inflamed. “Where the hell have you been?”

“Don’t take that tone with me,” Naoya sat up straight on his bike as he looked down at the other man. “I don’t work for you anymore. I don’t need to take your bullshit.”

“You—! You—!” Ichinose tried to speak, but he had difficulty forming the words. He wheezed and gagged, then bent over double as he tried to breath. He pressed the mask attached to the canister to his mouth and took a long, deep breath to regain his strength.

“You can’t pretend like you aren’t a part of all this!” when Ichinose could speak again, his fire hadn’t been quenched. “I lost everything because of you!”

“I’m not taking the blame for any of this!” Naoya snapped back. “I told you from the start I didn’t want to have anything to do with the Towers, and you lied to me!”

“So, I lied! As long as we got paid, what did it matter? You had him, you dumb son of a bitch!” Ichinose’s words were half accusing, and half pleading, as though he was asking Naoya to go back in time and make another choice. “You had Nishijima! You could have turned him in, and we’d all be sitting pretty!”

“And what would have happened to Nishijima if I handed him over to those thugs?” Naoya demanded, sure that Ichinose couldn’t answer.

“Fuck him, Nanbu!” Ichinose spoke with as much compassion expected. “Think about us, you moron! There’s a bounty on your head, you horse’s ass; did you know that? And I, in case you haven’t noticed, I lost everything!”

Ichinose took a deep breath from the oxygen tank again, and Naoya looked away while he panted and wheezed.

“What happened here?” Naoya asked when Ichinose’s coughing fit ended.

“What do you think?” Ichinose rasped out an answer, shaking his head in pure despondence. “The Towers happened.”

“Why?”

“Why, he asks,” Ichinose scoffed, and his prior energy seemed to drain out of him. “Mr. Won’t-Take-Any-Blame wonders why the Towers burned my whole damn shop down. They took everything away from me, Nanbu. They took all my savings and burned the rest. They took the girls, too.”

“What did they want with the girls?” Naoya leaned forward in his seat, his interest piqued.

“Boy, you’re just full of dumb questions today, aren’t you?” Ichinose chuckled, a choking and mirthless sound. “What do you think they wanted? He told me I was just as liable for losing Nishijima because I brought you on, so I had to pay up if I couldn’t find you. He took what little I had and said the girls had to work off the rest.”

Ichinose glared at Naoya out of the corner of his eye again, his hate palpable.

“If you’d just answered the phone one fucking time,” the small man shuddered with anger. “If you’d just listened to me. . .”

“Well, I’m here now,” Naoya reminded him and Ichinose through up his hands in exasperation.

“You’re too late!” Ichinose looked at his burned down business and took another breath from the tank. “The damage has been done, and you. . .,” Ichinose gave Naoya a long look, considering him, before he pointed an ominous finger in his direction. “You need to ride that bike to the other end of the island. Maybe hop a boat, I don’t know. But you aren’t safe here.”

“The man I spoke to over the phone,” Naoya nodded in the direction the Virgin Sacrifice. “The one who burned down your shop: is he the ringleader behind all of this?”

“You mean Yakiyama? Why do you care?” Ichinose cocked his head to one side, trying to understand what he wanted.

“Do you know where I can find him?” the question earned an astonished laugh from Ichinose that quickly petered out in another hacking cough.

“Do you—? Do you have any idea what you’re asking?” Ichinose demanded when he could speak again.

“If dealing with this Yakiyama is the only way to get this price off my head, then that’s what I’ll do,” Naoya folded his arms as Ichinose laughed at him again.

“You’re a fucking gem, Accident-kun,” Ichinose spat onto the wet street.

“If you help me, I can help you,” Naoya leaned forward on his bike again, making eye contact with Ichinose to try and impress on him the importance of what he was asking.

“Help me, he says. How’s that, Accident-kun?” the former soapland manager rolled his eyes. “Are you telling me you’ve got a few hundred thousand yen in your back pocket to help me get back on my feet? Of course you don’t. You don’t fix things, Accident-kun; you break them. That’s all you can do.”

“If you tell me where Yakiyama is, you can claim the bounty on me,” as Naoya explained his plan, Ichinose looked at him with disbelief. “You show the Towers that you never meant to double cross them, you get paid, and the girls go free. I don’t know if they’ll pay you enough to cover all your damages, but anything you can get from them is more than you have right now.”

Ichinose didn’t answer right away; instead, he stared at Naoya like he was a puzzle he couldn’t solve.

“They’re gonna fucking kill you,” Ichinose assured him, his voice grave. “You know that, right?”

“You let me handle Yakiyama,” Naoya spread his hands. “He’s taken two shots at me already, and he’s missed both times.”

“That kind of crazy shit is only going to piss this guy off more,” Ichinose shook his head, his eyes wide with fear.

“If Yakiyama wants to cut loose, let it be on me, not you,” Naoya tried to assuage the other man’s trepidation. “If you’re scared to face this guy, all you need to do is tell me where he hangs out. You call and let them know I’m coming, and I’ll go there myself.”

“No,” Ichinose looked towards the ground as he considered. “If I’m not there to hand you over, they aren’t going to give me shit.”

Ichinose fell silent for a moment, and he reached into his pants pockets, likely to search for a cigarette. When he couldn’t find one, he took another breath from the oxygen tank and gave Naoya a hard look.

“Look, I don’t know where Yakiyama hangs up his boots,” Naoya remained silent as Ichinose paused to take another breath. “But. . .”

Ichinose stared into the middle distance, and licked his lips, trepidation written on his face.

“I might know someone who can help us,” he finished after a moment.

“Who?” Naoya had to ask, and Ichinose shook his head.

“Look, I don’t even think this asshole is gonna answer when I call him,” Ichinose took another hit from the oxygen mask. “I’ve gotta think about this. Maybe call in some favors if I have any left.”

“So, what can I do?” Naoya asked.

“If you’re stupid enough to go through with this, then meet me at the Eastern Municipal Station in an hour. I’ve gotta get all my ducks in a row before our collective funeral.”

“I’ll be there,” Naoya promised, and he backed his bike up and began to turn it around. As he slowly drove away, the former soapland manager called out to him.

“If you don’t show, I won’t blame you! Hell, I wouldn’t if I had any choice.”

“We’re all doing things we’d rather not do today,” Naoya silently agreed as he accelerated down the street, leaving Ichinose with the ruins of his destroyed establishment. He turned down the street and headed nowhere in particular. He had an hour to kill, but nothing to fill it with. Working an odd job in the meantime was the furthest thing from his mind, and he didn’t want to risk leaving Sin Ward and getting stuck in traffic before meeting with Ichinose. He was too anxious to eat or nap, even if he did have someplace to rest his head. Driving around in circles didn’t seem like a good idea, either, seeing as the Towers were looking for him, so he decided to head to the station early and just wait.

The Eastern Municipal Station was on the south side of Sin Ward, sitting on the border between Ambition and Central Ward. The station was a wedge-shaped building five stories tall with a sloping structure that was highest at its rear point and gradually became lower to the ground as it fanned outward. Buses, taxis, and rails ran in and out of the Eastern Municipal Station, ferrying the city’s population up and down Sin Ward, and even into Foundation, but that was only the beginning. As large as the station was above ground, larger still was the underground railway and shopping mall which connected the facility to all corners of the island.

Naoya circled the station, picking through the buses entering and exiting the facility, pausing when he needed to let herds of pedestrians cross the street. He pulled up to a parking lot outside the station and parked his bike before heading inside. The interior of the Municipal Station had polished white tile floors and a dark carpet that covered the center of the walkway while the walls were soft red velvet in color. The ceiling displayed the motorways of Yōgai-shima on a digital map which tracked changes in the weather, road closures, and the movement of buses across the city.

The first floor of the station was largely a selection of storefronts and eateries; almost all of the actual business for buses and taxis was conducted out on the streets. From the second floor upward, the building was divided into two halves; one being a public side with more stores and businesses, and the other half being the station that served one of the four different trains that ran above ground. Between the two halves there was a partition manned by private security that ensured each passenger was ticketed and boarded the railcar without contraband or weapons.

Without direction, Naoya ascended to the third floor, ignoring the other commuters as he went. He tuned out his surroundings as he walked, turning all his thoughts inward as he tried to consider what lay ahead of him, and the choices he needed to make. He moved silently into a small gift shop on the third floor, ignoring the greeting of the employee behind the counter as he drifted between aisles of greeting cards and small stuffed toys. The wall of the shop opposite the entrance was a large window that allowed Naoya to look out at Sin Ward.

Three vortexes had touched down in the red-light district, pulling the storm above lower to the ground. The massive, terrifying spirals of churning clouds and crackling lightning obscured the city of depravity from Naoya’s vantage on the south side of the island. Looking at the hurricane, and the ethereal power it still held, Naoya thought of Suzume.

“Should I tell her?” Naoya asked himself as he watched spears of lightning descend from the typhoon above and strike somewhere in the city. She had a right to know; she was his girlfriend, after all. Naoya had already committed to facing Yakiyama, and he would follow through with whatever that entailed. He hoped, perhaps too optimistically, that the Tower would be amenable to a peaceful negotiation, but he had to steel himself in case the other man proved entirely intractable.

“I could die,” the thought should have been terrifying, and it was the driving force behind his desire to tell Suzume, but he couldn’t bring himself to do it. The fact of his own mortality held no fear for him any longer: he simply couldn’t believe he could die. It wasn’t that he was invincible, or immortal, he told himself. Instead, his encounters with Sakai and Shōki revealed to him that he contained an otherworldly power; a force that was truly immense and beyond his capacity to fully comprehend.

He looked down at his gloved hands again, at the hands that could destroy anything they touched. It was a terrible power that he possessed, and an intuition he couldn’t explain told him that he was capable of far more than he knew. Looking into himself and seeing only a silhouette of the awful energy that inundated him, death held no fear for him. Instead, he feared only himself, and for that reason, he wanted to avoid a violent confrontation if he could. A jingle from Naoya’s headset drew him out of his dark thoughts, and he reached up to tap the side of his Augur as a call came through.

“Ah! Nanbu-kun,” Yamato’s voice came over the line, sounding uncharacteristically pleased with himself. “How are thing’s going on your end? Have you managed to find out where they took Sakura-chan?”

“Sort of,” Naoya answered warily, unable to ignore the amusement in the other man’s voice. “How about you? What did you do with that gangbanger?”

“Oh, you don’t need to worry about him,” Yamato jovially waved off the question. “I taught him that it’s the insurance salesmen that really have a stranglehold on this city, and then I sent him on his way. He won’t be a problem, anymore: I managed to squeeze that promise out of him.”

“You just took his word for it?” Naoya balked, remembering how cautious the salesman had been,

“I told you before, didn’t I?” the salesman gleefully assured him. “Gangs like the Towers run on an honor system; their oath is their bond, and I always make sure I get the last word in when I close a deal.”

“I guess salesmen and career criminals aren’t so different,” Naoya observed with a heavy dose of sarcasm. “As long as he’s safely out of the way, I guess that’s all that matters.”

“That’s a strange way to say thank you,” Yamato sniffed, clearly affronted. “But I’m big enough to overlook your lack of gratitude and find solace in a job well done. Speaking of, how are things on your end?”

“There’s a friend of mine, well, an acquaintance, who knows some things about the Towers,” the words tasted sour in Naoya’s mouth as he was forced to describe the situation. “He says he can lead me to the local gangster that has me in his crosshairs. Well, maybe.”

“Do you trust him?” Yamato cut right to the heart of the matter.

“Ordinarily? No,” honesty seemed to be the only appropriate answer. “But he’s got skin in the game. I halfway expect a group of Towers to show up here in his place, but as long as I get to their boss, that’s all that really matters.”

“Where are you meeting him?”

“The Eastern Municipal Station; why do you ask?”

“With the mood he’s in, Adachi-san will fire me on the spot if I return to the office without Sakura-chan,” Yamato bemoaned his fate with a heavy sigh. “I might as well come with you.”

“This is going to be dangerous, Yamato-san,” Naoya spoke slowly, trying to convey the seriousness of the situation.

“Don’t worry, don’t worry,” Yamato assured him with a chuckle. “I’ll make sure to keep my distance if things take a turn.”

“Just focus on getting Sakura-chan,” Naoya insisted. “As long as she’s alright, you don’t need to worry about me.”

“I couldn’t agree more,” Yamato gladly agreed, and he swiftly hung up the call without a farewell.

“You didn’t need to agree that quickly,” Naoya thought ruefully. He reached up and pried off his goggles so that he could stare out at the city with his own two eyes. As the Augur shifted back into its compact form, and he stared into his reflection with his own two eyes, Naoya realized that he wasn’t alone.

“You know, eavesdropping is a rude thing to do,” Naoya turned to look to his left, laying eyes on the woman that was now sharing his view. Beside him stood a familiar woman; short, shapely, and with a head of pinkish-red locks that frame a round, cute face. Today, Conbeni-chan had her hair down, and she was dressed in a puffy bright red raincoat with black leggings and a pair of brown boots with fur trim.

“I wouldn’t call it eavesdropping, per say,” the young woman reached up to tap her chin with one pink-painted fingernail as she cocked her head to one side as she considered the accusation. “I was just listening.”

“Yeah, that’s called eavesdropping,” Naoya folded his arms, but he didn’t have the heart to truly try and scold the young woman.

“Everywhere you go, you’re speaking; be it through the words you speak, or the things you do, or even your body language, and someone is always listening in this city,” the young woman kept a glib smile on her face while she explained. “You should keep that in mind.”

“I’ll do that,” Naoya gave the woman a scathing look, but she only smiled back, mischievously, and Naoya felt the corners of his mouth twisting into a grin despite himself.

“Sounds like you’re in a bit of a tight spot,” the young woman looked out the window, staring into the storm.

“I suppose I am,” Naoya agreed. Conbeni-chan didn’t say anything and silence fell between them. Without a response, Naoya sensed that the young woman expected him to keep speaking and he reluctantly submitted.

“I’m about to walk into a lion’s den with two men behind me, and I can’t expect either of them to actually help me. In fact, I imagine both of them would sell me out if it served them.”

“That does sound like a pickle,” the young woman commiserated, but she didn’t sound the slightest bit concerned.

“What would you do in my place?” Naoya asked, watching the young woman out of the corner of his eye.

“Me? No, no. I’d never be caught in a position like that,” she waved a hand, dismissing the notion. “I’m just an ordinary girl, after all. What you really should be asking is what I think you should be doing.”

“And what is that?”

“Hmmm,” the young woman made a show of tapping her chin again, idly twisting on the spot. “I suppose that depends on what you’re fighting for.”

“I never said anything about fighting,” Naoya observed, coolly, but Conbeni-chan waved it off.

“You didn’t need to,” she answered coyly. “With men, it’s always about fighting, isn’t it? So, what are you fighting for?”

“All of this, it’s my fault,” Naoya admitted, looking away from the young woman next to him. “I made a mistake, and it put other people in danger.”

“What kind of mistake?” the girl asked.

“I was asked to do a job,” Naoya reached up to rub the back of his neck. “Only it turned out that it was way bigger than I was told. At the end of it, I wasn’t certain what the truth was, and I backed out. In the end, it pissed off the wrong people, and they’ve started hurting other people to get to me.”

“It sounds to me like you didn’t make a mistake at all,” Conbeni-chan offered.

“People are getting hurt because of what I did,” Naoya looked down, not wanting to look at the young woman in the eye. “A friend of mine lost his garage; another had his business burned down. Now, they’ve taken a bunch of people hostage, and I can’t help but blame myself for all of this.”

“So, what are you going to do about it?” another question, and Naoya found himself struggling to answer.

“I don’t know,” he chose honesty again. “I want to believe that if I can just speak to whoever’s behind this and I look them in the eye and explain, maybe that will be enough. If that doesn’t work, I don’t know. Maybe there’s something I can do to pay him back or make amends.”

“That’s sweet in its own way, but you aren’t that naïve,” the young woman shook her head with a sad smile. “Do you really believe that will work?”

“No,” the admittance formed a bitter frown on Naoya’s face.

“So, what are you really going to do?” the girl questioned him again.

“I don’t want to fight,” Naoya folded his arms again. “But, somehow, I know that’s exactly where this is all going.”

“Sometimes, it’s necessary to fight,” Conbeni-chan folded her hands behind her back, giving Naoya a gentle look.

“But if I fight, I don’t know if I can control myself,” Naoya held up his hands, again, looking down at them. “There’s something inside me that’s dark, and vicious. Something bloodthirsty. I may not be able to hold back; I might kill someone.”

“As long as it’s the right person, killing can be necessary, too,” Conbeni-chan spoke confidently and clearly, and it made Naoya do a double take.

“I can’t believe you said that,” Naoya couldn’t hide how astonished he was, and the moment served as a reminder how little he really knew the woman he called Conbeni-chan. Sensing his discomfort, the young woman took a step closer, slowly, and gently.

“Tell me, if you have a chance to save those women, but in order to do it, you need to kill someone, would you do it?” the young woman asked the uncomfortable question and Naoya tried to look away, but he felt himself drawn back to meet her eyes. “If something awful happens to those women because you chose to hold back, could you live with it?”

“I don’t want to hurt anyone,” Naoya shook his head, unable to really answer the question. “I don’t want to kill anyone, either.”

“When innocent lives depend on you, you can’t afford to give anything less than your all,” Conbeni-chan reached out and gently took hold of Naoya’s left wrist and held his arm up. “If you want to find a way to get out of this situation without fighting, then commit to it. Believe in it. But if you can’t, then you need to fight, and you need to commit to that, too. And if it’s necessary to use that power inside you, and you need to hurt someone, you need to fight whole-heartedly. When you fight for something you believe is right, to hold back would be the real sin.”

Naoya found himself staring down into the woman’s eyes, trying to understand who she really was. In the silence, the two found themselves communicating without words: Conbeni-chan tried to impress the importance of her words onto Naoya, while he struggled to find some reason to dismiss them. Before a resolution could be reached, there was a chime, and Conbeni-chan stepped away.

“Sorry,” Naoya fumbled with his jacket pockets, reaching for his Augur. “I’ve got a call.”

He looked away from the young woman and held up the Augur, which displayed a small yellow screen with the words “Ichinose Yuta.” He tapped the screen, putting the call through, and then turned to look towards Conbeni-chan, but the woman had vanished. He faintly heard the sound of Ichinose’s voice over the Augur as he turned around, searching for any trace of the disappearing woman in red, but there was no sign of her.

“Nanbu!” Ichinose shouted over the line, evidently tired of being ignored. “Are you there?”

“Yeah, yeah,” Naoya assured him as he pressed his phone to his ear, though he took one last look up and down the aisles for the vanishing woman. “I’m here.”

“Good, good,” Ichinose breathed out a heavy sigh. “I was starting to think you’d been jumped, or something.”

“Were you worried about me?” Naoya couldn’t help but smile sarcastically at the sentiment.

“I was worried that you’d found some way to screw me over again,” Ichinose corrected him. “Speaking of. . ., are you here at the station?”

“I’m here,” Naoya’s smile slipped away, and his features hardened into a stern look of determination.

“This is your last chance to run away,” the ex-soapland manager warned. “Once we get on the train, there’s no going back.”

“I’m in until the end of the line,” Naoya insisted, and the other man sighed again over the line, clearly struggling to understand.

“Meet me underground,” Ichinose barked. “We’re taking the eastbound rail from station three below ground. And make it quick; the train’s leaving soon.”

“Couldn’t you have called me sooner?” Naoya hung up and turned to leave, taking one last look around the small shop for Conbeni-chan before he hurried out. As he walked, Naoya idly tapped his Augur again, sending a GPS pin to Yamato so that the salesman would know where he was heading, though he wasn’t really concerned with idea of the other man joining him. He hustled down from the third floor of the station and descended the flights of escalators that wove through the building, moving as quickly as he could among the press of men and women on the stairways. When he reached the escalator heading into the station beneath the building, he immediately felt a familiar trepidation come over him.

A dozen or more people crowded around Naoya on the escalator as it descended into the earth, preventing him from moving forward of his own volition. The natural sunlight that managed to break through the cloud cover disappeared as the escalators continued downward through a tunnel into the underground station, replacing the sun with bulbs in the ceiling and the glow of holographic advertisements. To the faceless mass of citizens around him, nothing changed, but to Naoya, he felt as though he was being lowered into an open grave.

The constant buzz of human voices did nothing to make Naoya feel reassured, and neither did the soft tinkling of music, nor the echoing voice of an announcer playing over the speakers far below. He felt sweat beading on his forehead, and he hastily wiped it away as he shifted back and forth on his feet, eager for the ride to end. As soon as the sliding steps of the escalator terminated into the station floor, Naoya broke away from the commuters idly shambling off the stairway.

As large as the station was above ground, the underground was the true hub of activity, featuring a sprawling shopping mall that extended beyond the border between Sin Ward and Central. Numerous stairways ascended and descended from the streets above, allowing people across the city to enter the travel hub. The underground shopping mall served as a massive central space with a dozen different tunnels that broke off into various different directions. However, Naoya had no curiosity to follow any of the passageways and was instead focused on getting out as quickly as humanly possible.

A thousand footsteps rang off the linoleum floors and up the walls of tile and grey paint, creating a raucous chorus that pounded in Naoya’s ears. The ground beneath his feet rumbled as a train came through, making Naoya feel sick, and the air was filled with the shrieking of the rails. He doubled his pace, following the directions Ichinose had given him while trying not to think about the fact he was trapped underground. He kept his head on a swivel, trying to find Ichinose, but the other man found him first.

“Accident-kun!” a familiar voice called out over the noise, and Naoya turned his head, scowling at a small figure waving in his direction. Ichinose beckoned him over from beneath a thick blue-grey raincoat that was so large it made the slim man seem over twice as wide as he was. Beneath the coat, Ichinose wore a grey set of sweatpants tucked into a set of black rubber boots.

“Can you not call me that in public?” Naoya lowered his voice as much as he was able considering the loudness of their surroundings.

“What? I can’t call you ‘Accident-kun?’” the small man asked with a mocking grin. “It’s what you are.”

“Do you want me to leave your skinny ass out to dry?” Naoya glowered at the small man, but Ichinose only seemed more amused.

“I keep telling you, you shoulda walked away from this,” heedless of the station’s rules, Ichinose puffed on a lit cigarette. “I wouldn’t be here, if I could help it.”

“Nothing will get done if you doubt yourself when the moment comes,” a tall shadow spoke as it appeared hovering at Naoya’s left elbow. Both men were flinched at the sudden arrival, and Ichinose spoke first.

“Hey, asshole!” Ichinose snapped at the newcomer and gestured down the station. “This is a private conversation; keep it moving.”

“No, no,” Naoya held up his hand to restrain the small man. “This an associate of mine. His name’s Yamato.”

Ichinose glanced between the two men, arching an eyebrow in clear confusion as he glanced up at the tall, slim Yamato in his black smart-fabric suit and crystalline glasses. The salesman had abandoned his hunch-shouldered, eager-to-please persona again. Instead, he loomed like a shadow of death, putting off an unnerving aura as he glared with his deep-red eyes.

“So what are you?” Ichinose gestured at Yamato with the cigarette. “You this guy’s undertaker?”

“Yamato Kenji,” the salesman didn’t allow the opportunity to introduce himself slip, and he smoothly produced a business card and handed it to Ichinose with both hands and a slight bow. “FAIR Insurance Agency representative. My specialties are housing, vehicle, and health insurance.”

“Oh, that’s the scam, huh?” Ichinose looked down at the card and flashed a sleazy smile at Naoya. “You bought life insurance from this guy, and you’re bringing him with you to watch you die, huh? You might as well cut me into the payout, considering what you owe me.”

“Please, don’t be absurd,” Yamato reached up to adjust his glasses, his bloodless face lacking any expression. “Nanbu-san couldn’t afford a life insurance worth anything on his income.”

“Ohhh!” Ichinose covered his mouth with the back of his hand as he laughed, then reached out to pat Naoya on the chest. “Did you hear that, Accident-kun? Even your buddy knows that your delivery racket can’t pay bills!”

“Can we just get on the damn train and get this over with?” Naoya barked, casting an irate eye at both men.

“Why the hurry?” Ichinose asked, sarcastically. “You’ve got somewhere to be? I don’t; the ashes of my business ain’t even cold, yet.”

Naoya shook his head and stepped away, heading towards the turnstiles while the other two men continued to talk behind.

“What kind of coverage were you paying for, if you don’t mind my asking?” Yamato questioned, perhaps sensing a chance to make a sale.

“I barely even remember,” Ichinose brushed the question away with quiet exasperation. “I’ve been paying the bare minimum on that shithole for the past three years.”

Naoya tuned the pair out as he headed for the tracks and joined the line of commuters that headed towards the checkpoint leading to the rail tracks. The checkpoint had six different capsules that men and women took turns stepping into, after which they were scanned for contraband or weapons. The process was almost entirely automated, but two Civil Police Officers stood off to the side, watching for anyone who might object to the process.

A few of the people grumbled about the process, but Naoya didn’t pay any attention. When Naoya’s turn came, he stepped forward with little eagerness and the doors of the transparent capsule closed behind him. He closed his eyes, trying to imagine he was anywhere else but here, being trapped in a glass-and-metal coffin far below the ground.

“Please hold still,” a female mechanical voice chimed from somewhere in the pod, but Naoya refused to open his eyes. There was a mechanical hum as the machine scanned him, looking for any irregularities. Naoya impatiently counted the seconds, and after having stood there for what felt like an hour, the door ahead slid open.

“Thank you for your patience!” the voice chimed in again. “Have a great day!”

Naoya hurried out of the capsule onto into the boarding area, joining people of all ages as they waited for train. Despite getting out of the scanner, the restless sense of anxiety didn’t abate. The world around him started to blur, and the conversations of the commuters around him became an indistinct buzz. He hardly recognized it when the rail car arrived and barely remembered boarding. The press of the other people on the train made was unbearable, along with the motion of the car around him. He felt like he was trapped in a metal box, and the air was running out. He struggled to breathe, and he forced himself through the throng of people and pushed himself towards the window, desperately peering out to look for open space, but the darkness of the tunnel stared back at him.

“Breathe,” Naoya tried to remind himself of Suzume’s voice as the fear tried to overwhelm him. “Breathe, Naoya. You’re okay.”

“Suzume,” the thought of his dark-haired girlfriend filled his mind. Pressing himself against the wall of the rail car, Naoya dug out his Augur, and it broke apart when he snapped it, shifting into sharp fragments before solidifying into his goggles once more. He pressed the Augur to his face and the device hooked itself onto his head. The nanite machine extended itself over his ears, blotting out the sound of the rail as the lenses projected the image of a grassy field beneath the shining sun. The optical illusion and the muted noise couldn’t completely allay Naoya’s fears, but they managed to help him focus.

He tapped the goggles, bringing up a small menu that displayed itself over the image of the field. Running his left index finger across the Augur, Naoya directed the device to make a phone call. He stood in his tiny bubble, being jostled by the motion of rail car and the bodies of the other passengers, listening to the sound of the phone ringing as he anxiously waited for the call to connect.

“You’ve reached Sumitomo Suzume,” the sound of his lover’s voice came over the Augur headset, but Naoya immediately knew it wasn’t really her. “I’m deeply sorry that I can’t answer your call. Please, leave a message, and I’ll get back to you.”

There was the sound of a chime, and Naoya began speaking before he even knew what he wanted to say.

“Hey, Suzu, it’s me,” Naoya winced a little, realizing that introducing himself was pointless. “Look, there’s this job I’m doing; I can’t really go into detail about it, but it’s important. I broke something; not an object, but a contract, I guess. It’s caused a lot of trouble for a lot of people, and I’m going to do whatever I can to fix it. I don’t know what it’s going to take, but I’m going to see it through. I—,”

He struggled to go on, not certain exactly what kind of farewell he wanted to give. No, he reminded himself, it wasn’t a farewell, at all. It was just a message.

“I’ll speak to you when I get home,” Naoya decided to end the message there. The more he spoke, the more he felt like he was lying, and that thought twisted his stomach.

He spent the rest of the trip trying to pretend he was somewhere else, tuning out the universe as best he could. A tap on his shoulder beckoned him out of his trance, and Naoya raised his goggles and turned to look at Ichinose standing behind him.

“You ain’t freaking out, are ya?” Ichinose smirked as he made eye contact with the larger man, perceiving his discomfort.

“I’m fine,” Naoya assured him, pressing the Augur back into the shape of a cellphone.

“Well, it’s too late to back out now,” Ichinose shook his head. “Our stop is coming up next.”

Naoya reached up and held onto the strap that dangled from the roof of the subway car as the rails began to screech, and the entire train lurched as it slowed. The motion and the pressure of nearby passengers pressing against him made Naoya’s stomach do flips in his belly. When the subway car finally pulled to a stop, Naoya pushed to the fore, making sure he was one of the first to get out. It was one of the rare times Naoya used his size to his advantage, and his urgent desire to escape the confined space blunted any sense of guilt on his part. As soon as Naoya passed through the sliding doors, he stormed across the station and up the steps, seeking the open air.

Scanning the smaller concrete and brick laminate buildings around the exit from the station, Naoya realized that they were still in Sin Ward, likely somewhere between Decadence and Ambition. Over the tops of the buildings to the northwest, Naoya could make out the stark-white peak of Gettō-san, which was contrasted by the sable slopes of a nearer monolith. A smooth pyramid of black metal sat on the eastern edge of Sin Ward, straddling the Ambition and Decadence Districts and the White-Mountain Sanzu that led into Foundation. The locals called it “Kurodaiya,” to Naoya’s recall.

The great black pyramid was an experimental self-contained environmental dome that concealed a small chunk of the city. When refugees from Japan made new lives in Yōgai-shima, the powers that be expended great effort into manufacturing bleeding edge defenses against the proliferation of Human Calamities, and Kurodaiya was one of the first manufactured habitats that was designed to provide citizens beneath its roof complete protection against all forms of inclement weather. However, the protections offered by roofs and biospheres paled in comparison to the technology of the new century.

After the advent of the ground-breaking Karmic Barrier system that sheltered the entire island from one side to the other, shelters like Kurodaiya became obsolete. Most of the oldest shelters were deconstructed, but some of them remained, often falling into the hands of private interests when they weren’t abandoned outright. Those shelters that remained standing in Sin Ward were converted into “dark sectors” where illicit businesses operated twenty-hours a day outside the view of the public. Naoya had never been into Kurodaiya himself, but he’d heard stories about what went on there, and if only a single one was true, it made the other dark sectors he’d passed through seem trite.

“Look at you, charging off without a single thought in your head,” Ichinose followed Naoya up the steps, he and Yamato being the only other two passengers to follow Naoya. “Did it only occur to you now that you didn’t know where you’re going?”

“Just needed fresh air,” Naoya thumbed away some cold sweat from his brow.

“Fresh air, he says,” Ichinose scoffed, and reached into his coat pocket to retrieve another cigarette.

“My, this is quite the change of scenery,” Yamato adjusted his glasses as he looked up towards the buildings around them, his crystalline glasses reflecting the distant gaudy lights.

“I think now would be a good time to tell where it is we’re going,” Naoya turned to fully face the other two men, the three of them standing alone on the streets.

“I don’t know,” Ichinose admitted, taking a drag from his cigarette.

“What do you mean, you don’t know?” Naoya demanded, but the soapland manager remained unflappable.

“I mean, I was told to get off at the station and wait,” Ichinose breathed out a trail of smoke. “They didn’t tell me what to wait for.”

“Should we be expecting a warm welcome or. . .?” Yamato glanced at Naoya, clearly expecting imminent trouble.

“That’s the thing about trying to get in good with the Tokyo Towers,” Ichinose flashed a tight grin. “Every time you talk to them, it’s a gamble.”

Lights flashed at the end of the street, and the three turned in unison to the left. A pair of headlights drove down the street, slowly approaching. A long black limousine crawled up the street, moving at an ominous pace. All three men watched with anticipation as the vehicle rolled forward and came to a stop. The doors at the rear and middle of the vehicle opened, and four men climbed out.

All four men were dressed in black-on-black suits with opaque shades shielding their eyes. Though they had different heights, builds, and hairstyles, their demeanors were identically stoic. All four men stood, their hands clasped at their waists, and they eyed the trio with severe gazes from behind the tinted glasses they wore.

“Ichinose?” one of them, a man with dark, spiky hair slightly shorter than the other three bodyguards, addressed the group.

“That’s me,” Ichinose raised a hand, and Naoya felt the unseen eyes of the man in black shift to him.

“And you’re Nanbu?” the man in black asked.

“Right,” Naoya nodded, still not certain whom he was talking to, or why.

“Who’s the third?” asked one of the other bodyguards, a bald man who nodded in the direction of Yamato.

“Yamato Kenji, from the FAIR—,”

“He’s a friend of mine,” Naoya lied, interrupting Yamato’s practiced introduction. “He’s just here for moral to support.”

“Tell him to take a walk,” the first bodyguard said. “We’re only here for two.”

“He comes with us,” Naoya insisted. “He has a vested interest in this, too.”

All four guards remained silent for a moment, and then, the leader with the spiky black hair spoke up.

“Where we’re going, none of you might make it out alive,” the bodyguard informed Naoya. “Is your friend aware of that?”

Naoya looked towards Yamato, whose red eyes shined in the overcast light.

“I’ve danced with death a time or two,” the salesman assured them with a macabre smile.

“Yeah, I’m sure contract negotiations are cutthroat,” Naoya scoffed inwardly, but he didn’t voice his doubts.

“Very well,” the bodyguard ushered the trio towards the rear of the limousine. Ichinose reached the back first, but a tall bodyguard stopped him before he could climb into the car, and he motioned for him to spread his arms. Ichinose sighed and pulled his Augur out from his coat pocket before holding up his arms. The bodyguard quickly frisked Ichinose for weapons and forced him to empty his pockets and show him his pack of cigarettes before he was allowed to get in the car.

Naoya followed suit, keeping his Augur in the form of a pair of goggles while he held his arms up. He tried to ignore the uncomfortable feeling of the bodyguard’s hands groping his chest, arms, and legs, resisting the instinct to punch the other man invading his personal space. When the frisking was finally over, Naoya climbed into the limousine, while Yamato complained outside.

“Is this entirely necessa—ah!”

The inside of the limousine had genuine rich brown leather seats and scarlet carpet. The interior was open and spacious, with a second row of seats facing the rear where Naoya and Ichinose put themselves. Inside the back of the limo were four people, though one of them immediately seemed to stand apart from the others.

Two bodyguards sat at either end of the seats facing Naoya and Ichinose, and between them sat a man and a woman, or something that appeared to be a woman. Wearing a black gossamer off the shoulder dress whose hem reached her thighs, the woman had perfect brown skin and a head of stark white hair that was elegantly tied up. The woman didn’t even look up when the pair of men slipped into the seats across from her. Instead, she kept her knees gently pressed together, her legs slanted to her right, with her hands folded in her lap as she stared at the floor.

“An android?” Naoya wondered as he stared at the shapely, but entirely unresponsive female passenger. The effigy of femininity was certainly attractive, but she was too perfect, in some ways. Naoya had never seen a human being with more perfect skin, and her features had the slightest hint of exaggeration; her eyes were a little too large, her face, a little too small. It was the subtle things about her that made Naoya question just what he was looking at. The way she sat with perfect stillness made Naoya wonder whether or not the woman was a machine, or a flesh-and-blood human being that had received extensive modifications.

“Has my lady caught your eye?” spoke a man’s voice. Where Naoya would have expected those words to be voiced with jealousy, the speaker sounded curious instead.

Naoya looked to the last passenger in the vehicle, the man sitting to the left of the woman in the black dress. He was dressed in a suit the color of red wine with a pair of brown leather loafers, and he had an entirely relaxed demeanor, keeping his left leg crossed over his right with his fingers interlocked in his lap. The man had a headful of purple hair that was tied back in a loose ponytail and pale porcelain skin that was livelier than Yamato’s severe death mask. If he didn’t know better, Naoya almost would have thought that the man was a machine, too. His features were nearly as perfect as the woman sitting next to him, and the soft glow of his eyes and the metal studs in his temples spoke of inarguable cybernetics, but something about him seemed genuine in a way that Naoya found hard to put into words.

“She does anything I ask her to,” the man in red reached out with one hand and gently pressed a finger under the woman’s chin, raising her head. At his touch, the woman’s full lips spread into a beautiful smile and her eyes lit up with gladness, but as soon as the man released his hold, the woman’s smile immediately faded, and her head drifted towards the floor to resume its prior position.

“She never complains about my work, she always supports me, and she never spends my money,” the man in red flashed a handsome, but somehow mocking smile as he tenderly patted his companion on the knee. “Really, what more could a man ask for?”

“No offense, but I prefer the real thing,” Naoya couldn’t help but say what he felt. Ichinose jabbed him unsubtly in the ribs with an elbow, but he ignored it.

“I hear that often,” the man in red smiled confidently. “I once knew a man who refused to drink wine; he said that it was a poison that sabotaged the mind and eroded moral character. It took some time for me to convince him to savor a glass, but once he allowed himself that first drink, he found he had an appetite for alcohol he could never satisfy.”

“You sound like a good friend,” Naoya flashed a smile of his own, trying not to be overtly sarcastic. If the owner of the limousine felt insulted, he didn’t show it.

“Well, that was unpleasant,” Yamato slid into the seat to Naoya’s right and slipped off his glasses, polishing them furiously with a cloth pulled from pocket.

“And who is this?” the man in the red turned his eyes onto Ichinose, and his irises flashed white.

“He’s, uh—,”

“Yamato Kenji, representative of the FAIR Insurance Agency,” before Naoya could stop him, Yamato had replaced his glasses and withdrawn a business card from somewhere, which he obediently offered to their host with both hands.

“Amon,” the man with the purple hair plucked the card from Yamato’s hands with one hand, seeming not quite certain how to process the third man’s appearance.

“If I may ask, is your companion a ningyō?” Yamato asked, leaning forward to look at the woman. “It’s a Marionette model, isn’t it? What series if I might ask?”

“It’s a Venus series,” the man in red answered, his smile curious but uncertain.

“A stellar choice for a man of such expensive tastes,” Yamato nodded in appreciation, but he gave the brown-skinned android another look. “But, forgive me, that isn’t true, is it? This is clearly an Athena-series, isn’t it? Yes, it certainly is, and it makes all the sense in the world for a man such importance to have one. A ningyō that’s as gentle as kitten behind closed doors, and as fierce as a lioness when it comes to personal defense. A little of everything.”

“My, you certainly have quite the in-depth knowledge about the subject for an insurance salesman,” the man in red held up Yamato’s card with a look of amusement.

“I’ve worked in an eclectic series of fields,” Yamato assured him, adjusting his glasses with a self-assured smile. “While I was with Black Mountain, our subsidiaries at Marionette were still putting out the Testament series. Of course, the history of androids in Japan goes back long before the Downfall when rudimentary robots designed to emulate grandchildren and caretakers were marketed towards our aging population. After Yōgai-shima was founded, the demand for ningyō as emotional supports for broken families and single men exploded into an industry all its own. Still our critics claimed that the Venus and Aphrodite series were always what Black Mountain was aiming to produce.”

“You have a very strange choice in friends, Ichinose-san,” Amon tucked Yamato’s business card into his pocket.

“I wouldn’t exactly use that word,” Ichinose grumbled.

“Yakiyama,” Naoya spoke firmly and clearly, taking control of the conversation. “Do you know where he is?”

“As a matter of fact, I do,” Amon agreed. He raised a hand and made a silent gesture, and the guards outside the car closed the doors.

“Why don’t you go ahead and tell where that is, and we can get this over with?” Naoya heard the doors of the limousine’s other compartment closing, and through the glass window behind Amon’s head, he could see the remaining bodyguards clambering in.

“I could do that,” Amon agreed with a patient smile. “But the question is, what would I stand to gain from that?”

The car rumbled as the engine turned on, and the automobile began to pull away from the curb.

“Amon-san, where are we going?” Yamato asked.

“We’re going somewhere,” Amon answered, cryptically. “But our exact destination depends on you.”

“What is it that you want?” Naoya asked, directly.

“Yakiyama and I are, let’s say, having a bit of tiff,” Amon leaned back in his, folding his hands again. “Due to certain disagreements we’ve had in the past, he’s developed quite a vendetta against me. However, due to a set of shared allegiances, our friend Yakiyama is unable to attack me directly. For that reason, he’s decided on a course of action that’s as violent as it is roundabout. Namely, he’s opted to attack my associates.”

“Which means burning my fucking shop down,” Ichinose complained. “Don’t see how you couldn’t have stopped that.”

“Like I said,” Amon’s eyes turned a cool blue as he flashed his eyes towards Ichinose. “Yakiyama and I are bound by the same rules. I can’t strike him, and he can’t strike me. You and I may have done business in the past, but you aren’t under my umbrella. That made you a target.”

“Business?” Naoya glanced at Ichinose, who was too busy grumbling under his breath, then, Naoya looked towards Emon. “You’re the one who put up the bounty on Nishijima, aren’t you? That’s what this is all about, isn’t it?”

“Nishijima is old news in this city,” Amon didn’t deny the allegation so much as he brushed it aside. “That affair was just the inciting incident that Yakiyama needed to justify his temper tantrum, but this would have happened eventually, eventually. You can mark my words.”

“So, how do we enter the picture?” Naoya prompted Amon to continue.

“All of this is happening because Yakiyama is convinced that he lost out on a fortune with the way things resolved themselves,” Amon shook his head in disapproval. “He’s decided to recoup his losses by putting on a performance in the Ryūketsu.”

“What’s that?” Naoya asked.

“It’s a place of bloodsport far outside the eyes of civilians,” Amon seemed entertained by the question. “The rich and powerful come to watch men fight and die for the sake of entertainment, and fortunes are won and lost on every match. The high stakes games will also serve as means for Yakiyama to traffic the women he’s abducted; he’ll use them to sweeten the pot or pay off his other debts.

“However, the arena also serves as a rare opportunity for Yakiyama and I to come to blows, in a sense,” Amon shifted forward in his seat and fixed Naoya with a keen set of green eyes. “This is where you come in.”

“How?”

“From what my sources tell me, Yakiyama’s sent his lieutenants after you,” Amon planted his elbows on his knees and indented his fingers, giving Naoya an intense appraisal. “You survived both encounters. Most men couldn’t do that.”

“What are you asking me to do?” Naoya demanded, not liking the look in the other man’s eyes.

“I’m asking you to fight,” Amon spelled it out. “You defeated Sakai and Shōki; that means you’ve got real skill. Granted, neither of them was on Yakiyama’s level, but even so, you’ve got enough of a track record that I’m willing to take a gamble on you.”

“You want me to fight in the arena, then?” Naoya concluded and Amon nodded.

“Yakiyama already hates me, and because he blames you for depriving him of Nishijima, he hates you, too,” Amon settled back in his seat and Naoya noticed the light coming through the windows had dimmed, as though the limousine had entered a tunnel. “He thinks you and I conspired to fuck him over, and when he sees me enter the Ryūketsu and I put you into the cage as my prize fighter, he’ll be seeing red. After that, I’ll put a truly ludicrous wager on you, and Yakiyama will put his entire business up as collateral in order to challenge you himself.”

“And when I beat him, he loses everything,” Naoya realized what the other man’s plan was.

“I want you to do more than that, Nanbu-san,” Amon flashed a smile as handsome as it was threatening. “I want you to kill him.”

The Daily Grind Case File #9, “But this is probably the hardest part.”

January 4th, 2044

4:30 PM

Central Ward

Sunset District

Senior Inspector Asahi Takeyoshi

Takeyoshi, strode in the shadow of an enormous skyscraper, his hands shoved into the pockets of the green jacket he wore over his black Bureau uniform. The wind whipped at his messy dark hair, but the Inspector was wrapped in an invisible curtain of Negativity that made the rain fall around him. The Inspector didn’t move with any haste; it was clear to him that situation was already resolved regardless of what he did at this point.

The rain poured down on the Heights, that cluster of spiral argent towers that dotted the northern reaches of Sunset. Fingers of smoke poured from the side of Tower 5, though the dark cloud was swiftly dispersed by the howling wind and rain. The skybridge that once connected Tower 5 to its nearest neighbor had fallen to pieces and collapsed into the streets below, becoming a slag heap of metal and glass. It was there, in the ruins, Takeyoshi found Shin.

The young man had seated himself on a broken and scorched chunk of the metal rails that had fallen to the earth. His elbows were on his knees and his posture was hunched, directing his eyes down towards the ground to stare at the space between his feet. The young man’s Omen was still in the form of a black claymore, which was speared into the concrete some fight feet away from the Deputy, who didn’t seem keen to even look at the weapon. Laying on the ground with the sword driven through its skull was what remained of a human body.

“Sloppy,” Takeyoshi shook his head, looking at the tortured remains of the Casualty. The dismembered body sparked as drops of rain struck it, and it spasmed in its death throes, but the voice in Takeyoshi’s head was silent, telling him that the corpse posed no threat. Shin had done the job; his sword had pierced the Human Calamity’s brain, though he’d seemingly torn the creature limb from limb first, with no regard for his own safety, or mercy for the Casualty itself.

Looking down at the young man, nothing needed to be said for Takeyoshi to know what the young man was going through. He’d taken his first life; even in the clearest life and death situations where lethal force was justified, the act of killing was something that could scar the survivor for the rest of their life. To an Inspector, who was forced to deal with death on a daily basis, the act of taking the lives of Casualties took a heavy toll. He’d seen how it affected other Inspectors; hell, he lived that life himself.

“If you’d just retreated instead of charging into the building, things would be different now,” Takeyoshi silently admonished the young man. “I was kind of hoping to keep you from having to get your hands dirty for a while. Honestly, making your first kill on the first day has got to be some kind of bad omen.”

The young man stood up as his mentor drew closer, and Takeyoshi found himself looking into the younger man’s green eyes. There was a confusion in the Deputy’s features; a sense of being lost. Takeyoshi looked back, fixing the younger man with his most disapproving glare, but he didn’t say anything. There would be a time for upbraiding him later.

Reluctantly, Shin stood, brushing his slick blond hair out of his eyes as he rose. He crossed towards the sword, then reached his hand out towards the hilt of his weapon. He hesitated for a moment as Fubuki Kamui twitched again in her death throes, and electricity cracked from her corpse. His hand shaking, Shin wrapped his fingers around the weapon and withdrew it. No sooner than he held the weapon up, than it released a shower of digital sparks and returned to the shape of a phone. The small black device produced a flaming eye which peered at Shin impassively, but the AI within the phone said nothing.

Takeyoshi withdrew Ink from inside his coat pocket, and he tapped the screen. The AI within interpreted his gesture, and from down the street behind him, Takeyoshi heard the roar of an engine. The Survivalist taxied down the street, moving with rare restraint towards the pair of Inspectors. The Bureau’s jet-black vehicle was soon joined by a parade of white and red emergency vehicles, their lights and horns blaring.

Takeyoshi directed the Survivalist to park itself alongside the street, giving space for the Civil Services to cordon off the wreckage of the collapsed skybridge. He stepped to the side, moving to lean against the passenger side door of the Survivalist, while Shin followed suit, seating himself on the hood of the vehicle. The white-clad members of the Civil Services picked over the rubble, setting up holographic barriers to create a boundary around the collapsed railing. A number of EMTs dressed in protective suits circled the blackened and charred remains of Fubuki Kamui, looking at the cadaver with professionally disguised confusion and revulsion. Seeing the EMTs begin to extract the body of the Human Calamity from the debris, Takeyoshi drew Ink out again.

“Ink,” Takeyoshi spoke as he held the dark grey Omen to his mouth. “Radio HQ; tell them we need a hearse out here to pick up the remains of a Casualty. Civil Services is going to have it bagged up for them by the time they arrive.”

“Roger,” came the feminine voice of Ink.

With that, Takeyoshi tucked Ink back away into his pocket, and returned to watching the Civil Services go about their business. There was no need for the Inspectors to linger; the Casualty had been eliminated, and the Forecasters hadn’t contacted them about any further potential emergencies. All Takeyoshi needed to do was summarized the day’s events into a mostly fictional incident report, and the death of Fubuki Kamui would become nothing more than a record in the Bureau’s database, destined to be forgotten. The only person who would likely remember today was Shin, who stared sullenly at the scene. For his sake, Takeyoshi stood silently next to him, giving them young man time to process everything.

“Are they demons?” Shin broke the silence, and the question he asked caught the seasoned Inspector off-guard, but he quickly found himself following Shin’s train of thought.

“No,” Takeyoshi answered quietly, knowing the mental struggle his trainee was wrestling with.

“Tell me they aren’t human,” Shin looked back down at the ground for a moment, before looking back up to watch the oddly shaped body bag carrying Fubuki’s remains being placed onto a stretcher.  “Tell me there’s a reason for all of this. Tell me it’s aliens, or a military experiment gone wrong. Anything.”

“Anything to avoid the fact that we’re the same?” Takeyoshi cut to the heart of the matter. Shin hung his head again and placed his hands against his knees. He looked like he was bracing himself to be whipped.

“How is that possible?” Shin questioned.

“Hazard Energy,” Takeyoshi looked up into the sky, holding his gloved left hand up to catch a few raindrops on his palm. “It’s a hell of a thing. Makes the impossible possible. But Hazard Energy has a way of seeping into everything. The air. The ground. Buildings. And, of course, human beings.

“Normally, its benign,” Takeyoshi cocked his head to one side as he reconsidered. “I mean, you generally don’t notice it. Build up too many positive or negative Hazard Particles and it can really take you for a spin, but in most cases, people never realize what effect it’s having.

“But when Hazard Energy builds up in the brain, well, that’s when things get dicey,” Takeyoshi folded his arms. “The brain becomes a powder keg, waiting for the right conditions to become lit.”

“What conditions?” Shin looked up, his face pensive.

“Fear. Anxiety. Exigency,” Takeyoshi tapped his right temple with a finger to enunciate his point. “Hazard Energy gathers in the amygdala and when it gets excited, the energy surges through the brain and lights it up like a Christmas Tree. In that moment, an ordinary human becomes a walking calamity.”

“But why don’t Casualties look human anymore?” Shin pressed. “Why do they change? Why do they lose control?”

“It all depends on the brain,” the Inspector leaned over and poked the deputy on the forehead. “A human being that has been through trauma or has that natural ‘it’ factor can more easily adapt to the energy flowing through the brain and harness it. The amygdala transforms, becoming kind of a regulator called a ‘Dharma.’ But if the brain isn’t resilient enough, not adaptive enough, well, then the flow of energy causes it to mutate and deform. The Hazard Energy spreads down to the rest of the body, changing it as well. The original mind tends to get lost in the shuffle; I’m told.

“Casualties have a different kind of brain structure called an ‘Adharma.’ The Adharma is a natural processor of Hazard Energy and that’s all it wants: more energy. And the fastest way to get what they crave is through burning the world down around them.”

“But why did I become a Survivor and that woman didn’t? What makes us special?” Shin demanded, trying to find a refuge of reason in a meaningless universe.

“It’s not about us being special, or privileged,” Takeyoshi corrected the young man’s thinking. “It’s not even about being strong or weak. It’s about whether or not it’s in you to endure a crisis in the moment. Some of the strongest people you’ll ever meet can collapse in the face of the unexpected, and sometimes pressure can turn the weakest person into a diamond. You can’t predict it, Shin, and you can’t find a reason for it. You can only deal with each crisis as it comes.”

“I just can’t wrap my head around it,” Shin shook his head, clearly still troubled.

“Alright, you got me,” Takeyoshi spread his hands and smiled faintly. “You were right the first time: they are aliens.”

Shin allowed himself a quiet chuckle. For a brief moment, silence returned between them, both men not knowing exactly what to say.

“I screwed up,” Shin announced, abruptly. “I know I shouldn’t have gone on ahead, but at the same time, I. . .”

“Look, kid,” Takeyoshi began before he was even certain what he wanted to say. “I know you thought you were doing the right thing. And maybe you were, but you need to listen. The rules are in place for a reason, and the first day on the job is definitely not the time to start testing boundaries. If I can’t trust you to follow protocol or do as I say, when I say it, then we can never function as a team. Do you understand?”

Even though he was the one saying it, Takeyoshi wasn’t entirely sure what he was trying to communicate. Was he taking accountability for what happened or assigning blame? Was he admitting that Shin had been right or admonishing him for his actions? He couldn’t decide exactly what he needed to say. Why was this so hard?

“I understand,” Shin agreed, solemnly, and Takeyoshi thought they had come to an understanding, but Shin stared into the distance, and his eyes hardened. “But I’m not sorry for what I did.”

“You nearly died up there, kid,” Takeyoshi reminded him, but Shin shook his head.

“Maybe so,” the young man agreed, his voice grim. “But other people did die. She was only a Casualty for a few minutes, and innocent people got caught up in the situation. I can’t sit by and let that happen again.”

“And what happens the next time you pull this shit and get yourself stuck in another situation you can’t handle?” Takeyoshi asked, growing confrontational. “You got lucky today, Shin; twice if we count that situation this morning. Trust me, that luck is going to run out.”

“So, you just want me to shut up and sit on the sidelines?” Shin asked, and he looked back toward Tower 5, gesturing at it with one hand.

“Yes,” Takeyoshi answered without batting an eye. “If that’s what I tell you to do, then you do it. Do you remember what I asked you this morning?”

“About why I’m here?” Shin answered, a feistiness in his voice.

“Keep that in mind,” Takeyoshi pressured him. “There’s a reason for you being here, and it’s not about playing hero. That needs to be your motivator right now, not being a good Samaritan.”

“I’m not going to close my eyes and cover my ears when people need my help,” Shin protested, raising his voice. “That’s not who I am!”

“It’s what you’re being told to do!” the Senior Inspector shot back, trying desperately to impart some sense of reason into the younger man’s head. “Do you have a death wish? Is that it?”

“No!” Shin insisted. “This isn’t about me!”

“Do you have family, Shin?” Takeyoshi changed tactics, trying to appeal to the young man’s emotions. “Are there people who care about you? Have you spared a single thought for them? What are they going to do when you get yourself killed running headlong into danger.”

“The people I love wouldn’t be proud of me if they knew I let someone else get hurt because I was too scared to fight,” Shin spoke solemnly as he drew himself to his feet. “And if I learned that my brother or sister was left to die because an Inspector refused to save them, I’d never forgive them.”

It was a rare moment in Takeyoshi’s life when the journalist found himself at a loss for words. What was he supposed to say to that? Takeyoshi had encountered Inspectors of all different sorts during his tenure with the Bureau, but none of them were quite as motivated in the same way Shin was. He wasn’t trying to be a hero or chasing a high.

Shin was motivated purely by a sense of moral obligation. As long as single person was in peril, Shin wasn’t going to sit idle, regardless of the risks to himself. That kind of zealous drive couldn’t be reasoned with; as long as the young man thought that he was acting in service to his own moral code, he couldn’t be dissuaded. Anyone so fanatic about their beliefs was dangerous, and Shin was most dangerous to himself.

Takeyoshi ground his teeth together. He was angry. The feeling surprised him. This kid, this child, was running headlong into a tragedy, whether he knew it or not. Sooner or later, someone had to knock him on his ass and teach him what life was really like, and the universe had picked Takeyoshi to do the deed. He held up one hand, pointing accusingly at Shin and opened his mouth to say something, but at that precise moment, he felt his Omen beginning to ring in his pocket.

“Listen—,” Takeyoshi’s momentum was interrupted and he pulled his Omen out of his jacket, glancing between it and Shin. The small grey Omen displayed a green holographic screen with words written in white text that spelled a name: “Kazuma Iori.” Takeyoshi’s breath caught at the name, and he stared at the incoming call with a sense of disbelief.

“What is it?” Shin asked, his mentor’s confusion was obvious.

“Nothing,” Takeyoshi immediately waved the young man off, the high emotions of their conversation forgotten in the span of a moment. “Just wait in the car.”

He turned his back on Shin and strode away as the Omen rang, trying to make sure he was far enough away from his deputy so that the conversation wasn’t overheard. He gave Shin one last glance, making sure the young man was staying put, before he turned away and tapped the screen, raising the phone to his ear.

“This is Inspector Asahi,” Takeyoshi announced, speaking in a low voice.

“Inspector Asahi, it’s me,” came the voice of a young man from the other end of the line. The speaker sounded furtive, and nervous, and he was also speaking softly, as if he was afraid of someone listening. “Do you remember?”

“Iori-san?” Takeyoshi kept his tone neutral. “What is it?”

“It’s been a while,” the caller tried to seem conversational, but he couldn’t hide how awkward he felt. “I honestly wasn’t sure whether or not to call you.”

“But you did,” Takeyoshi observed curtly, his patience quickly running thin. “What happened?”

“Well, it’s about Jinta,” Iori admitted, sounding as though he was coming out with a dirty secret.

“Have you heard from him?” Takeyoshi asked, his voice a razor-sharp whisper.

“That’s the thing. . .,” Iori struggled to speak.

“Did he contact you?” Takeyoshi demanded, his entire body tensing up.

“He called me,” Iori answered, sounding as though he was tensing up with the expectation being hit.

“He called you!?” the Inspector demanded, nearly shouting into the phone. He glanced around through the falling rain, making sure he hadn’t attracted any attention with his outburst. “When?”

“Well, the first time was last week—,”

“The first time?” Takeyoshi sputtered, but Iori went on.

“And he’s called me a couple of times since then,” the other man continued to confess.

The once and future journalist was left momentarily wordless for the second time that day, so angry and disbelieving that he couldn’t form a sentence. His teeth ground together, and his lips pulled back into a snarl of raw anger. He wanted to start screaming through the phone at the man on the other side, but he struggled to restrain his temper. Kazuma Iori was by no means obligated to help him, and right now, Takeyoshi couldn’t afford to burn any bridges.

“You spoke to him?” as much as he wanted to lay into Iori for not calling him immediately, that wasn’t what was important. Tanaka Jinta had finally come up for air after months of hiding. But why? Takeyoshi needed to know.

“The first couple times, he just called, but I didn’t answer,” Iori admitted, sheepishly. “I thought it was just a glitch in the system or something. I told myself that there was no way he was really calling me.”

“And?” Takeyoshi prompted the young man to continue, eager to tear through the young man’s hesitation to get to what he really wanted to hear. “You did eventually pick up, didn’t you?”

“I did,” the admission was quiet, and barely audible.

“What did he say?” the Inspector pressed, growing more and more irritated.

“He was just. . . Jinta,” Iori seemed to be at a loss as to how to express himself. “We just talked about better times. About the Bank. About Megumi. He was just himself.”

The irony of Iori’s statement forced Takeyoshi to scoff bitterly. He was just “Jinta?” That wasn’t true, no matter how much the man calling Iori made it seem.

“When was the last time he called you?” More concerned about discerning his enemy’s motives than Iori’s feelings, Takeyoshi continued to pump him for information.

“Today,” the answer made Takeyoshi’s heart race.

“What did he say?” the journalist in him came to the fore, though Takeyoshi wasn’t motivated by a desire for the truth. “Be specific: did he mention where he was staying? What about names: did he mention anyone you know in common?”

“I don’t really remember,” Iori sounded like he was wavering, torn between respecting Takeyoshi’s authority and whatever obligation he thought he owed the man pretending to be his friend. “He sounded tired; I’ve never heard him sounding so depressed, and I. . .”

Takeyoshi ground his teeth, ignoring the pain in Iori’s voice. “Jinta” was well versed in covering his tracks; evidently, he’d been very careful in speaking with Iori to avoid letting any hints about his whereabouts slide into the conversation, but that left Takeyoshi with another question. Why contact Iori in the first place?

Jinta had to know that all of his former friends and associates were being watched for any sign of him contacting them. The fact that he withheld information from Iori spoke volumes about how cautious he was being, but what was he hoping to gain from even reaching out? Was it desperation, or was there something he thought Iori could give him?

“Did he ask you for anything?” Takeyoshi’s question seemed to catch Iori off-guard.

“What? No,” the way Iori answered told Takeyoshi everything. The Inspector lapsed into silence for a moment, considering his next choice of action. Whatever play Jinta was hoping to make, Takeyoshi knew that if he pushed back too strongly, then he risked scaring his quarry back into hiding. He had to be careful.

“The next time Jinta calls you, don’t answer,” Takeyoshi advised him. “Don’t talk to him anymore. Don’t text him. If you see him, avoid him. Does he know where you live?”

“Of course he does,” Iori scoffed, sounding almost insulted by the question. “We’ve been friends for years.”

“You should find somewhere else to stay,” despite the severity of his words, Takeyoshi could only wonder if the young man would listen to him. “Leave the house for at least a month. Don’t tell anyone where you’re going.”

“Come on!” Iori sighed over the phone, his voice filled with exasperation. “You can’t be serious! I have a life to live! I can’t just pull up stakes and disappear! I don’t have the money for that!”

“You have no idea what you’re dealing with, Iori-san; the man we’re talking about is too dangerous to be put into words.”

“That doesn’t make any sense,” Iori seemed to deflate again, his voice losing all its strength. “I’ve known Jinta for years; he’s not some kind of monster.”

Jinta was half-right: Tanaka Jinta had been an ordinary person. The man that now went by that name, the man that had called Iori, however, was the worst kind of Human Calamity.

“Remember what I told you,” Takeyoshi could only hope that Iori would appreciate the gravity of his words. “Whatever happens, how ever often he tries to contact you, do not speak with Jinta again. If you see him, go to the police. Never, under any circumstances, allow yourself to be alone with him. Do you understand?”

Iori didn’t answer, and Takeyoshi sensed that the other man had precious little to say. The conversation had run its course, and Takeyoshi needed to turn his attention to more important things. Namely, trying to pin down Jinta now that he was coming up for air.

“Look, I have to go,” Takeyoshi was curt with his informant; Iori had played his part, however late he was with the information. The next move was Takeyoshi’s, and he felt a surge of adrenaline telling him to plunge forward. “Remember what I told you.”

Takeyoshi hung up the call and turned about, looking back towards the car, but not really seeing. His mind was occupied, already racing through different scenarios. He needed to try and pump Jinta’s other associates for more information on the off-chance he’d tried to contact them as well. He also had to consider trying to discretely protect Iori, just in case Jinta had homed in on him as a future victim. So distracted was he by his various thoughts, that he didn’t realize that Shin wasn’t where he’d left him.

The young man was no longer sitting near the Survivalist. Stepping towards the car, Takeyoshi bent down, trying to peer through the windows to see if the young man was waiting inside as he was told, but he knew he was bound to be disappointed. In the distance, Takeyoshi heard the sound of raised voices, a clamor he’d been ignoring during his phone call, but it demanded his attention now. He whipped around and caught sight of Shin striding away through the downpour, headed back toward the Tower entrance and the lineup of emergency vehicles.

There was a man dressed in a dark business suit with a long brown trench coat standing outside the tower doors. He stood arguing with one of the firefighters, who held up a hand to silently refuse the man entry into the building. Whoever the newcomer was, his voice carried across the street and through the rain, though his exact words became faint and hard to understand at a distance. Shin was making a beeline toward the two men, evidently dead set on intervening.

“Shin!” Takeyoshi called out, trying to get the younger man’s attention, but his trainee kept on walking. The Senior Inspector hastened after him, but it was clear he wasn’t going to reach Shin before he butted into the situation that was unfolding.

“You can’t do this!” the man in the trenchcoat spat, his voice filled with outrage. “I’m a taxpayer and a resident of this Tower! I demand you let me inside!”

Getting a better look at the newcomer as Takeyoshi approached, he appeared to be a man in his early twenties, judging by his face. The newcomer reached into his coat as it whipped in the wind and pulled out a leather wallet. He opened it up and held it in the face of the Civil fireman, for all the good it did.

“I’m sorry sir, but access into and out of the Tower is suspended until we’ve made a complete survey of the damages,” the fireman replied from behind his heavy mask. “You’ll be notified as soon as we’re done.”

“I’m not just going to sit out here!” the man continued to protest. “I work directly for the Cabinet! I can have your supervisor down here in the next ten minutes with one phone call!”

“He’ll tell you exactly what I’ve told you, sir,” the firefighter replied, having the patience of a saint. “No one gets in or out until our survey is complete.”

“My wife is still in there!” the young politician pointed up toward the building. “I have every right to—!”

“Fubuki Kamiya?” Shin stopped two paces away from the disgruntled new arrival and the man in the trench coat turned to face Shin. The rain poured down young Fubuki Kamiya’s features and Takeyoshi saw there was palpable fear in his eyes. Kamiya beheld Shin as though he were an embodiment of death itself, despite the relaxed and meek posture the young Inspector had adopted.

“Yes?” Kamiya answered, his voice shaking with apprehension.

“I’m afraid your wife has fallen victim to an unforeseen calamity,” Shin bowed, holding his hands out toward Kamiya, a cracked and blackened ID held in his grip. Kamiya reached out toward the small card, his hands shaking as he stared at it. He almost pulled back, as though he were afraid to take it. Eventually, his quivering fingers plucked the small card from Shin’s hands, and he held it up to his face. At once, his face contorted with agony, and his breathing became ragged.

“Where is she?” Kamiya demanded, trying and failing to control his breaking voice. “Can I see her?”

“Your wife’s remains are within Bureau custody,” Shin answered, his voice soft and understanding even as he recited the standard answer. “Once we’ve finished our final examination, her remains will be cremated and you’ll be notified when you can retrieve them.”

“I can’t even—!” the man stuttered, holding the picture of his wife up to his face. “I can’t even say goodbye.”

He held a hand to his mouth as tears began to flow, mingling with the raindrops on his face. His mouth contorted into a toothy rictus as his shoulders began to shake, his entire body soon wracked with sobs.

“I should’ve—, I should’ve been here!”

Kamiya collapsed to his knees, splashing onto the asphalt as he wept, the unbearable realization that his entire life had been destroyed in the space of a few minutes bearing down on him. As he cried out in his grief, Shin looked down at him with sympathy, clearly lost as to what to do past the Bureau SOP. The Deputy Inspector opened his mouth to say something, but Takeyoshi placed a firm hand on his shoulder, silently urging the younger man to keep his peace. No combination of words, no elegant prose, no heartfelt utterance could soothe the pain of a man that just learned the woman he loved was dead.

“There are a lot of hardships that come with being an Inspector,” Takeyoshi observed as the rain fell down around them. “But this is probably the hardest part.”

January 4th, 2044

08:15 PM

Central Ward

Lunar District

Deputy Inspector Atarashi Shin

The rest of the day after the events in the Heights was uneventful and awkwardly silent. Neither Takeyoshi nor Shin had much to say to one another after their argument at the Heights; Shin was emotionally drained from his battle with Fubuki, and seeing her husband in the aftermath only served to put a painful seal on the event. Takeyoshi, for his part, barely seemed to remember that Shin existed. He spent the rest of the shift constantly finding excuses to pull the car over so he could make private phone calls. That was fine with Shin; he didn’t want to spend more time in the car with Takeyoshi than he needed to. Fortunately, the rest of the dreary day passed without further incident, and the end of the twelve-hour shift mercifully came.

Shin leaned his head against the passenger side window as Takeyoshi sat behind the wheel. The young man stared out at the city, watching as the rain continued to fall through the night. The meager sun had long since fallen, leaving Yōgai-shima to be lit by a sea of lights from its thousands of buildings that clustered together in the darkness. The Survivalist headed south towards the Lunar District, joining the endless flow of traffic heading into the Bureau’s private sanctuary.

The line of cars moved in a staccato fashion, stopping and starting unpredictably. The Eclipse Tower rose in the distance, illuminated day and night by the lights that shined up from the base of the building. The black wall that surrounded the entire district was nothing more than a tenebrous silhouette in the night, whose outline could only be seen by the glare of headlights and lamps mounted on the walls.

The line of cars was made up of vehicles of every shape and sort, many of them automated trucks delivering supplies. Occasionally, Shin could see the shape of other Survivalists in among the queue ahead of them. Takeyoshi sat patiently behind the wheel of the car, saying nothing, although Shin noticed that his mentor was yawning every thirty seconds or so. Every few seconds, Shin would glance away from the window and look towards Takeyoshi from the corner of his eye, checking to make sure his sleep deprived senior wasn’t falling asleep at the wheel.

Eventually, after what felt like a small eternity, the car began to move forward again, and a lane opened on the right for the Bureau’s vehicles that allowed them to quickly break from the congested traffic and bypass the checkpoint. The vehicles of the Inspectors swiftly broke away and sped towards the black walls of the checkpoint. Ahead of Shin and Takeyoshi were two more Survivalists, one a cherry red color, the other the same polished black, but with a massive cleaver strapped to the back. As the red Survivalist augured towards the black walls around the Shadow District, a sensor detected their approach and a retractable gate slid open, allowing the Inspectors in past the checkpoint.

The parade of Inspectors rejoined the traffic on the other side of the wall, smoothly merging into the faster flow beyond the chokepoint. The two Survivalists plunged ahead, making a beeline for the ramp on the right side of the road that led into the garage beneath the Eclipse Tower, but Takeyoshi brought their car up to the side of the street and put it in park. Shin looked at Takeyoshi, not understanding why they were stopping, but Takeyoshi continued to stare out the windshield without making eye contact.

“I’m gonna be taking the car,” Takeyoshi explained before Shin, stifling a yawn with the back of one hand. “You can get out here.”

“Yeah,” Shin accepted the curt handoff without complaint, popping the passenger side door open before climbing out into the rain. He stepped onto the wet cement and took hold of the car door as he turned around, preparing to slam it shut behind him. He paused for a moment, holding the door open as Takeyoshi finally glanced in his direction. It felt like there was something unsaid between the two of them, and Shin had an urge to speak, but he didn’t know what he really wanted to say.

Takeyoshi didn’t say anything either, breaking eye contact with disinterest, not even asking why Shin was leaving the door open. The chance to extend some kind of olive branch vanished in the space of a second, and Shin stood dumbly holding the door open for another second before he swung it shut. Barely a moment passed before Takeyoshi hit the gas, and the Survivalist continued down the street, merging back with the flow of traffic to leave Shin and the Eclipse Tower behind. Shin watched his mentor leave with a sense of defeat and reluctantly stepped out of the street and into the sidewalk beneath the Eclipse Tower. He stared up at the monolithic structure through the pouring rain, looking at the symbol of the Bureau with dampened spirits.

“Same time tomorrow, huh?” Shin remarked with a wry smile.

He walked down the street, his hands in his pockets, letting the rain cascade down on his head and shoulders. He turned into the sloping tunnel that led down into the garage, ignoring his surroundings as he strode through the concrete hollow. He was lost in his thoughts as he called the elevator and then descended to the below ground tunnel that connected the Eclipse Tower with the Dormitories.

It was a strange and automatic process that guided Shin to return to his sleeping quarters; he didn’t really want to just go home and go to bed, but the year he spent in the Academy had instilled in him a mentality that he wasn’t allowed to have time to himself. He’d spent that entire year either working or resting, and the realization that he was now able to spend his free time however he chose hadn’t sunken in yet. He wasn’t just an academy recruit anymore: he was an Inspector, now.

Shin let the automatic walkway carry him through the tunnel, watching the luminescent signboards with a blasé expression as they cycled through pictures of a dozen forgotten cityscapes, all of them far from Yōgai-shima, and all of them consumed in the endless chain of disasters that had destroyed the once auspicious 21st century. He was only ten years old when his family came to Yōgai-shima, and over the past decade, his memories of what the world had been like had faded. He wracked his brain, trying to recall anything solid or tangible about Japan, and already, the recollection eluded him.

“In ten years, I’ve already forgotten so much,” Shin savored the melancholy flavor of that thought for a few moments as he was bathed in the blue light of a billboard that showed Tokyo Bay. “I doubt either Rina or Keni remember anything about Japan at this point, either.”

He spent the next few minutes embroiled in thoughts about that distant world once known as “Japan,” which seemed more like a fantasy with each passing day. While he was lost in those feelings, his feet carried him to the elevator that took him up to the Dorms. He emerged onto the tenth floor of the Dorms, stepping out of the elevator and into the familiar but off-putting interior of the building with its blood-red carpets and dark walls. The sound of his muffled footsteps on the carpet was the only noise he could hear, adding to the uneasy atmosphere. Looking at the endless series of dark brown doors that ran up and down the hallway, Shin hesitated, momentarily unable to locate his own room.

“Number 12,” the sound of Shin’s Omen reminded him, though it was still inside his pocket. He thought about reprimanding the device again, but he chose not to. He didn’t have the energy. Instead, he found the dark wooden door with the number twelve rendered in silver on its surface. Shin dug in his coat to pull out his ID to unlock the door, but the sensor detected it before he could even draw it out. The door slid open, welcoming Shin inside.

“I’m home?” Shin’s words disappeared into the empty apartment behind the door, sounding strange and unfamiliar.

The room he’d been given was larger than the house he grew up in. In contrast to the red and black color scheme of the Bureau, whoever designed the apartment was sensible enough to give Shin a living space with far more neutral oak floors and cream-colored walls. The front door was situated in a small alcove between the fully-furnished living room on the left and the kitchen on the right, the cooking area separated from the rest of the floorspace by a chest high counter. There were two doors in the kitchen, one that led to a built-in pantry that contained countless shelves of prepackaged ready to cook food and ingredients, while the other led to a room that held a washing machine and dryer. The living room itself was so spacious that all of Shin’s belongings still sat shuffled to one side of the floor in a pile of cardboard boxes that scarcely took up even a fourth of the floorspace. His new apartment didn’t feel like it was his, at all. If anything, it felt more like an expensive hotel room.

He slipped off his shoes at the gekan, and walked into the living room, stripping off his jacket as he went. He glanced toward the kitchen, considering the possibility of making something to eat, but he found himself without the energy to cook. Shin crossed the largely empty living room to the door at the opposite end of the apartment, where his bedroom was. Opening the door, he flicked on the light, revealing a king-sized bed with black sheets. Atop it lay a black bag nearly as tall as he was with a hanger protruding from the top and a zipper down the front. Pinned to the front was a note and Shin stepped forward to read it.

“Please place damaged uniform in the bag and leave it hanging on the rack at the back of the front door.”

He wasted no time in unzipping the bag, finding a perfect replacement for the uniform that had been put through the wringer during Shin’s patrol. The Bureau uniform he’d been provided had a layer of nanite laminate, allowing the clothes to resist wear and tear and even partially repair themselves, but the damage he’d done to them was mounting. He took out the new suit and crossed over to his spacious walk-in closet, hanging the new clothes up on a hook before stuffing the burnt suit jacket and shirt into the bag, which he tossed onto the floor next to his bed. He leapt backward onto the bed, feeling it shake beneath his weight. He lay there, arms and legs spread as he stared up at the ceiling.

Shin pulled out his Omen and the device connected to the private network of the building. Within moments, he was scrolling through a screen that detailed countless meals he could order from kitchens within the dormitories. Another tap of the button brought up a detailed map of the Bureau’s private district with little nodes marking the twenty-four-hour eateries that he could order food from at any time. There wasn’t a price tag attached to anything. Any service inside the Bureau’s area of influence, anything at all, was provided for him at no expense. A luxury apartment, private tailor, the best food: he could have anything he wanted.

“What am I doing here?” the question resounded in Shin’s mind, his headspace emptied of any other thought by exhaustion. It was a bizarre thing to ask; for the past year he’d been entirely devoted to his training to become an Inspector, putting aside all hesitation in his desire to join the Bureau. Now, though, at the end of his first day, he finally asked himself the question he’d been unable to ever answer.

He killed Fubuki Kamui; that she had transformed into a Casualty didn’t alleviate the sense of guilt he bore. She was a monster that had killed other people, and had tried to kill him, too, but she was also a victim. She’d never wanted to become the monster he’d been forced to execute. The old man from this morning was just the same.

The role of an Inspector always seemed to be that a protector; an agent standing between Human Calamities and the helpless population of Yōgai-shima. But that was a lie, wasn’t it? Inspectors and Casualties were both Human Calamities, only one of which was lucky enough to retain their reason. He was elected to take on the role of Inspector not for virtue, but by necessity: society needed people like Shin to kill Human Calamities only because the common man couldn’t.

A part of Shin’s soul desperately demanded that he be virtuous and stand apart from the Bureau, insisting that he would be sullied somehow, otherwise. In the end, though, whatever moral or righteous imperative he had inevitably had to bend the knee to rational needs. Whether the Bureau was a beacon of morality in a dark time, or a thoroughly corrupt institution, it didn’t matter. Shin had been swallowed up by the Bureau and he couldn’t go back. He couldn’t afford it.

“I’m not here for me,” he reminded himself, though that thought was bitter.

He spent some time trying to answer the question the Bureau represented. What did it stand for? Where did it come from? There were a thousand little questions Shin had sorted and archived in the back of his mind, now overshadowed by the dark realization that the answers didn’t matter. If the answers to those questions would’ve changed his decision to become an Inspector, it was too late. Looking for answers would do nothing more than satisfy his childish curiosity at this point. But that didn’t mean he had to like it.

The thought that he had to kill for the privileges that surrounded him only made him feel dirty. He felt like a vampire, a ghoul. Something that fed on the dead to sustain itself. All at once, Shin’s hunger vanished, and he quickly closed out the menus and advertisements that promised him rich food however he wanted it.

Instead, he scrolled through his phone, absent mindedly. He found himself going into his pictures folder and scrolled through several old photos until his eyes settled on a familiar image. A man in his late thirties with black hair going grey at the temples, a salt and pepper beard growing across his smiling face. He was bent over, his arms wrapped around a pair of children, one with raven black hair and her arms folded, while a young boy with honey-colored hair held up the piece sign toward the camera. A young man with messy blonde hair stood off to one side, a teenage boy that found himself too cool and mature for a family photo. What an idiot, Shin thought of his younger self, and not for the first time. His eyes looked over his father’s face, wondering what the old man would have thought of the situation Shin found himself in.

Seeing the faces of his siblings, Shin felt an urge to hear a familiar voice, and he closed the picture and scrolled through his contacts. His eyes fell on a name, “Atarashi Rina,” and his finger hovered over the call button. He debated with himself on whether he should call so late at night.

“It’s a school night; what are the chances she’s up right now?” Shin wondered. “Hell, she might not answer just out of spite.”

Regardless of the objections in his head, Shin tapped the button and held the phone to his ear. The phone rang three times, and it was picked up halfway into the fourth. Rather than say anything, the first thing Shin heard on the other end of the line was an exaggerated and exasperated sigh.

“What do you want?” the young woman’s voice on the other end of the phone was bratty and accusatory.

“Is that how you talk to your older brother?” Shin demanded, irritated at the churlish behavior of his sister. Still, he found a smile spreading across his face as he sat up.

“It’s how I talk to obnoxious telemarketers that call in the middle of the night,” Rina replied, coolly. “And my idiot older brother.”

“Well, excuse me, princess. I just thought all the times I carried you around and wiped your snotty nose might have earned me some respect.”

“That was like, a zillion years ago,” the grumpy girl objected with clear affront.

“I still remember you asking me to hold your hand everywhere you went,” Shin teased. “Telling your classmates about what a great brother I was.”

“Ugh,” Rina made a gagging sound. “I’m hanging up.”

“Wait a minute,” Shin insisted. “I wanted to talk about something.”

There was another sigh.

“What is it?”

“Today was my first day as an Inspector,” Shin told her.

“Oh, so you made it through to the end?” Rina couldn’t sound less impressed. “The Bureau must really be hurting for new hires.”

“Hey, don’t say that,” Shin chided her. “Besides, I’m still technically in training.”

“So, you still have plenty of opportunities to screw things up, then,” Rina sounded genuinely pleased.

“Come on, don’t be that way,” Shin implored. “This is important.”

“What do you want me to say?” Rina asked. “Do you want me to congratulate you on your super-special-secret-spy job? Do we have to call you ‘sir,’ now?”

“That’s not what I called for,” Shin insisted. “Thing is, I’ve been running ragged on the patrols for the last year just to prove I could cut it as an Inspector. I know I haven’t been around as much as I should have been, but it was all for this! I’m still working twelve-hour shifts and all, but being an Inspector comes with a lot of privileges, Rina.”

“Good for you,” his sister shot back with onerous passive-aggression. “I hope you enjoy them.”

“They aren’t for me,” Shin felt his frustration growing, but he tried to hold it in check. “They’re for you and Keni. Housing, food, medical benefits. I can get Keni fitted with cutting edge-“

“Stop pretending you give a damn about us!” Rina’s voice sounded strained and filled with ire. “You can’t just disappear for an entire year and then waltz back into our lives, showering us with gifts and pretend that makes us even!”

“I didn’t disappear!” Shin objected. “I called! I would have visited if I could have!”

“I haven’t seen you face to face for months,” Rina sounded like she was crying, now. “Keni hasn’t seen you. He asks about you, you know? All the time. He never shuts up about you. He still looks up to you, despite everything.”

“Rina, I—” Shin found it hard to form words as his throat tightened and eyes burned.

“But you were never there,” Rina went on, speaking over him. “Not when he was in the hospital. Not when he was learning to walk again. You just left us behind and never looked back.”

“Everything I’ve done has been for the two of you!” Shin grit his teeth in anger, indignation bringing his voice back. “Do you have any idea how hard this last year has been for me? Do you think it doesn’t cut me up inside knowing I’m halfway across the city from the both of you? But if joining the Bureau is the best way to make sure the two of you are safe, well-fed, and cared for, then that’s what I have to do!”

“We didn’t ask you for any of that!” Rina screamed at him through the phone. “You told me that it didn’t matter what happens to us, as long as we were together. But as soon as the opportunity came up for you to get a chance to play hero, suddenly we didn’t matter anymore. You just couldn’t wait to join the Bureau.”

“You’re right,” Shin agreed with heartfelt resolution. “I couldn’t wait. Because waiting would mean we would get behind on paying our dues to the city and you, me, and Keni would have fallen through the cracks of the system and gotten deported. Keni can’t work, you’re only fifteen, so you can’t get a high-paying job, and I can’t support the three of us and pay for Keni’s medical bills on an ordinary salary. So yes, Rina, I couldn’t wait. I needed to choose between staying with the two of you and struggling to tread water or join the Bureau and get the resources we needed, even if that meant I couldn’t be with the two of you. That’s what being an adult means. Making sacrifices to help the ones you love.”

“Get off your high horse!” Rina sneered. “You aren’t some kind of martyr, Shin! You’re just selfish. And Keni and I have been doing just fine without you. We don’t need your brand of help.”

“Listen, things are going to be different from now—” Shin was interrupted by the sound of a beeping on the phone.

Rina had hung up. Shin flopped back down on the bed with a sigh, staring up at the ceiling, the turbid conversation taking the last iota of his emotional energy for the day. He held up his phone over his face, once again looking at his family photo.

“I don’t care if they hate me,” he decided. “As long as they’re okay.”

Personnel Dossier

Deputy Inspector Atarashi Shin (新 信)

Birthdate: September 21st, 2023 (21)

Crisis Abilities

Explosion Emergency, Black Powder

Inspector Atarashi possesses the ability to summon clouds of black particles with explosive properties. He typically summons the Black Powder through his left hand, though he can seemingly generate the substance from any part of his body, and he can seemingly direct the swarm of particulates to an unknown degree. The amount of Black Powder Inspector Atarashi can generate is unknown, likely even to himself.

Parameters

Exigency: 7* (Unknown)

Inspector Atarashi ranks in the upper half of the Emon Scale and is a force to be reckoned with, easily hundreds of times faster and stronger than an ordinary human being while using Exigency. His biometrics have gone haywire at several points during his basic training, and during his patrol duty while engaging a Human Calamity, so I’ve been unable to pin down his precise reading at present.

Runaway: 8

Shin’s power grows very rapidly as he fights, and it bleeds away between his uses of Exigency very slowly.

Forecasting: 3

Inspector Atarashi experiences his prescience through a sense of dread and feelings of pain in his chest, though it’s a very imprecise method.

Account: 1 (30%)

Inspector Atarashi is a complete amateur in handling Karma.

Precision: 4

Inspector Atarashi has little control over his Crisis, which itself is designed for indiscriminate destruction.

Karma: 5

Inspector Atarashi has Balanced Karma.