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The Book of the Pearl
The Book of the Pearl Read online
This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
First Simon Pulse edition September 2003
Text copyright © 2003 by 17th Street Productions, an Alloy company
Interior illustrations copyright © 2003 by Renato Alarcao
SIMON PULSE
An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division
1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
Produced by 17th Street Productions, an Alloy company
151 West 26th Street
New York, NY 10001
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
For information address 17th Street Productions, 151 West 26th Street, New York, NY 10001.
Library of Congress Control Number 2003106779
ISBN-10: 1-4165-0370-6
ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-0370-5
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I wanna check you out
Check you out, hey yo yo
I’m packin’ cash like Konishi Kogo
Got my girls in a huddle on the club couch
When I go out I don’t need to say much
All the boys they ask, “Where’s Heaven at?”
If I knew I’d have to kill you with my gat
Nobody knows where baby has gone
Sing hey, hey…
—“Heaven’s Gone,”
the newest single from
Tokyo hip-hop band Funkitout
The real nature of ignorance is the
Buddha-nature itself;
The empty illusory body
Is the very body of the Dharma.
—Yungchia Hsuanchueh (665–713)
Tokyo
Daily
News
January 12, 2004
Authorities remain silent about the ongoing investigation of the death of Ohiko Kogo, son of business scion Konishi Kogo (of Kogo Industries fame). Details have been slow to surface in the mysterious death, which took place at the Los Angeles wedding of Kogo’s adopted daughter, Heaven, to Takeda “Teddy” Yukemura, son of the prominent Yukemura family. Sources have leaked numerous contradictory details to the press, but the following facts have been verified: an intruder (some say a ninja) invaded the wedding, killing Ohiko Kogo after a violent sword fight witnessed by dozens of guests. Heaven Kogo fled the scene, and it is unclear whether she remains in the United States or has returned to Japan. Several weeks ago Konishi Kogo was flown back to Tokyo in a coma after another reputed ninja attack. Authorities once again refused to comment on rumors that Heaven Kogo may have been involved in the second attack. Konishi Kogo remains in a coma at an undisclosed location. His wife, Mieko, has refused repeated requests for an interview. Heaven Kogo, of course, first caught the nation’s attention in 1984 at the age of six months as the sole survivor of Japan Airlines flight 999, which crashed en route from Tokyo to Los Angeles. When no family members surfaced to claim the child, Konishi and Mieko Kogo stepped forward to adopt her….
1
“Are you sure you know where you’re going?” I asked.
“Trust me.” Cheryl laughed and tugged at her microscopic denim skirt, which managed to cover even less of her after she pulled it down. I wrapped my sweatshirt around me and scanned the area. We’d hopped off the bus near Second and Alameda—nota part of town I’d ever been in. Of course, I’d only been in L.A. for a couple of months, but something told me only Cheryl, my insane roommate, would think she could find a good time in this neighborhood. Still, a ripple of excitement passed through me. It felt good to be out of the house.
“What are those tents?” I asked, pointing to an empty lot crammed full of oddly constructed shacks. Dark figures lurked over a burning trash can, warming themselves against the chilly California night.
“Those are homeless people, Heaven. Don’t you have those in Japan?”
“Of—of course,” I stuttered, trying to mask my surprise. “Just not—exactly like that.” I’d actually never seen a homeless person until I got to the States. I’d grown up in teeming, frenetic Tokyo, but my father’s compound was like an oasis in that city. Servants, chauffeured cars, unlimited credit cards, cooks, a gym, a pool—you name it, we had it.
It’s a simple story, really, if a little unusual. Baby falls out of a burning plane. Baby named “Heaven” by witty journalist, becomes national celebrity, Japan’s “good-luck girl.” Baby adopted by Konishi Kogo, head of Kogo Industries and the source of all that wealth I mentioned. Luck holds. Baby grows into Girl. Girl loves father. Girl grows up. Father tells Girl she has to marry Teddy Yukemura, slimy son of business rival. Girl obeys, travels to Los Angeles for hugely elaborate wedding. Wedding crashed by evil ninja. Ninja kills Girl’s brother and only ally, Ohiko. Girl flees scene. Luck runs out.
“I think it’s this way.” Cheryl turned onto a smaller street that was totally devoid of people. I instinctively went into alert mode, casting my senses out like feelers—sort of the same way Spider-Man unfurls his spider goo. (I had developed a huge crush on Tobey Maguire after Cheryl downloaded that movie. Dreamy. Did I mention I’m a total movie-phile?) I didn’t sense anything out of the ordinary, but I was still tempted to use some of the stealth techniques I’d learned just to make sure we got to wherever we were going. I resisted, thinking Cheryl might find it odd if her roomie suddenly began slipping in and out of existence like a ghost. It was just a trick of the eye and mind, really, but it could still be freaky.
Oh—there’s one other thing I didn’t mention. After Girl went on the lam? Girl became Samurai Girl. Well, Samurai Girl in training. But still.
“Are you sure you know where you’re going?” I grabbed Cheryl’s jacket and stopped her in her tracks. “There’s nothing that even remotely resembles a nightclub here.”
“Hehh-vuuuuhn…,” Cheryl moaned, rolling her eyes. “Trust me. We agreed that you need this. Remember? All you’ve been doing for the last week is lying around the house, polluting your mind with bad television and your body with Krispy Kremes.”
“I havenot eaten that many Krispy Kremes,” I insisted, laughing. Maybe it was true that I had an unholy affection for the little fried lard puffs. Blame it on the strictly healthy Eastern diet I was raised on. But I wasn’t a total addict…yet.
“Krispy Kremes aren’t even the point. Ever since you and Hiro had thatthing, which youstill haven’t explained to me, and you got fired from Life Bytes—”
“I did not getfired. I quit.”
“Whatever. The point is you’ve been moping around like a sick puppy. You have to get back out there and live a little. Besides, you owe me for this month’s rent. Thatalone should be enough to inspire you to hit the job market. And a night at Vibe is going to put you back in action. Trust me.” Cheryl’s stiletto boots tapped the pavement as she teetered over to the corner and squinted up at the street sign. “Ooh! Peabody. This is it. Let’s go.”
“Iam inspired!” I argued as Cheryl skipped off, her cropped blond head (complete with bright pink streaks) bobbing. “But why not just go somewhere on the Strip?” Cheryl ignored me, and I tried to rekindle the feeling of excitement at our big night out. I hated feeling like I wasn’t able to take care of myself, having to borrow money (especially from someone like Cheryl, who didn’t have a lot of it) when I’d never had to worry about money before. Never even had to consider it. But I was on my own now, and I’d had to quit the first job I’d ever got (at an Internet
café) when my almost-husband’s family, the Yukemuras, decided they wanted to kidnap me. I was pretty sure by now that the Yukemuras were out to destroy the Kogos and were responsible for my brother’s murder. But there were still so many pieces to the puzzle. My brother, who was also my best friend, was dead. My father had been flown back to Japan in a coma, the victim of another ninja attack. And Hiro, my trainer, the man who saved me, was in love with another woman, Karen. Andshe had ended up being kidnapped when she was mistaken for me. I was alone.
How veryDays of Our Lives, right?
“Wait up!” I called as I caught up with Cheryl, who was speeding toward the faint sound of a thumping bass.
“Okay, Heaven, just be cool,” Cheryl whispered theatrically as we turned the corner and saw a bunch of people hanging around outside a nondescript storefront. “Take off that sweatshirt.”
“It’s freezing,” I whined, pulling the sleeves down over my hands. “Besides, I’m not sure about this outfit you made me wear.” Cheryl always managed to convince me to wear something I never would normally. Tonight it was a pair of low-slung jeans with a leather belt that sat on my hips and a flowing black top that slid off one shoulder. I’d refused to wear heels, instead choosing a pair of motorcycle boots from Cheryl’s vast shoe collection.
I knew I had to be able to run. But more on that later.
“Give it here,” Cheryl chirped, ignoring me. She opened her cavernous shoulder bag and held out her hand. I stripped off my sweatshirt and stood there awkwardly, feeling half naked and stupid. Cheryl looked at me critically.
“God, you are one lucky woman. Whatever kind of training you and Hiro do, it’s working. Can you say ‘Charlie’s Angel’?”
“Shut up, dork,” I said, blushing. I still wasn’t used to getting compliments.
“Okay. Here’s the deal,” Cheryl said, suddenly all business. “Vibe is underground. That means they don’t really have a license to be here, and they only advertise by word of mouth. So we have to be very chill—plus we don’t look like hip-hop regulars, so just play it cool. Do you have that ID I gave you?”
I fished in the back pocket of my jeans and pulled out the fake ID Cheryl had made for me. Just having it made me feel instantly cooler, like a “normal” teenager. I suppressed a giggle as I looked at it. There was nothing Cheryl couldn’t do. A few weeks before, she’d dragged me into the bathroom and done my makeup, then taken me to a photo booth in a nearby mall for pictures. And now there I was, grinning out from the plastic card, complete with an assumed name—Heaven Johnson. I wasn’t sure of my ethnic background, since I was adopted, but it was pretty certain that I was half Caucasian. And with the ID, I’d aged from nineteen to twenty-three overnight—presto! Every inch the California girl.
“All right, let’s go,” Cheryl said, giving me a last once-over. You would have thought we were about to go into battle. That was one of the things I loved about Cheryl—she took having a good timeseriously.
The bouncer was sitting on a stool, talking to a few guys in baggy jeans and do-rags. He looked us up and down, then waved us in without another glance. “Have a good time, ladies,” he said. I heard one of the guys whistle before the heavy iron door closed behind us. I glanced back, and another guy grinned at me, displaying a row of gold teeth. I looked away quickly and shivered. I hoped Cheryl knew what she was getting us into.
My heart pounded as we descended into the club and the music enveloped us. Whatever was going on at Vibe, I had a feeling I was going to like it.
“This is even better then I thought!” Cheryl yelled, leaning toward me. “You can actually hear yourself think in here. And none of that mind-numbing techno.”
I nodded, only half listening, entranced by the sea of bodies on the dance floor. I’d only been to one other club in L.A. (also with Cheryl), and the difference was like night and day. The people at Vibe looked like they were there because theywanted to be—not because it was the hippest place to be seen. But they also looked like theybelonged there somehow, and I wasn’t sure we did. A glass bar lit from beneath let out a soothing glow, and red velvet booths lined the walls, each with its own tiny lamp—it had a very retro feel, kind of like what I’d seen in old Hollywood musicals—and the fact that it was underground made if feel almost like a speakeasy. Very Harlem Renaissance. Very mafia. I couldn’t quite put my finger on it, but something about the place made me feel like anything could happen—and that theanything wouldn’t necessarily be good.
“What do you want?” Cheryl asked, squeezing onto a stool at the crowded, glowing bar.
“You pick,” I said. I’d been out with Cheryl before, and it was easier to let her deal with the drinks. The one time I’d ordered for myself, I’d ended up with a frothy pink concoction that tasted like cough medicine.
“Stoli Vanilla and Coke?”
“You’re the boss.”
The drink was delicious. It didn’t taste alcoholic at all. I eased back onto my bar stool, bopping a little to the groove, feeling free. The people who stood trying to get the bartenders’ attention seemed to embody every hip-hop variation imaginable. Some of the guys looked thuggish, like the ones outside, in their baggy clothes and knit caps, with gold chains in full effect. Others seemed more Rastafarian, wearing dreads and Marley T-shirts. Some of the girls were dressed in standard “club” clothes, like Cheryl and me, and others had blond hair like Eve and impossibly tight jeans. Black, white, Asian, Hispanic—and everything in between—the whole spectrum of color was represented. I felt totally out of my element—and it was a great feeling.
“So what do you think of the club?” Cheryl asked, dancing around a bit. “Do they have anything like this back in Japan?”
“Well, nowhereI’ve ever been to—which isn’t saying much.” Cheryl nodded understandingly—something else I loved about her. Even though it seemed impossible to her that I’d lived to be nineteen without setting foot in a dance club, she could still be sympathetic. Don’t get me wrong—I knew about different “scenes” from a steady (and secret) diet of pop culture magazines and web browsing. I’d just never experienced them.
“But the hip-hop scene is actually pretty huge in Tokyo,” I said, taking another delicious sip of my drink. “There’s a whole group of kids who spend all day in the tanning salon and then go out to hip-hop clubs with names like Night Avenue and Kingston Club. I always kind of wondered about those places.”
“Wait—you mean they go to tanning salons to get darker?”
“Yeah. They want to look like rap stars—or hip-hop stars. And since the most famous ones are black…”
“That’s really wild. Small world, huh? Culturally, I mean.”
“I guess. It’s weird, though—the hip-hop thing in Japan is a little more cartoony than this, you know? Like, all the girls get those long acrylic nails, and the boys wear really elaborate coordinated outfits—everyone’s just trying to be like what they see in the music videos. It’s all about the image. My ex-fiancé was totally like that.” I looked around, wondering if Teddy had ever been to this club. It seemed like his type of scene. Teddy had disappeared a few weeks ago, and I had no idea where he was now.
“Vibe seems to be more about the music,” I said, pushing thoughts of what might have happened to him away. Worrying about it wasn’t going to do any good. “About doing your own thing,” I added thoughtfully. I stared out into the throbbing crowd of dancers.
“Hello? Earth to Heaven?”
I shook my head and tried to smile at Cheryl. Sometimes all I wanted was for my brain to shut down. Thinking about all that had happened, and what it meant, never seemed to get me anywhere. “Let’s go dance,” I said, jumping off my stool.
“Why, Heaven, I thought you’d never ask!”
The dance floor was full, but there was just enough room to move. I felt awkward at first, but when a familiar 50 Cent song came on, I finally let go and got into the groove. It was a remix I hadn’t heard, and it made dancing easy—you didn’t even have to think
about it, your body justwanted to move in the right direction. I closed my eyes and let myself go.
“Cut it out, loser!”
My eyes flickered open and I saw Cheryl elbow a thick-looking guy who’d cozied up behind her. He threw his hands up in the air and smiled with a “What?” look on his face.
“Just helping you out, sister,” he said.
I stopped dancing, unsure of what to do. I hoped Cheryl wouldn’t tick him off with some smart comment.
“Yeah, well, my butt doesn’t need your help! Thanks.” Cheryl turned her back on the guy, who wiped a hand across his brow in mock nervousness. His friends started laughing.
“They’re so desperate!” Cheryl yelled in my ear over the music. “You’ve got to keep ’em in line.”
I laughed. Cheryl was tough. I could learn a lot from her. She joined me in the middle of the dance floor.
“You ladies care to join me?” a short guy with a bald head and a button-up shirt that looked about two sizes too small for him called out from his table, where he sat alone. I wasn’t sure how long we’d been dancing, but I didn’t really want to stop.
“Not now, baby,” Cheryl said, ever the smooth one, as she pulled me toward the bar.
“Why not jointhis? ” The man who stepped in front of us gestured to his chest, which was impressively built. “I’m just over there with my peeps.” He pointed to one of the red velvet booths that lined the walls of the club. A couple of girls with their boobs hiked up to their ears and several more guys were crammed in there, and they looked unenthused at the prospect of us joining them.
“Looks like you have enough company,” Cheryl said, and tried to step around him. Her pursuer blocked the way, his dark eyes shining in the low light.
“Not enough for me.” He reached out and grabbed Cheryl’s arm.
“Don’t touch me!” Cheryl said, the playful tone leaving her voice.
“Hey,” I said, stepping forward, “we’re not interested.” The man looked at me for the first time. “I don’t think I was talking to you,” he sneered. I opened my mouth to let loose a snappy comeback, but nothing came out. This was Cheryl’s territory, not mine. And although I could have taken him out with one kick, the situation certainly didn’t call for that. I clapped my mouth shut. As a fighter, I was of some use—as a diplomat? Forget it.