Case File: send me a ✈ and I will give your character a memory from mines past.

A Taste of the White Widow

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There he was: fourteen years old and strung-out on god knows what in a someone’s loft just outside of London proper.

He’d taken the train there and gotten off of a stop under a bridge. The others led him through the poorly maintained tunnel, then out to the surface streets where every house was uniform and tightly packed, six or so sharing walls between them with long, narrow gardens stretched out back. The grass grew unusually high there, but then, that may have also been whatever they were sampling that day. It was dead in the cold February frost either way.  

It was difficult to remember how long he’d been there, when he was going to leave, or really, what mattered. The weather was cold and dark out there; the ice covered the walks, and wild cats knocked over rubbish bins and fought with the foxes in the hedge. It didn’t matter. They were warm enough inside.

The heater hummed with the sound of crickets that didn’t exist, and burned what the group assumed were the corpses of spiders that had crawled in, but James Hakuba — he was a smart one — thought that maybe it was dust and debris from the room… stray hair, dead skin cells, that sort of thing. 

They liked James. They liked that he was pliable. They liked that he was willing to try just about anything they threw at him, and that made him willing to do almost anything after that. It didn’t hurt that he was cute. The group agreed that he was on the young side, but quite attractive. In fact, some of them really, really liked that his voice was still cracking. It made it all the more interesting when he begged, they said. 

Sarah brought him to the flat. She’d slept with him before, she told the others, out under the bleachers about a year ago. She’d given him his first cigarette. His first taste of what being with a woman was like. How much different it was than that dirty old priest.

“So why didn’t he join us then?”
She laughed. “He wanted to find love.”
“Did he find it?”
“Yeah. Can’t you see his broken heart?”

There were seven of them all together in Sarah’s little pack, including Sarah herself. Three boys, three girls. James made eight. They sympathized with the story of the breakup. Offered to let him into their nest with welcome arms. Promised to chase all of those nightmares away. And they did… for a little while. 

The boy was young, impressionable, depressed, and rich. Really rich, and so willing. For nearly a month, they persuaded him to play. He fronted pound after pound for food, drink, toys, and so-called ‘natural remedies,’ while they served him so many, many experiences in return. It didn’t take long before he really didn’t know what he was on, or how long he’d been there… hours were lost, clothes missing, bloodied handprints appearing on the wall… 

For a solid week somewhere in the thick of it, he didn’t go home or to school.  They began their mornings with whatever they had, mostly bread, crisps, and coffee… then brought out the sampling for whatever it was. Cocaine was the easiest for them to get, and they’d all do hit after hit, throwing in another few things here and there. The veterans took turns getting it and various other chemical delights to sell while the others played in that blanket pit upstairs. 

Hakuba liked the way they took his tie off with their teeth. How they pulled his clothing off, one button at a time. He loved that they whispered his name in his ear, nice and slow like they were about to climax, themselves. “Ha-ha-Hakuba,” the cried, and it never failed to get him completely riled. They wanted their fresh meat to be treated well so he’d stay. He’d be more compliant if they kept his aggression at bay, used his heartbreak against him.

“We’re so sorry,” the girls crooned as they took turns feeling him up, long nails dragging over his thighs, kissing at his stomach, then lower and lower still. As drunk and high as he was, he had no complaints for anything they did. And they did a lot. The men, too, teasing and touching and replaying so many memories as if they were wild fantasies. A new submissive plaything was something they’d been looking for a long time. It was ideal, to say the least. Get him off first so that he couldn’t compete, then take turns with him. ‘Love’ in all directions. “Let’s just take care of you, first.” 

His wallet was their bank account, and they hit it hard. Lost in the haze, he didn’t care. It didn’t hurt nearly as much. Even when he had moments of clarity, enough to cry out John’s name in the dark, they soothed him. So many hands brushing over him, milking him, lips kissing and caressing him. Pouring more drink, getting him to go back to sleep. 

Back to sleep, where the dreams came and went like the hours in an endless haze of colors and light. Shadows lurked there. They lurked everywhere. He saw faces in the windows, in the walls, the cracks in the floor. He heard screaming under the floorboards and in the creaking of the ceiling fan. “Absinthe?” they offered, and there he stood on the edge of a vast desert, cloudy sky stirring the contents of his stomach until they forced their way out. 

The laughing was always good-natured. “Another toke will do you well, mate,” someone — he couldn’t tell who — whispered into his ear. It took the edge off, but the things they gave him usually did. The non-stop sexual exhaustion kept him pressed into the sheets without complaint. 

No, that wasn’t quite right. He had complained. The toys hurt. He hurt. His body ached all over and he couldn’t keep anything down. More wine was the answer. Or Jaeger. Rum and cocaine. Morphine. Heroine. Meth. They pushed him down, sucked him off, drugged him, kissed him with hard liquor, and laid him down to enjoy while the others went on to each other.

It was the White Widow that he remembered so clearly. Its particular strain reminded him of those days… .just barely far enough to feel safe, but keeps you under the bridge from it. You could run, but why risk? The tension builds. Panic. Anxiety. Sometimes screaming. 

He felt fire, he saw those faces in the dark, heard their voices, even though there was no one there but his supposed lovers, all unconscious from their binges. He cried and no one comforted him. They were dead. 

Dead until the afternoon when they finally roused themselves, laughing and discussing their dreams and their wonderful feelings and making plans for more, with James huddled in the corner. They’d been dead all night, all morning, and he’d watched their skeletons moving in the red dawn of winter. He’d seen, in his hazy vision, the bone fingers of the trees stretch into the room and choke the life from them. He’d felt that priest touch him, take him, push him down onto the steps in front of that fireplace, hot iron poker ready to lash and tear the flesh right from his bones. 

They tried to comfort him but he was numb by the time they were living again. Running fingers through their puppy’s hair, as they called him, shaking his naked shoulder, all that they could get was a small groan.

"He hasn’t been eating”
“Why wouldn’t he be eating?”
“Give him a cigarette.”
“How’s that going to help?”
“His trousers are stained…" 
"Shit. With what?”
“Everythin’…" 
"Bloody hell, did you really have to insist on that? I told you it was too big.”
“He’s gotta learn some time…" 
"Cigarette. Water. Go on then.”
“I don’t think he’s aware.”
“Shit, did we fry the bloke?”
“James… oi James… listen to us. You’re okay.”
“This is getting boring just leave him be, let’s get out the good stuff.. that merlot was amazing." 

The rest of the crew continued on while Sarah put her arm around James Hakuba, nuzzling into his shoulder and told him that he didn’t belong, did he? He wanted to be someone. “Here’s your share, baby… you were a wonderful investor.” She pushed a stack of rolled bills into his palms, which he couldn’t even take hold of. “Come on… I’ll get you home.”

Home.. sounded safe, but home ended p being the emergency room. Sarah left him there, bundled in nothing but a blanket with a wad of several thousand notes, smelling like incense, liquor, blood, and sex. She almost forgot to give his wallet back, too, but once he was safely admitted, she left.

Detox. Stomach pumped. Charcoal. Saline solution. His identity eventually made known. Marion and Baaya came straight away, holding their poor baby’s hand. What happened? 

He had no answers. Everything was muddled. They rook him home and there he writhed for three agonizing days in the dark through feverish withdrawals until he emerged, resolved. 

The things he’d seen were those he never wanted to experience again. The only solution, therefore, was to end it all. 

send me a ✈ and I will give your character a memory from mines past.

Dreams of Paris
[to be read after The Belt]

Sometimes scenes had a way of fading in Hakuba’s mind. Crime scenes in particular. They blurred, merged together with others of similar styles, methods, culprits. When he thought of the specifics, it was usually a simple matter to pick them apart and, once compared with his notes, became once again crystal clear in memory.

Everything from the lingering scent of whatever coffee creamer Megure-keibu had used that evening to the precise temperature of the cooling pavement beneath their feet came rushing back. Weather conditions, the particular knot he’d used for his tie, the number of steps from the squad car to the white chalk outline.

It was easier to let them stay buried, filed away until he needed them. Easier, safer, and, often enough at times, critical. But some memories didn’t fade that way. Ones he couldn’t compartmentalize because there were so few instances in which he could shuffle the cards to disguise the impact. Things like dreams of Paris with a former lover, and how it all fell apart. 

It had been two weeks since the incident with the belt. Two long, horrible weeks in which John had refused to look at him, let alone speak. After their month- 42 days, specifically -together, the fourteen year-old couldn’t understand what had happened. Yes, they’d been caught. Yes, John had taken a beating from his father. And, yes, Saguru James had been told to leave, but that didn’t mean that they had to stop seeing each other, did it?

They’d always known it was a risk. Everything they’d done had been in secret. Every moment had been a stolen one; an exercise in rebellious freedom from societal convention and religious oppression. They loved each other, and that was all that mattered. 

Love always won in the end. 

Until then. It was easy for John to avoid him, really; he was two grades ahead and moved in different circles. They didn’t share any classes, and John had rugby practice after school. Hakuba didn’t dare call for fear of alerting John’s parents, and though he wanted to, desperately wanted to, he was far too afraid to walk the seven blocks to the Wells’ flat. All that he could do was wait at his locker, attempt to catch him between classes at the drinking fountain or in the hallways.

And he did try. Every day until he couldn’t stand the pain any longer.  He needed to know. 

“Are we over?" 

John looked at the smaller hand that grasped his wrist, feigning ignorance of the desperation with a cold gaze. “What was that, twit?”

"I need to know… are we over?” 

"Get off of me.” The older boy yanked his arm away, scowling. “I’ve nothing to say to you.”

It stung. But there had to be more to it. He was hiding something; he had to be. “John, please. Talk to me. It’s okay if we’re broken up, but please, I need to know!”

This had John taking stock of the others in the hallway, some looking, most ignoring. Little kids like James were usually teased by the bigger boys; it was nothing unusual at all. Even Hakuba knew that John could have thrown him into the lockers, and no one would have batted an eye.

Would he take that chance? 

“Fine,” John said, rolling his eyes. “Meet me after school by the wall; we’ll talk there.”

The wall was where they’d meet to steal a kiss before school. It was where they’d make out during lunch. And also where they’d wait for the other to be done with the day before heading to John’s flat. It was a place of personal significance, and Hakuba couldn’t help but smile in hopes that things weren’t quite as bad as they seemed. 

They’d always talked things out before, after all. 

There they met. S. James Hakuba arrived first, nervously checking his watch time and time again while he waited the several long minutes for his lover. At least the wall was secluded; he watched the other students leave from his hiding place, heart fluttering. Forty-eight minutes… and he heard footsteps approaching. 

“John?”

“I’m here, James.”

The smile on his face was the same that Hakuba remembered; so easy, so pained. He crept from the wall to reach for his arms and felt instant relief when John let him, stepping after him into the shade. He stood still while Hakuba pushed onto the tips of his toes to kiss him, though he didn’t return it. Disappointed, but forcing that smile, Hakuba settled back on his heels and laughed.

“Are we okay, mate?”

John looked away. “I’m not gay, James.”

What? “John…”

“You heard me. I’m not gay. You remember why we started hanging around together, don’t you? I was curious. That was it. Now I know I’m not. So it’s over.”

It startled him to hear. It didn’t feel right. None of it clicked. The younger boy shook his head, horror creeping in. “That’s not true! We’re in love, John! Remember? It’s your parents telling you not to be who you are, but we can past that! We can run away, just like we talked about!”

“You don’t know anything about love, James. You’re fourteen.”

“Age doesn’t matter! It’s just a social construct meant to-”

“No. You are a fourteen year-old boy who has no fucking clue about life. You and I? Stupid fools. We were raped and beaten at that Academy, James. That’s the truth. That’s why we’re fucked up. There is no happy ending for us; we’ve already been ruined. Tainted. All we can do is try to do what’s right and pray that we’ll be forgiven.”

"What’s right is to be true to ourselves, John!”

“God, you’re so naive.”

"I know you had dreams! I know you! This isn’t you! You can’t let them oppress you! You can’t let them ruin you! It goes against everything that we believe in!”

John reached for the young boy’s shoulder and pushed him to the wall, gaze a mask of conflicted ire. “No. That’s what you believe, James, and I’m through with it. You’ve got to let it go. Don’t ever talk to me again. I don’t love you. I never have.”

With a strangled cry, James pushed from the wall, arms reaching for the other boy, but John held him back. “It’s not true, John! You know it’s not! You’re lying! You did love me! don’t let them ruin you! Don’t let them! Please!”

The older boy sighed. It was so easy to hold him in place. He was so small, so thin. “Everyone is broken one way or the other, James… I guess I’ve got to help you, now.” He paused. “Stop crying.”

"I can’t,” he said, admission through the tears. “You don’t know just what…”   but then he paused, lifting his head in silence at the sound of approaching footsteps. Furiously, Hakuba wiped his eyes. He couldn’t be seen like this. He didn’t want anyone to think that John had done anything to him. “Let go,” he muttered. 

But John didn’t let go. The grip that he had on his shoulder tightened as the others – five boys in total – filed in to join them behind the wall. Hakuba recognized them from John’s rugby team. Big boys. Strong. And all predatory. 

“So this is the little fag?”

“Looks like.”

“Why aren’t you getting the hint, little twit?”

“He doesn’t want you around.”

“God he’s so perverted.”

Hakuba shrank back against the wall, eyes wide as he looked from face to face, and finally back to John, pleading. “Let me go.”

“Yeah, he’s sick,” John said, stepping forward to press his hand to the front of his pants. It only took a gesture to unbutton the younger boy’s pants, hand slipping in to caress him. “He’s already getting hard.”

He was. A reaction to John’s touch. It wasn’t like he could help it. But why? Why in front of the others? James shuddered, shaking his head. “John, please, stop.”

“This is what you wanted, isn’t it? That’s why you keep following him around school.”

“Sending him love letters.”

“Showing up at his house.”

"It’s disgusting.”

There was a hitch in his breath and Hakuba bent forward, mouth open to gasp. Despite the rough handling, his body responded well, and to his horror, it didn’t take long at all for him to get close. The pressure built and so did the haze. It was different and all too familiar at once. When the priest had done this, it had always been in private. Same, too, for he and John before. But the others watched. Leered. Loomed. 

When he came, it was with a whimpering cry, face red and head hung, so embarrassed and ashamed. He struggled to catch his breath with the others laughing, and kept his eyes held tightly closed when John spread his own seed across his cheek and into his hair. 

“See? I told you he was sick.”

The only fortunate thing was that it was far too easy to remember what it had been like at White Chapel. The ground beneath his knees was concrete instead of stone, but it scraped just the same when he was forced down. They forced themselves into his mouth, and twisted handfuls of his hair whenever he’d start to gag or bite down. And he swallowed, as he’d been conditioned to, each and every time. 

The boys beat him when he threw up. Kicking his stomach, his ribs, and against his arms when they moved to cover his face. He sobbed when they dragged him out of his fetal position by a leg, hands clawing at his pants to expose him. They used a stick to sodomize him, cheering when they drew blood, and left it in as they laughed. 

He couldn’t focus on their words. It wasn’t a hot fire poker, but that hardly seemed to matter. All he could think about was the head master, the fire, and how he was going to Hell for his sins. For being so dirty. For being so sick. 

Trembling, all he could do was cry, burying his face in the sleeves of his wool sweater. They had to be finished soon, whether they got bored or they killed him. There couldn’t be that much more they could do to him. He felt the warmth on his face before he realized what it was; urine, sprayed from one of the larger boys, soon joined by others. The stinking liquid soaked into his hair, his clothing, filling his olfactory with the choking scent of ammonia. He gagged again, curling in on himself, and tried to shut it out. 

They left. Hakuba wasn’t sure when, but he found himself alone as the sun set. How long had they been at it? Where was Baaya? 

He managed to remove the stick and pull his trousers back into place, but that was all that he could do. Everything hurt, inside and out. Words wouldn’t come, only choking sobs as he lay there, waiting, humiliated. 

Baaya did come, eventually, but despite her urging, he couldn’t tell her what happened. Still, the doctor treated him and somehow in the fog, he ended up tucked into his bed, clean, medicated, and safe. 

The boys were suspended, a transfer put in, and S. J. Hakuba stayed far away from John. 

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If I take a flight on British Airways, I can make it back to Tokyo in under 16 hours, assuming I’m able to book one-way and make it to the airport with enough time for international security. Given that I’ve been issued my replacement passport, and Mum is willing to drop me off right at the terminal… one checked bag, one carry on… 43 minutes travel time from the estate, approximately 30 minutes for express security diamond, 10 minutes to the gate, 12 hr 5 minute flight, another 25 minutes to get from gate to baggage claim and to the curb, and a cab to my father’s home…

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Adjusting for the time zone shift and the demonstrated personal set-in time for jet lag, I should be able to make it in time for afternoon tea before passing out in the ensuing fifteen hours that follow, putting me at a 5:30am wake up, just in time for my routine jog and back on schedule for the court appointment at 10:45am.

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Then it’s all a matter of supplying the collected evidence, my carefully rehearsed testimony, a persuasive argument regarding the inevitable plea bargain, and celebrating the predicted verdict. 

All according to keikaku.

a happy hakuba story (for once)

“Hakuba-kun?”

“Ne, Hakuba-kun?”

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The young detective glanced up from his book, blinking, to see two girls standing in front of his desk. It was lunch time, and though an apple rested at the corner of his desk, it was untouched. How long had they been there? What time was it?

Hakuba glanced at his pocket watch before looking back to the girls, brow rising. "Ah… yes?“ 

"Could you do us a favor?”

“Yeah, could you say Valentine?”

More blinking. Hakuba bit his bottom lip, looking between the girls, then glanced around the room. No one was paying them any mind, so it didn’t appear to be some kind of a trick. An odd request, surely, but the girls did seem hopeful and his profile for them didn’t include malicious behavior. 

So, after another moment of hesitation, he offered a quiet, questioning “Valentine?" 

This was rewarded by giggling as the girls clung to each other, and though it took a moment, Hakuba realized that they weren’t laughing at him, they were genuinely pleased.

"What’s so special about Valentine?” he asked, a smile slowly spreading on his face, one corner of his lip slanting upward. “Come on, fess up. Is it the holiday itself, or…?”

“No!” The darker haired one said, then laughed again. “Well sort of!”

“You have more of an accent when you say English words.”

“It’s really cute!”

“She actually thinks it’s hot.”

Stop that! Oh my god!" 

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He watched them bicker, elbowing each other, giggling, and leaned back in his seat. "So you like my English accent, do you?”

Blushing, they both nodded. 

“I’m more than happy to say a few more things for you, I suppose, before class starts… Do you have any requests~?”

The girls looked at each other and then shook their heads. “Sorry, we don’t really know much english…”

Hakuba pursed his lips, thoughtful as he considered something to tell them. He had his little black detective book on him, though he didn’t think that they would appreciate hearing all about murder and suspects. Not that they would understand it, but it didn’t seem terribly enchanting.

“You could read from your book?”

He glanced down at the volume in his hands and gave a small, helpless laugh. “I’m not…” Hakuba looked back to the girls, their large eyes full of hope, dark lashes batting, fingers clasped together as they waited, breaths held. He sighed. “Well, all right, I suppose a little reading couldn’t hurt…”

He waited for their squeals to die down before reading, using his best and most proper British accent. Posh. Refined.

“In the Ripper’s case the process of transference was, typically, ‘an outgrowth of fear and mystery. Fear inspires a search for meaning, while mystery virtually assures that none will be found.’ The principal mystery enshrouding Whitechapel Jack was how he contrived such uproarious violence within an encapsulating silence…”

With pauses for giggles and swooning sighs, Hakuba managed to get through three paragraphs before their sensei returned. He chuckled as they offered their thanks, bumping into each other as they retreated to their desks, and gave a contented sigh as he settled in for the rest of the day. 

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Perhaps things weren’t always so miserable…

[source]

Black Bird

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The Belt

It was 17:14:32 – just after 5pm on a Wednesday afternoon when they were caught. Hakuba – then known as James – remembered his face; wry smile stretched under freckled cheeks, brown eyes squinting in amusement. John Wells. The most perfect boy he’d ever met. Athletic, smart, tragic. They’d met at the academy three years before and, somehow, ended up in the same middle school.

Together, they explored a private world of experiments and experiences. Both of his parents worked, so it was easy to sneak in after school and huddle in the under-stairs playroom. No one needed to know that they shared an intense love, or dreams of running away to Paris, and the hope that, some day, they wouldn’t have to hide. Wouldn’t have to feel so guilty about what they did together, how they felt. 

He loved John. They needed each other. There was so much pain that needed to be erased. So many things to learn. John was safe. John was wonderful.

But… 

They didn’t hear the heavy footsteps, nearly forty-five minutes too early, until it was far too late. Their laughter masked  the closing of the front door and the door leading to the finished basement. The heat between them kept them from realizing that they were no longer alone. Really, it wasn’t until the door to their safe space was torn open, blinding them with light from the hall, that the panic fully set in. 

Had they more time, even just a minute, they could have hidden what they’d done. What they’d been doing. As it was, James stared in wide-eyed surprise as John’s father hesitated a full five seconds before he grabbed the dark-haired boy by the arm, dragging him from his grasp. Rug burns on naked skin would have been bad enough, bringing a whine of sympathy to the blonde’s throat. 

“Dad! No, it’s…”

“How could you do this to me? To your mum?! I thought we were PAST this!”

“Leave him alone!" It hurt. The yelling, the fear. It brought back too much too quickly. James pulled his trousers on and, heart in his throat, forced himself to step out and face the man. He’d seen too many people get hurt to stand by again. John didn’t deserve this.

However, as he looked between the two of them, his resolve faltered. There was pain in the man’s face. Anguish. John wore it, too. No one said anything for a moment as they let the outsider’s voice fade.

Then, without looking at him, the father gave a calm, simple command.”Get out.”

It was followed by one from John. “Do it, James… just go.” 

"But… no, you can’t do this! He’s not doing anything wrong! It’s okay!”

“JAMES, get OUT!”

To hear those words from his lover, said like that, brought heated color to his cheeks, eyes stinging from the feeling that was something between embarrassment and betrayal. He went back into the playroom, gathered his belongings, and left without another word, just as that man slipped the leather belt from the last loop of his trousers. 

The slap of it against skin and the subsequent cries reached him just before slamming the front door behind him on his way out for the last time. 

White Knight Widow | Part Two

[part 1 2]

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There wasn’t a lot of time.

Hakuba stood shaking in front of the mirror, palm sliced open from between his index and middle finger down to his wrist. Blood slid over his hand and dripped into the sink in a steady stream, and though he had the bandages laid out, he couldn’t stop the grin that pulled at his lips. It was so difficult to care about it. It hurt, certainly, but he’d stopped hissing a few moments ago. Really, all he wanted to do was continue to flex his hand, back and forth, and watch the way the skin pulled away from itself over that gash of red. 

It was fascinating, really. The threads of tissue and muscle. The hand was such an intricate piece of machinery… 

The detective shook his head. No. He had work to do. 

“Concentrate…" 

He shuddered, blinking several times before he turned to the supplies next to him. Bandages. A syringe. Liquid already measured out. But what was…? Oh- oh, yes the solution. Chemical compounds he’d put together in the labs earlier, which would react to certain parts of the…

…the drug…

The detective pressed his palm against the mirror and pulled his hand down over the reflection of his face. It was all so familiar… a memory from before. Years ago? Not too long ago. Something like that. His pack of friends had done this before. That was in London. Where was he now?

Not that it mattered. God, red was such a beautiful color. He smeared his hand sideways in an arc and sighed. Just like Koizumi-san; the sunrise, the sunset, heaven and earth. What was blue, anyway? Unoxygenated? Non… oxygenated? Blood…

No, that wasn’t right. That was just a myth. Blood wasn’t blue unless you were speaking of royalty. Which he was not. 

"Fuck my grandfather, really… who needs lineage? It’s all just a game… a bloody game of kiss and tell with papers like dogs and like horses. Horses…”

He touched his face and chuckled. 

Where were they? His mates.

“Lend me a fiver. Lend you a fiver. An’ we’ll head down to the pub fer a drink! A drink and a fight and a bit of a fuck in the back alley by the brick wall and the underground parking lot…”

How long had it been since he’d called them? Months… years? No, it was years, he was fairly certain. He dug in his trouser pocket for the silver Master Watch and pulled it out, holding it close to inspect the time. His vision blurred, doubled, and he pulled it against the mirror. Yes, it’d been years since he’d seen his friends. He’d need to give them a call…

But where was his phone? Not in his pocket…

“Tricksy… string or nothing.." 

Not that it mattered, either. He’d find it in a moment. There was always the house phone, too. Or, no, this wasn’t his house, was it? Not exactly. Things were too clean. Too sterile. But it wasn’t the labs. 

Yet there was a syringe there… next to all that spilled white powder. What was it for?

He closed his eyes to think, running over memories of carnivals and street markets, tall grass and a bracelet of beads. She’d worn such a short skirt, that bird. The pack leader. Such a short skirt with nothing underneath. How’d she get away with that, anyway? How had she remembered him after the years of not talking? 

The blood was dripping onto his trousers and he paused to wipe his hand and arm over his bare chest and stomach, manufactured frown on his face. Sticky, that. Red and sticky, with just a bit of grit. Impure blood. Like crime scenes. 

The syringe was for…

Oh yes. For an experiment. He only needed to push it in. Needles weren’t scary. Not when you worked with them in a lab quite often. Nothing more than tugging on the skin here, a little pinprick there and – ah- push the stopper… 

The needle fell into the bloodied sink when he dropped it, rolling around before coming to a stop. It was a feeling of triumph. He’d done the task he’d set out to do. He almost hadn’t been able to, but he managed, and already a bit of clarity was coming back to him. He blinked at the mirror, suddenly hesitating. 

The sunset he’d painted was dripping. Boiling. It turned to fire. He shuddered, staring past it at his own face, chalk white. There was someone standing next to him. Black robes. Thin white collar. The cross.

He stepped back into the towel rack and froze. The cold metal touched those scars. Lifting a hand to comb through his hair, blood dripped to the crook of his elbow and onto his bare foot.  Fire. There was fire there. Soot-stained stone. The dig of that metal. The smell of burning skin. 

Hakuba choked on a gasp, staring into the eyes of that man. Two men in one. The turban threads swung loose in the breeze, but he wasn’t there. None of it was there. The locks were on the doors. Chair in the way. The sliding glass had furniture in front of it, too. He couldn’t move it. Bolted down? No. how could this be? Then the wire… the wire everywhere.

The web…

He was caught all over again; a scared little boy at only sixteen, face-to-face with that man who spoke of thieves as if they were only his lures. Men and women that he played with, propped on silver strings and made to dance for his supper. 

Red everywhere. The sky, the grass, the flames.The faces of children burning, screaming silent screams, weeping muffled into pillows. Bloodied sheets. Hands and feet so cold they burned with blood on concrete pathways. He watched them all as they tumbled down the steps, one after another until the blood flowed like a river over stone, carrying them to the tide beyond. 

It was hell. Everywhere around him was eternal purgatory, reaching toward outer darkness and a scream that he couldn’t manage from all that boiled in his gut. But there it was on the ceiling… those words he’d been searching for these years. The face of the man he was searching for. There, just barely out of reach… and if he could only just stretch a little further, deal with the pain a little longer, he could save them…

Whether it was the loss of blood from his untreated hand or the chemical cocktail that had him unconscious first was unclear, but he remained out cold until late the next morning. Even once awake, it felt like hours before he could drag himself from the floor to his knees. The bloody scene that greeted him left him ill, but he managed to make it to the bathroom before completely losing all composure. Yet, sick or not, and so much cleanup ahead of him, at least there was one small comfort: 

The experiment had been a success.

Ramen

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“I despise the way that ramen fogs up my glasses.”

“Young master, you shouldn’t be eating ramen in the first place. Not that instant rubbish, anyway. It’s very unhealthy.”

“Baaya, please. I’m attempting to get into character.”

“Are the glasses really your disguise? I have to say that they likely won’t fool anyone.”

Hakuba lowered the black rimmed glasses, index finger pulling at the bridge to draw them down to the tip of his nose, and frowned. “No. Baaya, they’re reading glasses.” He held up a university level Chemistry textbook. “God, I’m not that foolish.”

“Considering that you’re not very Japanese?” Baaya gave him a skeptical glance in return. 

“Even if I weren’t a bloody halfer, a simple pair of glasses wouldn’t make for an adequate disguise on anyone. Now, leave me in peace. I’m enjoying this…” He glanced at the torn packet on the counter. “…oriental flavor.”

“Are you really?”

“No… I put an egg in it, minced garlic, spinach, and several stalks of diced green onion, yet all I can taste are the cheap carbohydrates.”

 With a snort, Baaya offered nothing but a pat to the young detective’s shoulder before leaving him to his work. 

White Knight Widow | Part One

[part 1 2]

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He touched the wall where the blood had been not hours earlier, but the gloves came back white as ever. The clean up crews were good at their job; this was no question at all. An entire crime scene picked up and photographed, documented, displaced, and reopened within a day of the body’s discovery. Incredible. Why, without the proper equipment, it would be nearly impossible to tell that there’d been a murder here at all.

Hakuba sighed. He’d had a chance to get all of his routine investigation in earlier, when things had been fresh. The victim’s blood hadn’t even finished drying on the pavement. Yet, even with paperwork properly filled and filed, here he was again, going over the scene in his mind. It had been a boy… no more than fourteen years old. Full-blooded Japanese. Hard-working father, devoted mother, one sister. Good grades, no trouble at school, president of the chess club of all things. Brilliant, his homeroom teacher had said on the phone earlier. Simply brilliant.

So why had he gotten involved in all of this drug nonsense? It didn’t add up, just like so much of the rest… 

The young detective recalled the boy’s body, lying crooked against the wall. Not shot like one might expect in gang territory, no… but strangled with the chains one might find on a big dog with a choke collar. Not that they’d found the chains, but the welts and broken skin had left a very distinctive pattern. Pinched, torn, bruised- delicate veins beneath the surface burst from the strain. But that had only been the final method. Oh, no, this boy had certainly been tortured before death.

Head beaten bloody – certainly while he was still alive, which is where the blood on the brick walls had come from. Arm broken, twisted around his back, and every finger on that hand fractured at the second knuckle. Recalling the image was a simple matter, but putting the pieces together, that was the chal-

“Hm?”

Vibration at his thigh pulled him from his thoughts, and Hakuba immediately answered the call, lifting the phone to his ear.

“Detective Hakuba speaking. Do we have the results yet?”

“Results? Darling, it was all normal as usual.”

English? Hakuba paused again, taking a moment to put a name and face to the voice before he sighed. “Mum. I’m investigating a case; can I call you back?”

“You’re always on a case, dear." The woman on the other end laughed dismissively. "Not to worry. I just have a couple of quick questions for you to answer before I’ll let you get back to work.”

“Really, Mum. I’m expecting a call." 

"I’m just asking about Christmas, James. Or, sorry, Saguru now, isn’t it?”

He sighed, and took a step back to that wall to lean against where the blood splatter had been, shoving his free hand into his coat pocket to save the warmth for when he’d inevitably have to switch hands during the ‘quick call.’ “Mum, we’ve been over this.”

“Yes, but you keep saying no.

“That’s my answer.”

“But they hardly celebrate it there, dear! That’s not Christmas at all!”

“I don’t have school off, nor work. I can’t just… nip off on holiday any time I like, Mum, honestly…" 

"But you haven’t been home in months! And we were to go to Paris this year, since your trip was canceled.”

Although he couldn’t see it, Hakuba knew that she was pouting on the other end, which made him roll his eyes, expression dry.

“I’d love to go, really, I would. But I’m not leaving Japan until I’ve gotten this case wrapped up. That’s my final word.”

“You’re not a part of the force, love. Let them handle it.”

“They’re not, though, Mum. That’s exactly the point. I’ve been on this case since August and we’re still not getting anywhere.”

“That’s hardly your fault. You could sneak away just for a week, come right back refreshed and ready to tackle it head on!”

“No. Mum, you don’t understand. People are dying. Children are dying.”

“Children? What sort of case is this?”

“I’m really not at liberty to discuss it with you, Mum…”

“Oh, but you’ll tell your father, is that it?”

God… “Because he’s the Superintendent General, Mum. It has nothing to do with-”

“Is that why you won’t come? Come now, he can’t be more fun to be around than your own mother! How many times did he eat dinner with you this week?”

Hakuba sighed. “Once, Mum. That’s not the point.”

“Ah, you see? He takes you away from me-”

“That’s not what happened, Mum.”

“-and ignores you. I’m calling it Stockholm’s Syndrome. You’re to come home straight away back to London where you belong.”

The detective turned and pressed his forehead against the cold brick, closing his eyes. “Mum… really, I’ve an important call that I’m waiting for… could I call you back later?”

“You’ll never call! I know you.”

“No… clearly you don’t, as I always return your phone calls.” He paused. “Eventually.”

“Eventually. But, please, dear! It would mean so much to me to have you home for Christmas…”

“Not while this is going on. Today’s victim count made sixteen… that’s far, far too many… and the police aren’t even convinced that they’re connected…”

“Are they?”

“They have to be… teenage victims, 73% of them with clean records… ages thirteen to eighteen… dead with the same drug in their system…” Hakuba took his warm hand from his pocket to stroke his chin, pulled away from the wall to walk, pacing back and forth, where the body had been.

“Dear, you’re explaining the case to me now.”

“You’re a wonderful listener, Mum… and I know how you love mysteries…”

“Not since your father left, love.”

Hakuba sighed yet again, and shifted the phone to his other ear so he could dig into his trouser pocket for the pocket watch. “Twenty one hours, 32 minutes, 53 seconds, and-”

“What is this, then?”

“…nothing, Mum. Look, I really must go.”

“But Christmas! Please, dear. I don’t want to go to Paris alone with your grandmum. God, no.”

“Perhaps I’ll solve the case in the next week or so and then I’ll see about flights for Christmas, yes?”

“That would be lovely! And, if you stayed for New Year’s, we could-”

As she went on, Hakuba found his fingers curled tight around the silver pocket watch, clenching at its surface. He pulled the phone away from his ear and listened. The sounds around him were normal for an alleyway at night and yet… and yet something felt decidedly off. He glanced upward at the streetlamps above, bright under the thick cloud cover, and wet his bottom lip, anxious.

No, something had definitely changed only a moment ago. It was too quiet. Too empty. Industrial though this area was, there would have been some sort of interruption by now… particularly in this territory. Though the caution tape had been removed, no one could resist a crime scene for long; even a detective…

“Saguru? Are you even listening?”

“I’ll call you later. Love you, Mum.”

He hung up the phone and checked for any missed calls before turning his attention back to the surrounding area. The circle he stood in was well-lit. The boy, who they’d estimated had died sometime between 05:00:00-07:40:00 that morning, would have been easily visible in the same lighting conditions. 

But what had he been doing all the way out here? What was the connection between him and the other victims? And how had they gotten-

His phone buzzed again. He checked first, then answered, voice more tired than he’d meant it to sound. “Detective Hakuba speaking.”

“We’ve got the results of the chemical compound…”

“Is it the Lidocaine? Mixed in with the Cocaine?” Hakuba quickly slipped the black book and pen from the inner suit jacket pocket, opening to a the page of notes that he’d gotten for the case. 

“Yes, that’s part of it. Traces of Marijuana as well.”

“But…”  Hakuba frowned, hesitating before writing that down. “That doesn’t even make sense. Are you absolutely certain?”

“That’s what the results say, detective. Did you want a copy of the full analysis?”

“Yes, please. Send it to my office email address.”

“Done.”

“…but that just doesn’t… Why would they…?”

“That’s for you to figure out. I just read the numbers.” He laughed. “You’ll be able to do a lot more with the information than I will.”

Hakuba nodded, though he knew that the lab assistant couldn’t see it. “Thank you, Kagawa. I’ll be in touch.”

“Sure thing, detective.”

“Oh- wait, one last thing.”

“Hm?”

“Did you happen to narrow down a strain of Marijuana?”

Kagawa took his turn to sigh. “It’s not…

“Just tell me.”

“White Widow. Yes, just like the last one.”

Hakuba almost laughed. “Right.”

“They’re going to pull you off the case at this rate.”

“I’ll take that chance. Thanks. I’ve got to run.”

“As always. Night, detective.”

“Goodnight, Kagawa.”

He hung up, but kept the phone in his hand as he finished scribbling the last of his notes, then surveyed the area one last time. No… no, someone was definitely observing him. Did he dare run? Ridiculous. He was armed. He had his phone. His car was parked just a block away, top up and secured. Nothing to worry about.

Hakuba left the scene and stripped the gloves from his hands, finger by finger, using the flashlight app from his cell to search the vehicle inside and out. There was still the possibility of a car bomb… The thought came without pleasure, recalling that time in London two years previous. But he’d be fine. Nothing to worry… about.

There was a note under the windshield wiper blade. Small, just a scrap of paper. After taking a deep breath, he slipped it from its place and unfolded it, wondering. Could this have been the presence he’d felt earlier? He scanned it, reading over the text three times, wondering just what the message was, when it finally sunk in…

Nothing but an advertisement for an investment opportunity. A crummy commercial. He sighed, crumbling the paper before stuffing it in his ash tray, dragging himself back into the car once more.

Ridiculous to be so paranoid. Utter rubbish. It was well past time to go home, and he still had mountains of paperwork to finish before he could sleep. 

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When the night was over and everything is silent and still again, the detective moved from the emptied parlor and into his bedroom. For once, he didn’t let his eyes linger on the wardrobe that had been converted to a liquor cabinet. He didn’t think about the oh-so-secret pack of cigarettes stowed safely in the storage space under the window seat. He didn’t even eye the pile of paperwork on his desk, still needing another thorough comb through before he’d be ready for court. 

No, this time, he shrugged off his suit jacket, worked off his tie, and pulled a case down from the top shelf of his walk-in closet. From it, he produced a violin. He rarely played it these days; not since leaving London. Really, there was little motivation to without his mother’s plea for a duet with her piano. But tonight, thoughts mulling over holidays past spent far away, in places where Halloween actually mattered, there seemed nothing else that could be done. Nothing else that seemed fitting than to pull the instrument out, tune it, and play, rusty though he was. 

Back against the opened window, lit by the moonlight and stars, he tucked violin under chin, raised the bow with practiced hand, and played. The sound swept over the darkened yard, carried by the chill breeze. Hakuba didn’t worry about waking anyone, even at this hour. The property was large enough to hold it all in, and the rest of the household had long since gone to bed. 

He was alone and it didn’t matter. There was no need to seek praise or approval, no search for warm and empty comfort. Just the music… and that was enough. 

[source]