Storm sipped from the water bottle Stella gave her. She hoped the water would alleviate the drug-induced headache that throbbed behind her eyes. She also waited for the searing pain in her wrists to subside. A fantasy of pounding the shit out of whoever drugged her, tied them up, and imprisoned them in this stuffy, stomach-churning little cabin kept her alert. Pounding in a figurative sense, of course; she remembered the heft of the person who’d hit her from behind.
“Stella, did you know Yasuko?” Storm asked.
Stella looked startled. “Sure, I know her.”
Storm wrestled herself into a sitting position and hung her legs over the edge of the bunk. “She’s dead.”
Both Stella and Keiko gaped at her. Keiko’s mouth dropped open, and her eyes filled.
“I’m sorry,” Storm said softly.
“She helped me,” Keiko whispered.
“She helped Angela, too,” Stella said. “Or she tried to.”
“You didn’t tell me about Yasuko,” Storm said to Stella.
“That day when you drove me,” Stella said, “I was just getting started. It’s not a short, simple story.”
“I gathered,” Storm said. “We’ve got time now. Why don’t you fill me in?”
“How’d she die?”
“I’m not sure yet. All I know is that she was found at a beach park.”
“Obake,” breathed Keiko. She sniffled softly, wiped at her eyes. Her hand trembled. “It’s my fault.”
“Why do you say that?” asked Storm.
“I went to see her after Hiroki Yoshioka shot himself. I wanted to know if Carmen was safe.” She looked at Stella, then Storm. “My father had debts, too. I knew what Obake wanted.”
“When did you do this?” Stella asked.
“When you were visiting Barb.”
Stella’s mouth opened, closed, and opened. When the words came, they were low and urgent. “Obake won’t let you get away with it.”
“I don’t care anymore. I had to stop him.” Tears flowed down Keiko’s face. “But it was selfish, and it got Yasuko killed.”
“You were saving yourself,” Storm said. She’d realized this when she’d found the girls at Pauline’s house. Keiko was furious, and she acted out her anger with power, a trait she’d been denied her entire life.
“I guess so. I have some catching up to do.”
“I’m proud of you,” said Stella.
Keiko shook her head. “It was worth risking my own safety, but it wasn’t fair of me to risk anyone else’s.”
“Don’t say that,” said Stella. Now her eyes brimmed with tears.
“You did the right thing,” Storm said. “How old were you when Obake brought you into the water trade?”
“Thirteen.”
“Not much older than Carmen,” said Storm.
“I was smaller,” Keiko said with a smile. “They took me to a doctor when I got here. I weighed thirty-five kilos, about seventy-eight pounds. Carmen’s going to be taller and healthier. She’s already five-one.” Keiko sounded like a proud mother.
“And Yasuko told you that Obake was planning to kidnap Carmen?”
“Yes. His men were going to take her from the hospital.”
Obake would know Yasuko had told Keiko, Storm thought. Still, Yasuko had done it for the little girl. Probably for Keiko, too.
Keiko, Storm, and Stella sat quietly for several minutes. All three women recognized the sacrifice Yasuko had made.
“Obake is responsible for Yasuko’s death, not you,” Storm said. She felt a surge of anger on the woman’s behalf. “What was she like?”
“She was kind,” said Keiko.
“Yes,” said Stella thoughtfully. “She was also confused. Um, there’s a term. Conflicted. She was conflicted.”
“About men?” Storm asked, and felt Keiko’s sharp eyes scrutinizing their faces. She looked to her and Stella as authorities, Storm realized. It wasn’t the time to tell the young woman she still had to figure out both men and family relationships.
“She was of Chinese ancestry, and born in the Philippines,” said Stella. “I think her parents sold her before she was ten.”
“How old is she now? I mean—”
“Forty-something. About my age, but it wasn’t something we talked about. She kept herself up very well.” Stella paused. “She had to, if she wanted to stay as Obake’s hostess. It was a matter of survival.”
“She’d been with Obake for more than thirty years?” Storm said. The exploitation of another human being to such a degree was hard for her to believe.
“She was his mistress for at least a decade,” Stella said. “When I was there, she was his primary consort.”
Storm had a vision of the woman she’d seen in her dream. “Did she look like a geisha?”
Keiko laughed.
“Not so fast,” Stella said to Keiko. “A modern one, perhaps. White skin, red lipstick, but Western clothing. She often wore a silk flower on her lapel of her designer suit.”
Storm remembered the flowers in her dream. “How about flowers in her hair? Gardenias?”
Stella frowned. “I never saw her with flowers in her hair.”
“Me either,” Keiko said.
“When she was Obake’s mistress, did he protect her from other men? Keep her for himself?”
“Yes, but,” Stella winced, “it wasn’t an easy job. Obake has certain needs.” She wouldn’t meet Storm’s eyes.
“Were you with him?” Storm asked.
“No, I got out before he—”
“I was,” Keiko said. “It’s when I did this.” She rolled up her sleeves and held up her arms. Parallel scars, six or seven inches long, ran the length of both forearms.
“I’m surprised you’re here to tell us about it. You’re a strong woman,” Storm said.
By the look of the cuts, whoever stopped the gush of blood must have known exactly what to do, and how to do it quickly.
“Yasuko,” Keiko said.
“She learned about tourniquet pressure points from another suicide,” said Stella. “From one she couldn’t save.”
“Angela?” asked Storm.
Stella shook her head. “Someone else. Angela overdosed.”
Storm looked at Keiko. “You knew Angela?”
“Yes,” she said quietly.
“Did you know Barb?” Storm asked.
“I met her once. She scares me.”
Storm turned to Stella. “Ichiru Tagama rescued you from Obake, but how did Michael Farrell get Barb out?”
“A week or two after Tagama took me away, Michael negotiated a business deal with Obake.”
“Michael loved her,” Keiko said.
“He traded a successful restaurant, didn’t he?” Storm asked.
“Yes.”
“And years later, he tried to open another one.”
“He didn’t know the deal was forever. Obake lets people go, but they owe him, and once they do, they owe him forever.” Stella’s words were bitter.
“Did you trust Yasuko?”
Both Keiko and Stella hesitated. “Yes,” they said together.
“You weren’t sure.”
“No one was ever sure about anyone around Obake. He knows how to get people to do what he wants. He capitalizes on weakness,” Stella said.
She looked at Keiko, who wouldn’t look up. “He used Pauline and me to lure Keiko. He knew she would come because she cared enough to rescue Carmen.”
“But why would Pauline help him?”
“She may have been protecting her son. Wayne wanted his boss’ job on the liquor commission. Pauline had seen what Obake would do if people didn’t agree to his terms.”
“What did he have on you?” Storm directed the question to Stella.
She looked ashamed. “He bought my house. And I was afraid of him. I’d see his car idling outside, that creepy son of his in the driver’s seat. They’d watch me.” She glanced over at Keiko. “Then I worried about Keiko.”
“And what about Tagama?” Storm asked.
“Tagama is the only person I’ve ever known who kept Obake off balance. I think Obake is a bit afraid of him. Tagama knows the islands better; he has people working for him that Obake can’t reach.” Stella sat up straighter. “If Obake got to one of Tagama’s people, Tagama had others. And he paid very well. Land, family security, kindness—commodities Obake never understood.”
“But Tagama loved Yasuko,” Keiko said. “How come he couldn’t protect her?”
“Maybe he didn’t know how bad her trouble was.” A shadow crossed Stella’s face. “He’s been able to protect Ryan.”
“Why didn’t Yasuko leave years ago, when Obake took another mistress?” Storm asked.
“Fear.” Keiko snapped the word.
Stella was more thoughtful. “It wouldn’t be easy to get away. But here’s where I think she was conflicted. Part of her liked the attention from men. Remember, it’s the only love she’s known, except from the girls she cared for. As she aged, she stayed because she could help the young women. She got them better health care, better clientele, better pay. It wasn’t until she became involved with Tagama that she knew her life could be different.”
“What pay?” Keiko spat. “And what good does it do when you are thousands of miles from home, in a different country and culture, and have no place to go? The only family you have is whores.”
Stella leaned against Keiko. Storm thought if she’d been able, she’d have put an arm around the young woman.
“How long has Tagama been seeing Yasuko?” Storm asked.
“We just found out,” Keiko said. “When I asked about Carmen, Yasuko told me to talk to him if anything happened to her. She didn’t put it in words, but I knew they were close.”
“They’ve kept it very quiet,” Stella added.
“I wonder how they met,” Storm thought out loud.
“I thought about this,” Keiko said. “Yasuko called Stella when I…” she held up her arms. “But a man was there, too. I didn’t see him, but I heard his gentle voice. They needed to stop the bleeding. Stella was a half-hour from Lahaina.”
“You think Yasuko called Tagama first?” Storm asked.
“Either that or he was there when it happened. She would have known him from his meetings with Obake.” Keiko made a little choking sound. “I wish I’d known.”
“I’m sure they were planning something. Some way of getting Yasuko away safely,” Stella said. “If anyone could do it, Tagama could.”
“But he didn’t,” Storm said in a soft voice.
“No,” said Stella. She stared at her feet and shifted her weight. “I wonder where he is now.”