Zero Sum Game (2 page)

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Authors: Cody L. Martin

BOOK: Zero Sum Game
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Hina took a drink of the ice-cold tea then wiped the condensation off her hand onto her jeans. "Do you want to go to Hondori? There's this new dessert place called Angel Sweets."

Ami glanced at her grandma before answering. "I…can't. Not this month. Maybe we can go there next time."

"Why not?" Hina ate healthy, but Ami had a sweet tooth. From what Hina had heard about Angel Sweets, it was a perfect match for her friend. She thought Ami would be ecstatic.

Ami gazed at her drawing pad. "The shop isn't doing too well. I need to tighten my expenses."

"Oh." Hina tried to push away her disappointment. It seemed Ami had more and more financial difficulties the past few months.

Loud greetings startled her. At the shop's window, a pair of men were talking to Ami's grandfather. "Here's your monthly shipment," one of them said. He crouched out of sight, and Hina heard the sound of cardboard scraping against the concrete.

"Put them inside and make it quick," the other man said to his partner. He glanced at a clipboard. "We're running late."

"Just leave them there. I'll get to it."

The man protested but Ami's grandfather waved him off. The pair bowed in thanks and bid farewell, pushing their delivery dolly in a hurry.

The old man wiped his hands on his apron and walked outside. He sighed. "Maybe I'll drag them into the house later."

Hina jumped to her feet. "I'll get those," she said, slipping on her shoes. In front of the shop, three large boxes were stacked atop of one another.

"No, no. I'll manage," Ami's grandfather said. He put the top box on the ground and slid it towards the door. He grunted and puffed out his cheeks.

Hina couldn't bear to watch him strain. "No, really. I can get them," she said.

"Hina's really strong," Ami yelled from the living room.

Hina shrugged the comment away. She held weightlifting records in the junior high division. She was officially recognized as the strongest junior high school student in Japan, even beating out the boys.

Ami's grandfather looked her up and down. "Can you take them into the kitchen? You can set them anywhere, Junko will get to them later."

"Sure." Hina lifted the heavy box with little effort and carried it to the house. She didn't even have to set down the box to slip off her shoes. She took it to the kitchen, then returned for the second one.

Ami's grandmother sat beside Ami, folding a pile of clothes. "Women shouldn't be strong," she said. She shook her head at Hina in admonishment as the girl passed by. "And Hina-chan, you shouldn't have such big muscles. Girls should be small, like Ami here." She smiled at her granddaughter.

Before Hina could reply, Ami jumped in. "But Hina's gotten awards for being strong."

The old woman clicked her tongue and warded away the comment like an offending odor.

Hina picked up the second box and carried it to the kitchen. She held out her arms in front of her. They were large and smoothly muscled, the result of years of weightlifting. Ami's grandmother continually told her to lose weight, but Hina knew she wasn't fat, her muscles made her larger than most fourteen-year old girls.

Ami's grandfather went back to his grill as Hina returned for the third box. A foreign couple approached the counter window, and Hina froze. The man was tall, and the woman had hair the color of fire. "She's cool," she said, staring at the red head.

They smiled at Hina. She panicked, her mind blanking. She pointed at her own black hair, then at the woman. "
Hair
," she said in English. "
Red. Very cool
." She gave her a thumbs-up.

The woman blushed. "
Thank you
," she said. She spoke further, but Hina couldn't understand it.

The man pointed to the menu, which was written in Japanese and had no pictures. "
What is this
?"

"Taiyaki," she said. They didn't seem to understand. Frustrated, she said, "Taiyaki
is…fish…fish…"
How could she explain it? Why did she have to study English in school if she couldn't use it? They continued looking at her and repeating "fish." Panicked, she turned to Ami and gestured for her to help.

Ami joined her outside. "
May I help you?
"

Hina was jealous. They had recently learned this grammar point, but her friend was using it smoothly.

In broken English, Hina, Ami, and her grandfather were able to explain taiyaki to the couple. They ordered two chocolate-filled ones and ate them at the shop. After finishing, the couple gave their thanks and left.

Back inside, the two girls dropped to the floor at the table. "I wish I was as good at English as you are," Hina told Ami. "You're so smart."

Ami's grandmother said, "See, Hina? The brain is the most important muscle of all."

 

CHAPTER 2

Ichihara knew he had to find Shota Fujiya, the man in the surveillance photos. He worked for Amano Heavy Industries, a company that made large machines and machine parts for other companies. AHI had flourished in the last five years, going from near bankruptcy to a global leader in almost the blink of an eye.

Ichihara wasn't interested in their financial history, the company's recent advancements caught his attention. Almost five years ago, not long after Ichihara had arrived (and, coincidently, Fujiya), Amano made startling advancements in metallurgy. They had invented metals that were lightweight, thin, and almost indestructible. After that, every company that used heavy machines or metals in high-stress situations wanted a piece of AHI's technology.

That raised Ichihara's suspicions.

Using sources within JAXA, who wanted the metals for their space equipment, Ichihara had gotten hold of some of AHI's data. The "radical" and "new" materials were old news to him: they were Noigel in origin. He had a theory that a Noigel worked at AHI, using alien knowledge to augment human machines. The purpose would be to help subvert that same technology to terraform the planet. But Ichihara needed proof.

He began to investigate Amano Heavy Industries. His chief suspect had been the company's founder and CEO, Takeshi Amano. But he turned out to be human. Ichihara continued. He investigated every scientist, designer, and researcher the company employed. Everyone was human. Not sure what to do, he decided to check every worker, no matter what their position. Several weeks bore fruitless results until he came across Shota Fujiya.

His file had Fujita listed as a delivery worker, but Ichihara noticed his unusually high security clearance within the company. Further investigations had found proof of birth and a family registry, but school records, hospital admissions, even on-line purchase histories were nonexistent. No record of Shota Fujiya went back further than five years. The Noigel were getting sloppy, which meant they were getting desperate.

Ichihara made his way down the crowded sidewalk toward AHI's headquarters, a modern building of glass and metal.

At the corner of a convenience store, a Buddhist monk shook the metal rings on his staff, a donation bowl beside his feet. His robes were brown and orange. His bamboo hat sat at a low angle and covered most of his face. He said nothing as pedestrians walked by without glancing at him. He only stood and clanged his rings.

Ichihara quickly took out his wallet and dropped a few 100-yen coins into the simple bowl. The monk bowed in appreciation but still said nothing.

He continued up the street. Two blocks later, he crossed to the opposite street from AHI and took up position not too far from the bus stop. Fujiya didn't know Ichihara, but he thought that if Fujiya spotted him, he would look less like a loiterer and more like a businessman waiting to go to work.

He stared at the second-story windows. His battle suit gave him superhuman sight. He gazed at the employees passing near the windows and read the reports in their hands as they conferred with colleagues. A man sat at his desk, his back to the window, and opened up a newspaper. Ichihara read part of an article about Toyota's stock prices before the article disappeared behind the man's shoulder.

Ichihara couldn't get an entire view of the second floor. He needed to find out if Fujiya was a Noigel; if so, he would be their contact on Earth. He debated about walking in and waiting in the lobby but decided against it. If Fujiya did somehow suspect Ichihara of being a Noigel rebel, he might become violent, and that would be bad. The point of infiltrating Earth was not to let the native population know they were there. He needed to be close to Fujiya but wanted the meeting to be quick.

"I need to make sure Fujiya is a Noigel," Ichihara whispered. "Any suggestions?"

"None that fall within mission parameters," his suit replied.

Ichihara sighed. He glanced at the people on the sidewalks, moving through their lives. He remembered the monk.

"I need a change of clothes," he said.

 

— — —

 

Shota Fujiya liked simplicity. Intimidation made life simple. His flash skin accentuated his larger-than-average Noigel frame. He stood over two meters in height and weighed over one hundred ten kilograms. When he walked down the street, people gave him extra room.

He walked down the street towards the headquarters of Amano Heavy Industries. His boss, Yusuke Shimizu, had called him in.
Yusuke Shimizu
. Fujiya had a hard time thinking of his superior in that respect; he also had some difficulty of thinking of himself as Fujiya. It wasn't simple. He was Tyren Dolok. He didn't like covert operations: the duplicity, the secrecy, the subtleness. They were Xilay's forte. Tyren wasn't a subtle person and he didn't like sneaking around. He preferred straightforward missions: go to a place, give their demands, respond with force if the locals didn't comply. Clean and simple. But Xilay had asked him to come on this mission and Tyren had agreed. He played by Xilay's rules; when Xilay told him to do something, Tyren did it. He tried to think of Xilay as Shimizu and himself as Fujiya.

Amano's office building came into sight, and Fujiya gave a
tsk
of disgust. A monk, begging for money, stood motionless nearby. He bent his head in supplication and folded his hands into the sleeves of his robe. Fujiya sneered; the monks only stood there, depending on the kindness and whims of strangers for money instead of directly asking for what they wanted. Pathetic.

The monk stepped in front of him. "Money, sir. A bill, a coin, anything you can spare."

This surprised Fujiya, most monks he had seen never talked to passers-by. "Get out of my way," Fujiya said. He moved, but the man followed.

"Please, anything you can give I'd appreciate. I'm sure you're a hard-working man with little to spare, but if you could, help me out." The man spoke calmly, keeping his hands in his sleeves. But he continually blocked Fujiya's attempts to pass him.

"I said I don't have anything," Fujiya repeated, and tried to push past the man.

The monk's demeanor changed in a flash. "I'm desperate. You have to help me out. I need this. If you don't…" A large wad of spittle landed on Fujiya's chest. "If you don't, I don't know what I'll do." The monk's eyes had a predatory and crazy quality. He struggled with Fujiya, one hand clutched the collar of his overalls while the other reached behind Fujiya's waist, going for the wallet. Fujiya pushed back; the two men were locked onto one another, weaving and shuffling in circles as they struggled.

Angry, Fujiya grabbed the homeless man by the collar of his grimy shirt. He twisted and spun, then pushed outwards, flinging the man away. The man's feet left the sidewalk and he sailed through the air, hitting the wall of the AHI building. His head made a sick cracking sound as it connected with the concrete. He slid to his butt, legs splayed out. His large bamboo hat hung to one side.

Fujiya, huffing in anger, glared at the nearby pedestrians who had witnessed the struggle. He stalked towards the entrance to Amano Heavy Industries, and the crowd parted before him.
Today
, he thought,
is not going to be a simple day
.

 

CHAPTER 3

Ichihara entered the small restaurant situated in a narrow side street. "Where's your bathroom?" he asked the clerk. She pointed to a small corner in the back. He entered and locked the door. He gazed at himself in the mirror; his large hat now sat straight on his head. Brown and orange robes replaced his business suit. Even his dress loafers were gone: split tabi socks and sandals adorned his feet. His head hurt from hitting the building. He turned on the faucet and washed his face.

After leaving the bus stop, Ichihara had walked past the monk, who remained in his original place near the convenience store, still motionless except for the shaking of his staff. He ordered Dolim to scan him and replicate the man's clothes. He headed down an alley to avoid anyone seeing him change, then took a back street to AHI.

Then he had waited outside Amano's headquarters, confident Fujiya would arrive because he often visited the headquarters during the day. A few hours had passed, and Ichihara had seen Fujiya stomping his way down the street. Then he did his monk performance.

"Analysis, Dolim?" he asked his battle suit.

"Conclusion: Shota Fujiya is a Noigel," replied Dolim.

Ichihara smiled. He had been certain of it too. That meant Fujiya had to be the contact here on Earth. He needed to figure out Fujiya's plan to get the planet ready for terraforming and stop it. An easy sounding task in theory, but rather vague in practice. "Is there any chance you can identify who it is?"

"Yes," replied Dolim. "Tyren Dolok. He was rumored to have been sent to this sector. Tyren is somewhat large for a Noigel, and this would fit with the larger man we saw."

"That can't be right," Ichihara said. He lowered the toilet lid and sat. Dolim must have had the wrong identification. "No. It can't be Tyren. Are you sure it's him?"

"The identification accuracy is over ninety percent," replied Dolim. Its voice held no condescension, it was stating a fact. "Is the name familiar to you?"

"Yes." The ID hit him like a boxer's blow. "We were in the service together. I…I don't believe he'd go along with mass genocide. It doesn't seem like him."

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