The Sinking World (Chapter Two)

In which we are introduced to our protagonists, Shoki Nakamura and the demon, Nanashi.

2

Shower Scene

They call this country the Floating World. Yet sometimes, when I move to the window, I expect the town to have sunk into the crust of the Earth to be swallowed up by the magma. This morning the streets of Yōkoso Harbour are still there. And unfortunately, so is he.

Nanashi is perched lazily on my left shoulder. A plain, grey mask covers his face and only his red eyes are visible through the small openings. I try to avoid those eyes. There’s something foreboding there, like the first firebombs blinking in the night sky over wartime Tokyo. His countless ghostly fingers rest on my neck, stroking and tapping the raised tendons beneath my skin as if they are piano keys. But he’s no musician. His fingers only burn and scar whatever they touch.

“So that quaint little café is actually a hotbed of depravity and you don’t think to mention it?” he asks.

“Why would I?” I reply. “Not like it’s the sort of place I’d go to meet friends.”

“Puh! You? Friends?”

I think of Tiger and the other homeless residents of Shiranami Memorial Park. On the occasions I’ve stayed there, someone was always awake to keep me company. I miss the park. I miss friends.

“Of course, it won’t be an authentic pleasure house,” Nanashi continues. “I’ll wager it’s some pink salon or soap palace guaranteed to leave the tongue and tackle limper than pickled sardines.”

“If you’re not interested then stop talking about it.”

“You just shouldn’t have kept it to yourself.”

This coming from the king of secrets: secret name, secret past, secret motivations.

I walk over to the electric cooker where oil has started to pop and spit from the base of a wok. I drop in a handful of noodles that I bought from an elderly vendor who always calls me ‘little man’. I could blame his poor eyesight, but when I’m wearing baggy tracksuit bottoms and a hoodie, I can look a bit tomboyish.

“Do you plan on stuffing your face whenever you can’t asleep?” Nanashi asks. “When I said you needed a thicker skin, I didn’t mean a fat suit.”

“What are you on about? It’s not like I eat junk food. Besides, last time I wore my hair up you said I looked like a shabby calligraphy brush. So what am I? Fat or thin? I can’t be both.”

He stretches to look me up and down as if scrutinising a catwalk model. “Neither. You’re shapeless.”

I’m shapeless. He’s the one whose limbs and fingers constantly divide. And that mask of his goes through more changes than a Kabuki actor on performance night.

I shove the noodles to one side and tip in a dish of tofu chunks, broccoli florets, cashew nuts and diced spring onion. The mixture meets the hot oil, sending droplets up my bare forearm. I hardly notice. When the tofu begins to brown along the edges, I pour in a broth of vegetable stock, soy sauce, sugar, ginger and whisky. Nanashi stretches over the mixture to inhale the fumes. He slumps back when the whisky has evaporated.

“What a waste,” he huffs.

I glare at the space between the oven and the fridge where there sits a strange device that could double as a prop for any Science Fiction B-movie. I kick it hard enough for the homebrewed saké inside to slosh about.

“Hey, take it easy,” Nanashi protests.

“You take it easy! That’s half a keg you’ve drained this week already. I’m not brewing again till Friday so you’d better slow down.”

I know he won’t. He’s incapable of pacing himself when it comes to alcohol. If he had a body or anatomy of any description his vital organs would resemble mouldy figs by now.

“It’s hardly expensive,” he says. “And someone worried about money doesn’t then buy whisky to go in their stir-fry.”

“Firstly, the whisky’s from your emergency supply in case the homebrew kit malfunctions again. And secondly, did I say it was expensive? You’re just knocking it back at a rate of knots and I can’t keep up.”

“I need it to stay strong, you know that. You wouldn’t deny a bodybuilder his protein shakes.”

“I would if they stunk out the apartment and leaked through the floorboards.”

“Back to this again. I told you the valve was faulty.”

“You left me sleeping while a gallon of saké was busy marinating the neighbour’s carpet.”

“I dealt with it.”

“Yeah, let’s talk about that. Of all the actions you could’ve taken, including waking me to discover any minor repairs were covered by my damage deposit, you decide to set his place on fire.”

“If he’d smelt the alcohol he would’ve called the cops.”

“The same cops probably now investigating an arson case.”

“You’re being paranoid as usual. The blaze only touched his living room before the neighbours started wielding extinguishers.”

“He could’ve burned.”

“Just like your food.”

Dammit!

Realising I’ve cremated the tofu, I remove the wok from the hob and empty the mixture into a bowl. I switch on the alarm clock radio above the fridge before carrying the food over to the lounge window.

…The attack on popular musician, Ms Kazuko Tanaka, known to her fans as Jo-Jo, has shocked the music world, emphasising concerns surrounding negligent security within the industry. An obsessive fan stabbed her during a live performance at the Fluid Rooms on Mercury Mile. Paramedics attempted to stabilise her condition, but she was pronounced dead shortly before reaching hospital. The twenty-two-year-old trained at the Tokyo Music Academy and was due to begin a tour of the United States this summer…

The newsreader’s clinical voice rasps through dust-clogged speakers. His tone is always the same whether he’s reporting on the tragic murder of a young musician or reading out the soccer scores.

It’s a little after two in the morning and all is quiet. My apartment is only a short distance from the docks though it’s too early even for the car manufacturers to be at work. In a few short hours my apartment walls will begin to vibrate as the factory machines warm up. I imagine they have a life of their own beyond their coding, a consciousness reserved for the dead of night when the security guard has dozed off in front of the CCTV panel. It would be like a ballroom dance: welding robots would bow deeply before reaching for a partner. Pneumatic arms would connect, tubes would coil and molten-metal sparks would shower the factory floor. The display would end just as the security guard stirred.

…The radical feminist group, Lips have used their popular radio broadcast to launch a scathing attack on the Prime Minister. The controversial programme was aired following a consensus to refuse the group a representative in court. Unfortunately for legal reasons we cannot air the Lips broadcast…

The New Year refuses to fade despite two months having passed. Tangerine lanterns still sway from rafters, trampled strips of confetti streak the pavements, and a kite dangles from the telephone cable beyond my bedroom window.

Yōkoso Harbour is big on festivities, to the point of inventing occasions to celebrate. Last October the crested ibis become extinct from the wild and the locals had their children create bird masks with red faces, beady yellow eyes and elongated black beaks. The procession that followed was like a Venetian carnival with every child dressed as a plague doctor. For an insomniac, having not slept for three solid days, witnessing eighty-or-so children wearing pale cloaks and grotesque masks pass beneath the window was comparable to a fever dream.

“It’s time we moved,” Nanashi says.

I shake my head. “What is it this time?”

His dissatisfaction with our living conditions is a regular topic. I could turn the apartment into a distillery and he’d still find something to complain about.

“Those shit-dribbling gulls,” he explains. “How can you put up with them? Always clambering across the roof tiles with their ridiculous feet, this way and that, this way and that, all the while screeching and flapping their wings like apocalyptic messengers.” He waves his countless arms like a sea anemone beneath a breaking wave.

I sigh. “Is that all?”

“No, there’s the smell too.”

“What smell?”

“Seaweed.”

“You’re imagining things.”

“You’ve gotten used to it;” he says, “living here has dulled your senses.”

“My senses are just fine.”

“They’re not what they were up north surrounded by all that untainted mountain air.”

“The same mountain air you couldn’t stand.”

“I’d take it over this stench. Think about it… sea-weed. Imagine a Zen garden with weeds. They’d be plucked from the ground and incinerated on the spot.”

“You’re talking about kelp. Doesn’t bother anyone else. In fact the salarymen can’t seem to do without it. They believe it’s got healing powers or something. Convinced enough to empty their wallets if they see it anywhere on a menu. Tiger told me that with the right ingredients you could even make soap out of it.”

“What does the bum know? Bet you had to barter for that useless piece of information. What did he ask for? Donuts please, Shoki. Cigarettes please, Shoki. A blowjob please, Shoki.” Between each request he bows mockingly.

“That’s disgusting! He’s never asked me for anything and you know it. What is it with him? Are you jealous?”

“Jealous!” His mask changes from the usual grey to terracotta with smooth lumps of amber appearing on the surface. “How could anyone be jealous of that subhuman?”

“I’ve obviously hit a nerve.”

With a faint groan, he turns away.

I rest my forehead against the windowpane. The glass is reassuringly cool. “Is that it? Nothing more to get off your chest? No more smells bothering you? Maybe I should buy an air rifle and pick off those gulls one by one? I’m sure that wouldn’t draw any attention.”

I can feel his anger. He’s visibly trembling. I know he wants to retort, to shower me with curses like acid rain, but something’s holding him back.

“Look, the gulls are only a problem when they start mating,” I say, attempting to pacify him. “That won’t happen till at least March. And I admit the kelp can smell a little, but only during the summer months when it’s baking on the shoreline. There’s no reason to move right now.”

...And in local news. Despite lengthy protests, plans to build an offshore wind farm are to go ahead this spring. Spokesperson for OceanMill Hydroelectrics, Haruto Eda said the operation would mark a new chapter in Japan’s clean energy future…

Ignoring me, Nanashi has switched his attention to The Crying Lemon café. Though its security shutters are down, steam continues to seep from vents connected to the brothel downstairs. I often watch the girls smoking on the basement steps, huddling like arctic penguins in the chill air while they tout for customers. Since setting up the homebrew kit, Nanashi’s interest in the outside world has admittedly dwindled, though how I noticed such a place before him is beyond me.

I lift a large portion of noodles with my chopsticks and attempt to pick clear the charred tofu chunks with my fingers. Realising I’m getting nowhere, I head for the kitchen bin.

“Stay at the window,” Nanashi barks.

“The meal’s ruined so I’m taking a shower. If you don’t bother me for the next five minutes, I’ll fix you a drink as soon as I’m out.”

The mere prospect of alcohol should keep him quiet.

After snapping the pull cord to the bathroom light, the already dreary space is now remarkably bleak. I wouldn’t shower so often but for Nanashi’s constant remarks on my personal hygiene. I don’t know why I listen to him? I guess I’m like any other girl my age when it comes to these things.

Once in the bathroom, I routinely inspect the ceiling for spreading damp. I’ve used thick emulsion paint to cover a large patch in one corner but the moisture always manages to bleed through. Damp is where the jellyfish come from.

Removing my t-shirt, I drape it across the sink before stepping from the bunched legs of my tracksuit bottoms. Forgetting to put on underwear is just another symptom of sleep deprivation. I’ve also placed frozen food in the oven, mistaken emulsion paint for moisturiser and added rat poison to the homebrew instead of rice, which Nanashi still drunk without complaint.

For the longest time, I wouldn’t bathe or shower in his company, and if I had to, I would always wrap myself in a towel. I gave up this pretence after waking from a rare sleep to discover him fondling my breasts.

Once in the bathtub, I draw the plastic curtain across before switching on the shower. The spluttering jet forms a cold pool around my feet. I wait for the temperature to rise before leaning forwards. The warm spray passes straight through Nanashi, striking a particularly angry blister above my left collarbone from a recent quarrel.

Not every scar is of his making. The raised tissue crisscrossing the length of my thighs is barely visible to the naked eye and yet still prevents me from ever undressing in public for fear of being labelled a self-harmer.

Tilting my head back, I let the water overwhelm me. I enjoy the brief feeling of disorientation as the stream hits my eyelids and trickles down into the hollows of my ears. I feel safe in the knowledge that I can return to the real world simply by opening my eyes.

I reach blindly for the shampoo.

The radio shrieks.

The bathroom light flickers to life.

Panicking, I flail and knock the showerhead with my hand, pushing the jet into the curtain. I back up against the wall; my palms flush to the tiles, fingers rigid and spread apart like dehydrated starfish.

Something scuttles across the lino. My breathing turns shallow and raspy. The thing scratches the smooth surface of the bath side. I imagine a crab: leathery green shell, eyes attached to stalks, jagged legs, bulbous claws. It’s trying to climb up! Can it do that? Maybe a spider could, but not a crab; they’re not as agile. What if it’s a Spider Crab? Would that make a difference? Can they climb?

Cowering in the tub, I listen as its claws open and shut and picture them clamped around my toes, squeezing, rings of blood framing my nails, bruises blossoming like ink in water.

Nanashi sniggers and his amusement is enough to bring bile to my throat. I retch and spit out undigested noodles. The shower stream washes them down where they settle over the plughole guard. A single piece of tofu disintegrates in the water, leaving residue like cigarette ash.

The scratching gets louder. The crab has burrowed through the side of the bath. It’s directly beneath me! The stiff tips of its legs echo off the fibreglass layer separating us. I reach up and lift the showerhead from its cradle. If the crab gets through I’ll spray it, and if that doesn’t work I’ll club it into a pulp.

The scratching ends.

The light bulb pops and fizzles out.

The reporter’s mutterings return.

I stay there for a minute, not moving a muscle. I know as soon as I draw the curtain across everything will be exactly as it was. I’m certain of this, just as I’m certain there was never a crab in the first place.

“Dammit!” I scream. “And damn you.”

“Nothing to do with me. You’re the one seeing things. What was it this time? Jellyfish from the ceiling? Eels from the plughole? Octopi from the showerhead perhaps? Now stop your whining and return to the window.”

“Get lost!”

He digs his fingers into my shoulder blade. I feel a scratch against bone. I may have a high pain threshold, but Nanashi can still hurt me.

“Okayokay!” I cry. “Enough… please.”

“To the window,” he repeats.

I switch off the shower and step from the bath. Struggling back into my tracksuit bottoms and t-shirt, which cling to my wet skin, I stamp theatrically across the lounge, my hair trailing water as I go.

I’m breathing hard as I reach the window. Nanashi leans over and wipes clear the condensation my breath has produced on the glass. I half expect his fingers to cut through like one of those gadgets professional thieves use to break stealthily into museums and galleries.

The street below is deserted and there are only distant sounds: the familiar chugging engine of the weekend road-sweeper, an intermittent car alarm, Nanashi’s ‘apocalyptic messengers’ screeching from the rooftops.

“What?” I demand.

“Just wait.”

“It’s freezing. My hair’s dripping…”

“I said wait!”

Out of nowhere a young girl emerges from the alleyway running alongside my building. She moves to the edge of the pavement and then stops abruptly, eyeing the tarmac as if it’s been freshly laid.

She could pass for an ordinary student: she’s wearing a typical school uniform and though she’s exceptionally skinny and pale, it is a popular look these days. She could pass, but for one glaring oddity – she doesn’t have any feet! It’s why Nanashi calls her Faintfoot.

“Why do I have these eyes?” I groan.

Nanashi lowers a cluster of fingers, suspending them inches from my face. “Perhaps you’d rather be blind?”

Sometimes I long for just that, for all my senses to burn away. In that place beyond darkness maybe I could truly sleep.

Faintfoot finally leaves the pavement and drifts towards The Crying Lemon. Even from such a distance, thick glass between us, I can feel her malice. If her sinister energy were visible it would leap from her like solar flares.

Nanashi leans in until his mask is practically touching the windowpane. I glance at his reflection, just for a second, but long enough to look into his eyes. I can usually detach myself from his cruelty, ignore his malicious words and tolerate his soldering fingertips, but there’s no escaping those eyes. What terrors have they seen? What atrocities have they guided?

“She’s after your baseball enthusiast,” he says.

“What’s Gotō doing here? I told him to stay clear of the Harbour!”

“Relax, he’s not here.”

“You just said she was after him…”

“But not that she’d find him. Gotō’s probably lounging in a rooftop Jacuzzi someplace surrounded by smooth-skinned women serving sakétinis.”

“So why is she heading to the brothel?”

“The bloated maggot must’ve hired someone to pose as him. Wouldn’t have to be anything elaborate; wearing the same aftershave would peak her interest.”

I dash into the bedroom and fling open the bedside cabinet door. Inside is a leather-bound journal, which I remove and place on the duvet.

“What are you doing?” Nanashi asks.

I negotiate a cluttered pile of equipment used in homebrewing and lift a towel from a clotheshorse beside the radiator. Feverishly drying my hair, I squeeze the last of the droplets free and then gather the damp mass up into a bun to secure it in place with a pencil. “I have to stop this.”

The Sinking World (YA Fiction)

During my Masters degree in creative writing, I wrote a YA novel set in contemporary Japan. The story followed teenager, Shoki Nakamura, a girl who could see the spirits of the recently deceased and quickly became entangled with the yakuza and ghosts hellbent on revenge.

The novel is currently in limbo, between agents and without a home. I feel it would make for a compelling tabletop RPG and I’d like to adapt it down the line, but for now I’ve decided to share it with those visiting the site.

I will update the page with a new chapter each month.

Enjoy reading.

Unable to complete this heavy task for our country
Arrows and bullets all spent, so sad we fall.
But unless I smite the enemy,
My body cannot rot in the field.
Yea, I shall be born again seven times
And grasp the sword in my hand.
When ugly weeds cover this island,
My sole thought shall be the Imperial Land.

General Tadamichi Kuribayashi
Battle of Iwo Jima
March 17th, 1945

1

Ninja

Police Sergeant, Masaru Tanaka was unclogging the lawnmower, wondering why he should spend his free time maintaining an artificial roof lawn, when his wife approached to hand him his pager. After rummaging through their freshly laundered clothes she had found it still clipped to the hem of his trousers. Now it displayed an unusual dispatch code reserved for matters of national security, and though Masaru assumed it had malfunctioned in the wash, he could not take that chance.

As was typical, he arrived first on the scene, parking behind a row of immaculate topiary bushes resembling horses in mid jump. Masaru believed his promotion through the ranks had as much to do with punctuality as with anything else. He found modern methods of law enforcement insufferable and was forever ripping textbooks from the hands of rookies in favour of a night patrol. Out there, driving beneath city lights whilst the swarm of human suffering and inhuman crimes crackled through the scanner, he could tell precisely who was cut out for the job.

He switched off the engine and opened the glove compartment to remove a pistol. Having only ever fired the weapon in practice it acted more as a deterrent, but he still kept it clean, oiled and stocked just in case.

Masaru had contacted dispatch on route, but they had given him very little to go on. And according to the code streaming across his pager, backup was still fifteen minutes shy of the country estate. For now he was on his own.

Taking a few deep breaths, he stepped from the car and moved immediately up the driveway to find cover behind a large stone urn. Disturbed by his presence, ants emptied from a gaping crack in the base. Some attempted to scale the thick rubber soles of his boots while others disappeared beneath the tread as if fishing trawlers passing through the Ebihara Marina tunnel.

Masaru leaned out a fraction to view the forecourt. Nothing moved. He expected to see birds occupying the central lawn or drinking from the twin fountains at either end, and there were none roosting in the trees which remained as still as torii gates at the entrance to a shrine. The silence too was unearthly. Having tolerated ear-splitting sirens for years, Masaru’s hearing was admittedly poor, but this was different; he felt like he was trapped in a Polaroid.

As if to justify his unease, a few feet shy of the house there lay a body. Masaru recognised the individual. Shigeo Kasai had been in every paper that week. He was the sole financer for the recently elected city Governor, the same city Governor now facing allegations of corruption. Maybe this was a matter of national security? Mr Kasai’s left leg was resting at an unnatural angle and dry blood had formed a broad halo around his scalp.

Keeping low, Masaru moved across the forecourt, his pistol bobbing left and right to track his eye movements. Reaching Mr Kasai, he crouched to check the man’s pulse. There was a rapid but shallow beat, like the sensation of lifting a hamster from its cage. Without medical attention he had around half an hour to live, maybe less. Masaru hoped his backup would arrive with paramedics in tow.

It looked like a clear-cut suicide attempt: open elevated window, no signs of tampering, injuries consistent with a fall from that height. And yet Masaru had that ache in his gut he had learned to trust over the years, that ball of undigested instincts that now directed him to the house.

In place of a traditional Japanese entranceway constructed of sliding panels, the Kasai family home was American in design with a single hardwood door. As Masaru approached, he felt his anxiety increase with each step. He was not afraid for his life; he had always been a little too willing to risk that. Instead it had to do with his impending retirement and a feeling of inevitability. That this was the end of things.

The door had not been forced. He turned the handle and used the barrel of his pistol to ease it open. The same stillness he had felt outside was present here; a kind of mantle draped over the realities of time and space.

A lavish chandelier hanging above the entrance hall illuminated many canvases of modern art lining the walls. With their clashing colours and chaotic brushwork, Masaru could not discern them from the artless daubs of a toddler, yet he had little doubt selling a single piece would double his retirement package. Beneath the canvases were sealed display cabinets containing antique ceramics of Chinese origin. Anybody could tell their considerable value and he was almost saddened to see a toppled cabinet and fragments of the ancient porcelain scattered across the floorboards. Saddened, that is, until he noticed the bodies.

As part of his captaincy training, Masaru had undergone regular psychological appraisals. One of these sessions was used to evaluate a candidates’ reaction to violence. He had been shown war photos taken during the Nanjing Massacre followed by slide after slide of disturbing images: starving prisoners, mutilated bodies, mass graves. At the time he had responded calmly and assuredly, never believing a police officerwould witness such brutality.

He was wrong. This was another massacre. The Shiranami Massacre.

The door came to rest against a chauffeur in a grey suit. The man’s peaked hat lay crumpled under his matted hair and the right lens to his sunglasses had split, revealing a deep, bloody cavity. Further in lay a young man whose tennis whites were now utterly red. Another body was slumped at the base of a door like a draft excluder and two more were sprawled on the staircase, their contorted expressions sharpened beneath the glare of the chandelier.

There were more victims, but Masaru had stopped looking. He was doubled over with his hands on his knees. To stop himself from vomiting, he allowed a string of saliva to fall slowly from his lips.

What was he dealing with here? Masaru had a keen interest in history and as he gathered himself to survey the bloodbath once more, he was reminded of mercenary ninja from the Sengoku period, adept killers who required but a single opportunity to dispose of a target. And as the floorboards creaked beneath his boots, he half expected a throwing star to spin out from the shadows towards his throat.

The scene before him was preposterous. And if it were not for the homeowner lying outside, he would have considered himself the victim of a practical joke. But this was no retirement stunt. His colleagues were not waiting to surprise him. The bodies would not miraculously get to their feet to remove wigs, makeup and prosthetics.

The whine of distant sirens made him breathe a little easier.

Then she appeared at the top of the staircase.

He nearly dropped his pistol. Her eyes! Full. Feverish. Feral. Masaru had seen eyes like those before, but never on a person. They belonged to trainee attack dogs confined to kennels during the starvation phase. Blood glistened through her hair and streaked her knitted cardigan. It was thickest along her right arm, unbroken crimson to the very tip of a kitchen knife she held.

She approached, making no effort to negotiate the bodies on the stairs, her eyes fixed on the open door.

Masaru heard the skid of tyres on gravel.

In any other circumstances, he would have assumed the girl a lucky survivor. Knife to be used only if the Sengoku ninja discovered her hiding place. Except, Masaru realised, she was the ninja.

“Drop the knife,” he demanded.

She kept coming, eyes never straying from the door.

He aimed his pistol at her shoulder. “I said, drop the knife!”

Surely escape wasn’t on her mind? Maybe she wanted death? Maybe a bullet was preferable to the alternative?

Masaru turned to acknowledge his colleagues, the briefest of movements, but enough for a ninja. She was on him before he could even cock his pistol. The knife flashed and he felt the punch, the spike of pain, and then nothing.

As he collapsed, his colleagues opened fire. The girl flailed her arms as she was sprayed with bullets, her fingers refusing to surrender the weapon even as she hit the deck.

From the floor, Masaru tilted his head towards her. He watched the hunger leave her eyes with the last of her breath. Then something else left her. Like steam from a rice basket. It formed in the air above her, at first hazy and indistinct, then crystal clear. A figure. A woman. Torn stockings covered shapely legs, slender hands ended at crudely broken nails, and a white shirt hung loose exposing a filigree bra and a necklace of bruised finger-marks.

Masaru was rolled onto his back and an oxygen mask placed over his nose and mouth. He tried desperately to turn his head, to look upon the woman’s face, but the paramedic was stronger. Masaru felt a needle in his shoulder followed by the sting of drugs entering his bloodstream. Then he was lost. Covered by the mantle. Lost in time and space.