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The Katana




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  The Katana

  Black Samurai #8

  Marc Olden

  A MysteriousPress.com

  Open Road Integrated Media

  Ebook

  Contents

  Chapter 1: TRAPPED

  Chapter 2: ESCAPE

  Chapter 3: CLASH

  Chapter 4: FLOWERS

  Chapter 5: SAND/WILLIAM BARON CLARKE

  Chapter 6: PLANS

  Chapter 7: DEADLY MRS. THOMMS

  Chapter 8: GOD LOOKS DOWN

  Chapter 9: PARIS FLIGHTS

  Chapter 10: STRATEGY

  Chapter 11: DEATH: A SAMURAI’S BLOOD

  Chapter 12: TRAPPED AND PURSUED

  Chapter 13: BACK FROM THE DEAD

  Chapter 14: FINAL REVENGE

  The Katana is a Japanese sword with a two-handed grip and a curved blade over two feet long, single-edged and razor sharp. It first appeared in Japan over a thousand years ago, designed for cavalry, giving warriors on horseback a slashing weapon with a long reach and awesome effectiveness. A Katana is considered one of the finest swords ever made, and the ancient swordsmiths who forged it are ranked the best Japan has ever produced. In its time, a Katana was one of the most feared weapons in Japan.

  —MARC OLDEN

  Chapter 1

  TRAPPED

  EYES BRIGHT, HIS THIN lips stretched wide in a relaxed grin, the German leaned over and pressed the .45 against Robert Sand’s ear, digging the gun barrel in hard and looking for signs of pain. Accepting the pain, the Black Samurai showed no reaction. His unblinking brown eyes stared straight ahead as though focused on something far away.

  Don’t let me get a chance at you, thought Sand. You’re on my list, Fritz, and I’m going to remember your ugly face. The Black Samurai knelt at the German’s feet, both hands—fingers locked—on top of his head. Orders from the skinny, long-faced German with the big jaw and the big gun.

  On your knees, black man, and don’t move a hair, he had said.

  “You move just one little thing, your eyes, your little finger, a hair that’s up your nose, maybe—yah?—and I’ll pull this trigger and you know what happens then? I tell you what happens, my well-dressed black friend. All what is inside your head, your brains, perhaps, and some blood—yah? All that goes splash! It shpreads all over these valls and maybe—perhaps on that nice expensive suede jacket you are wearing, yah? Hey, how much you pay for that suede jacket?”

  The German twisted the gun against Sand’s ear—left, right—as though the gun were a key opening a lock. Sand gritted his teeth, tensing his jaw. The veins in his neck stretched tight, trying to push through his skin. Ain’t gonna forget you anytime soon, baby.

  “Hey, I say, how much you pay?” The .45 was digging harder against Sand’s skull. More pain.

  Dieter Berle, the German, was relaxed, loose with arrogance. Why not? He had a gun and two armed men with him. More important, his sister was with him. His sister. Loved and treasured above all else in God’s world. Dieter needed her, needed her always, and so long as he had her, all was right with the universe.

  His sister. Mrs. Josepha Thomms. A very special woman.

  “Dieter, please?”

  I have to stop this, thought Mrs. Thomms, watching Dieter jam the gun into the black man’s ear. She didn’t want the black killed until after she questioned him. Question him first. Kill him afterward.

  Her voice was patient, with just the right touch of annoyance, and her brother reacted immediately, snapping his head toward her as though she had just jerked a wire connected to his nose.

  “Forget the jacket, Dieter, please?”

  Dieter started to say something, stopped, shrugging his shoulders like a little boy caught being naughty and unable to think up an excuse. Josepha was right, she was always right. Business first. Take care of business. After that, perhaps—maybe there would be time for fun with the black man. After.

  Fifty-year-old Mrs. Thomms, two hundred pounds of muscle on a five-foot-six frame, smiled at her brother, her square red face tilted to one side. Little Dieter. Thirty-eight years old and a man-child, but she loved him deeply. He was Dieter, her brother.

  Dieter smiled back, sighing and pulling the .45 away from Robert Sand’s ear. I’m forgiven. Josepha’s forgiven me, but doesn’t she always? She’s right. Let’s take care of the antique dealer first, then I can have the black man.

  Looking down at Robert Sand, Dieter grinned, his left hand stroking the Black Samurai’s right shoulder. The German’s voice was a soft hiss. “After, I think I take your coat, all right?”

  After, thought the Black Samurai. After you splash my brains around the room. An expensively decorated apartment on Manhattan’s East Side packed with antiques and excellent copies of high-priced art.

  Sand had no illusions about what was going to happen to him or to the antique dealer. The dyke with the short, dyed black hair and cheap brown clothes that didn’t fit her, along with her three gun-carrying hoods, were going to kill Wilfred Leo, a Manhattan antique dealer. And after that, they were going to kill the Black Samurai.

  Ain’t this a bitch, thought Sand, hands still locked in place on his head, still kneeling where Dieter Berle had told him to, his eyes straight ahead on Mrs. Thomms. I’m on my knees, unarmed, staring at a German dyke who’s got two of the biggest, hairiest fists I’ve ever seen.

  Seconds ago, I rang the bell and the door opens in a hurry, and this skinny creep here shoves a gun in my gut. Two armed men back him up and now I’m kneeling here waiting to die.

  Stay cool, stay cool. Robert Sand changed his breathing, bringing the air up deep from his stomach, keeping his breathing slow and even, controlling the flow of air in and out of his body. Relax, stay alert.

  That had been part of his samurai training. Control your mind and thereby control your body. Watch for the correct moment to attack, then attack with all your strength and speed. Day in, day out, for seven long, grueling, brutal years, Robert Sand had trained as a samurai under Master Konuma, “The Soft Tiger,” one of the greatest martial arts teachers in Japan’s history.

  Judo, karate, kendo—the two-handed sword, archery, horseback riding, stick and knife fighting, Ninjitsu—the art of the spy and assassin, all these and more had been studied and practiced for those seven years to the point of exhaustion until Robert Sand was an almost perfect fighting machine.

  Tonight, he would be tested. His own life was the prize, and to lose was to die.

  Sand had come to talk to Wilfred Leo about the Katana and had gotten unlucky. He’d walked into something that could be fatal if the Black Samurai didn’t get lucky in a hurry.

  Mrs. Thomms looked at Wilfred Leo, a forty-five-year-old Manhattan antique dealer sitting in a gold-painted chair, both hands on his thighs, eyes staring down at the pale green carpet. Leo, thinning brown hair combed sideways to hide approaching baldness, was a small, thin man with pink-tinted glasses on his long nose and three rings on each small hand.

  The antique dealer, eyes bulging, lips pressed tightly together, was a frightened man.

  “You’re lying,” said Mrs. Thomms, standing with her thick legs wide apart, both hands behind her back. Damn fool. Didn’t he know she wasn’t going to leave until she had the truth.

  Leo licked his lips. “I—I, look I swear to you that sw
ord was genuine. I didn’t double-cross you, I swear it.” He looked at Mrs. Thomms quickly, seeing only hardness in her red face, seeing her reject his lie. He turned from her, again gazing down at the carpet. God, she frightened him. That woman scared him, scared him more than the three men did.

  “You’re a ridiculous man, Mr. Wilfred Leo.” Mrs. Thomms walked over to him, then stepped behind his chair. A frightened rat. You could kick him once and he’d scream for days. Well, she didn’t have days. She had to learn all she could about that sword and learn it as soon as possible.

  Taking a deep breath, she raised her right arm and backhanded a chop into his left ear, driving the knife edge of her thick hand down hard on the small man’s skull.

  Pain exploded in Leo’s head and his mouth opened as he fell out of the chair, arms stiff in front of him to break his fall. Blackness squeezed his brain and he blinked his eyes again and again, trying to see, to focus. He lay on his right side, mouth still open and sucking in air, feeling pain press down on his eyes. Oh God, oh God! A nightmare. It wasn’t happening to him. It couldn’t be happening to him.

  Yanking the chair out of the way and tossing it aside, Mrs. Thomms hopped forward and kicked Wilfred Leo in the back, driving her thick brown shoe hard into his spine, making him arch his back, stiffen and cry out.

  Pain was all over him now, clawing at him and racing up and down his body like a fire out of control. Moaning, he rolled over on his stomach, drawing his knees up under him and pushing down at the floor with the palms of both hands. Got to get up, got to …

  Breathing heavily with excitement, Mrs. Thomms crouched over the agonized antique dealer, her voice soft and urgent. To hell with this little bastard. When she finished with him, he would tell her everything and be happy to do it. “Mr. Wilfred Leo, you have double-crossed the man I work for and he does not like this. He pays you good money for the Katana and you give us an imitation, a phony. We expect a sword worth over a half million dollars and you send us an imitation not worth even a thousand dollars. That is wrong, Mr. Leo, that is wrong, don’t you think?”

  The Katana.

  That’s it, thought Robert Sand. That’s why this muscle-bound dyke is kicking the pee out of Leo. We both want the same thing: the Katana.

  Sand was confused. Didn’t the dyke and her friends steal the sword, or … Wait a minute, wait a minute. They didn’t actually steal it. They paid Leo to help them steal it and he had switched swords on them.

  A phony for the real thing. And the real thing is worth over half a million. That’s why the Black Samurai had come to see the antique dealer. Like Mrs. Thomms and her hoods, Sand wanted the Katana.

  The Katana. A sword forged in medieval Japan, used to give horsemen a weapon with a reach, a weapon that could slash at a full gallop. But when you talked about the Katana, you were talking about one sword in particular, a sword made of solid gold, with a two-handed grip handle of solid silver wrapped in black silk thread. Embedded in the handle were three flawless red rubies.

  The Katana. An expensive gift made over twelve hundred years ago for a long-forgotten Japanese emperor; a sword that had literally disappeared until four years ago it was presented to the Japanese government by Sand’s teacher, Master Konuma, who felt that it belonged to the people, not just to one man.

  The Katana. On loan to New York City’s Metropolitan Museum and stolen from there two days ago; a sword Robert Sand was determined to get back any way he could, and in the name of his beloved teacher, again present it to the Japanese government.

  No matter how I have to do it, thought the Black Samurai. That makes me and this dyke brothers. We both want the Katana and we don’t care how we get it.

  Reaching down, Mrs. Thomms grabbed a handful of Wilfred Leo’s hair, twisting it hard, satisfied that it was hurting him. Leo closed his eyes in pain, gritted his teeth, and reached up to grab Mrs. Thomms’ thick right fist, his hands pitifully small beside hers. God, it hurt! It felt as thought hair and skin was being ripped loose from his skull.

  “The Katana, Mr. Leo. Where is it?”

  Words spilled out of his mouth in a hurry. “My partner, my partner! I don’t know anything about it! My partner, talk to him—”

  “I’m talking to you. The Katana.” Angrily, Mrs. Thomms twisted the handful of hair, yanking up on it, sending needles of agony digging into Leo’s scalp.

  His eyes were closed tighter now, trying to push out the pain and hell around him. Pulling at her fist wasn’t getting him anywhere. Her fist was like a brick, and now she had just jammed her fat knee down on his neck, pinning him to the floor and making it almost impossible for him to breathe.

  Leo squirmed, his small body twisting left, right, and not really moving at all. His neck ached from her knee and the pain in his scalp was worse, as though hooks were in his head and being dug in deeper each second.

  “My partner, I swear. My partner!”

  “Your partner, your partner. Where is Mr. Edgar Johns?”

  “Oh God, oh God, please! I don’t know. I haven’t seen him since, since—”

  “Since the robbery?”

  “Yes, yes!”

  “Such positive answers.” Mrs. Thomms stood up, smoothing out her brown tweed skirt, patting her close-cropped hair, then shooting her cuffs. “Well, it looks like we must find Mr. Edgar Johns, and then perhaps we find the Katana. I think you and Mr. Johns make a mistake. You should not try to double-cross Mr. Flowers, you know?”

  A stunned Wilfred Leo sat on the floor, left hand rubbing his sore neck, right hand gently touching his throbbing scalp. Pain had weakened him, draining him physically and emotionally, leaving him an exhausted, empty, and frightened man. His chest heaved as he sucked in air through his open mouth. God, that woman was horrible! Worse than any man. Much, much worse.

  Leo fought for breath, spacing his words. “I—didn’t—double-cross—Mr. Flowers. I—didn’t.” He was weeping silently, tears bright on his pained red face. She had to believe him, she had to.

  Sand watched in disgust. The dyke was vicious. Brutal. She enjoyed causing pain and she was frightening to watch. You don’t expect that from a woman, and when you see it, when you see a woman who likes being sadistic, it throws you. You find it hard to deal with.

  She wasn’t keeping anything back from Sand. No attempt at all to be subtle, quiet, or cool. It was as though he wasn’t there, as if he was already dead. Well, he would be soon. Instinct told him that. Mrs. Thomms wasn’t the type to leave any loose ends. You could tell that by the way she was making the antique dealer bleed.

  Mrs. Thomms turned to Robert Sand, on his knees several feet away from her. “And what are you here for, my black friend?” Shrewdly, she eyed him, his calm face, his expensive well-tailored clothes. No ghetto nigger, this one. Good clothes and in control of himself. He has strong eyes. One should be careful of anyone with strong eyes.

  “Same as you, the Katana.” Might as well tell her the truth. Part of it, anyway.

  Mrs. Thomms nodded her big head, satisfied with the answer. “Was Mr. Leo here going to sell it to you?”

  The antique dealer frowned, his narrowed, frightened eyes darting from the muscular woman to the black man and back to her again. Then his eyes widened in sheer fear as he realized that Mrs. Thomms’ question could mean his death. He shouted, “I don’t know this man, never saw him before, I swear to you, I never—”

  This was one of the few true things he’d said in the last few minutes. They had to believe him, they had to. This time he was telling the truth. He didn’t know who the black man was.

  “He knows you, Mr. Leo,” said Dieter, grinning at the antique dealer. “At least, he’s here in your apartment. Now why is that, hmm?” Dieter’s grin stayed in place. He enjoyed making people miserable. It meant he had power and was superior to them.

  Mrs. Thomms cupped her hands in front of her crotch, twiddling her thumbs. “Why does this man know you, Mr. Leo?”

  “I—I don’t know. Really, I mean, really
I don’t—” He stopped, shrugged his shoulders, temporarily forgetting the pain in his back and head, forcing himself to believe the fragile truth that to stay alive all he had to do was to cut off any connection between himself and the black man kneeling across from him. That’s all.

  But deep down inside, he knew differently. It would take more than that, much more. Still, his desperate greed deluded him into believing a lie—that he could get away with lying to Mrs. Thomms about the Katana, and if the black man died, he, Wilfred Leo, would live.

  Mrs. Thomms placed both hands behind her back, spreading her thick legs apart. A general about to lecture the troops. Her eyes went to each of her men—Dieter, Dennis, and Giorgio, the other two gunmen. Dieter smiled. Josepha was about to say something clever.

  “I tell you what happened, Mr. Leo. Business is bad, true? Oh, I know all about you and your partner, Mr. Edgar Johns. I know your store is not doing too well and that you both need money to keep on living like the American wealthy class. You make no money on antiques, and even the stolen things you sell do not give you and your partner enough for your expensive tastes.”

  She smiled down at Wilfred Leo, who sat on the floor staring up at her as though she was reading his mind. His face was slack with horrible understanding. She knew. Oh God, this awful woman knew what had really happened and now she was telling him, telling him as clearly as if she had pulled his brain from his skull and was reading what was written there.

  “So, Mr. Leo, you decide that the money we pay you for the sword was not enough. You had to have more, you and your partner. So you cheat us, you send us a phony sword because you think we do not know about the Katana. Perhaps you think we get it, then throw it in the bottom of a closet, and don’t take it out again until our customer comes. No, Mr. Leo, we are not that stupid. We must be very careful, we must be sure we are selling what we say we are selling. Our customers are important people, rich people, and they are special to us. You must think Mr. Flowers is dumb. Tell me something—”