The Shield of Kuromori. Jason Rohan
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He opened his eyes again and his stomach heaved. The moonlit surface of the lake was rushing towards him at almost two hundred kilometres per hour. Kenny screwed his eyes shut, clenched his teeth so hard that he thought they would break, and summoned every trace of willpower he had. He knew he could do this, but more importantly he had to believe it.
‘I trust you.’
Kiyomi’s words sparked like a firefly in the blackness of his mind. Something flared deep down in the core of his consciousness and power surged through him. Kenny braced for the impact; hitting water at that speed and height would be like slamming into concrete.
Nothing happened.
He waited, not daring to open his eyes.
‘Uh, Ken-chan.’ Kiyomi’s voice was quiet, as if afraid to disturb him. ‘You can set us down now.’
Kenny blinked and gasped. He and Kiyomi were suspended two metres above the lake. The autumn air was motionless around them and they floated, as if gravity had ceased.
‘I – I don’t know how . . .’ Kenny began to say, before a whisper of doubt crept into his mind. This can’t be real.
SPLASSHH! The shock of the chilled lake water slapped him back to reality and he swallowed a mouthful before kicking up to the surface. Kiyomi bobbed alongside him, treading water in her soggy leathers. Fury blazed in her eyes.
‘I know, I know,’ Kenny spluttered, before she could speak. ‘I’m an idiot. But at least we’re not dead.’
‘Urgh! No thanks to you.’
‘What? It wasn’t my idea to jump on to a moving plane.’
‘And it wasn’t mine to cut the wing off.’
An orange light flashed in the mountains to the west and the muffled crump of an explosion rolled towards them.
‘You can thank me later,’ Kenny said, and began the long swim to shore.
A circular intake tower with a green conical roof, like a medieval turret, stood some fifteen metres clear of the water. Connecting it to the mainland was a suspension bridge and the industrial lights of a pumping station shone like a beacon, guiding Kenny and Kiyomi to shore. They pulled themselves up the shallow bank and flopped, panting, on to a forlorn patch of grass.
Kenny breathed in deep chestfuls of air and waited for his drumming heart to slow. His limbs were leaden and he wanted nothing more than to fall asleep on the dirt, except the chattering of his teeth would have kept him awake.
Kiyomi unzipped her phone from its waterproof pocket and made a call.
‘How long before our pick up?’ Kenny asked, sitting up and hugging himself to keep warm.
‘About half an hour,’ Kiyomi replied. She wrapped her arms round her knees and shivered.
‘And how long before hypothermia kicks in?’
Kiyomi rolled her eyes. ‘You’re such a wimp. It isn’t that cold.’
‘Easy for you to say. This football kit isn’t exactly warm.’
‘You try swimming in leathers. At least you’ll dry off quickly.’
Neither spoke for the next few minutes. The only sounds were the whisper of leaves on the breeze, wavy ribbons of distant music from an amusement park, frogs chirping and the occasional plop of a fish.
‘This is silly,’ Kenny said and slid over to squeeze next to Kiyomi.
‘What are you doing?’ she asked, with undisguised suspicion.
‘Jeez. It’s basic survival,’ Kenny said. ‘We’re both cold and wet. We’ve got nothing dry to change into, so the next best thing is to share bodily warmth. That or light a fire, and I don’t see anything to burn.’
‘All right,’ Kiyomi agreed, ‘but don’t try any funny stuff.’
‘Yeah, right, because you’re really appealing right now.’ Kenny regretted the words as soon as they left his lips.
‘What’s that supposed to mean?’
‘Oh, uh, just . . . well . . .’
Kiyomi’s elbow landed in Kenny’s ribs. ‘Come on, spit it out.’
‘All right then. It’s just . . . you’ve been . . . such a pain lately.’
‘Me? What about you? You’ve been the most useless –’
‘No.’ Kenny held up a hand to stop her. ‘Hear me out. Listen. Ever since . . . you know . . . happened, you’ve been really angry, all the time. OK, I’m used to you being a bit feisty, and it was kind of cute, but now . . . now, you’re like the flipping Hulk – a total rage monster. Tonight just caps it all off. You could’ve got us killed, what, four times, at least. Reckless is one thing, but this . . . this is like you just don’t care.’
Lights flashed behind Kenny’s eyes as the back of his head slammed into the earth and the air was driven from his lungs by Kiyomi’s knees on his chest. He tried to breathe in, but her fingers drilled into his throat, cutting off his airway.
‘Who are you to call me reckless?’ Kiyomi spat. ‘I ought to rip your stupid throat out and . . . and . . .’
The mask of rage faltered. Kiyomi’s eyes widened from angry slits and her twisted snarl changed to a gasp of distress. Her hands flew to her mouth and she pushed away, tears brimming in her eyes.
Kenny sat up, a hand to his bruised throat, and drew in ragged gulps of air. ‘You . . . see?’ he wheezed. ‘That’s . . . what . . . I . . . meant . . .’
‘Ken-chan, I’m so sorry,’ Kiyomi sobbed, dropping to her knees beside him and throwing her arms around his shoulders. ‘I don’t know what . . . I would never . . . You’re my friend.’
Kenny felt the warmth of her tears against his neck and cupped his hand over hers.
They were in the same position when the powerful headlights of the limousine swept over the shore and Oyama strode towards them with a blanket in each ham-sized fist.
Kiyomi was first in the house, tugging off her sopping boots in the entryway. She paused at the sight of a pair of polished black loafers which didn’t belong to her father.
‘Kiyomi-chan,’ Harashima said, standing at the door to the main room. ‘I need to speak to you and Kuromori-san.’
Kenny arrived and, seeing Kiyomi’s father, bowed. ‘Konban-wa, Harashima-sama,’ he said.
Harashima