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Chapter 36 - Chapter 36

On Christmas Eve 1986, no snow fell on Tokyo.

A dry, biting cold wrapped the Kanto Plain, granting the night an unusual clarity. From the heights of the Port Area, the city resembled an overturned jewelry box: countless lights spilled across the horizon, merging into golden rivers that flowed without end.

In the discos of Roppongi the music throbbed at deafening volume. In Ginza's high-end restaurants, couples sliced into expensive steaks. Even beside roadside vending machines, clusters of young people sipped hot canned coffee, cheeks flushed, chatting eagerly about next year's skiing plans.

Bustle, joy, restlessness.

This was the distinctive pulse of the eve of the Bubble Era.

Yet deep in Azabu-Juban, at the foot of the slope known as Kurayami-zaka, only silence reigned.

Tall fences draped in black construction netting bore stark warnings: "Saionji Construction – No Entry." Through the mesh one could glimpse only dark, shadowy trees and the skeletal outline of a building swathed in scaffolding.

This was the former residence of Count Kyogoku.

Its present codename was simply "The Club."

Click.

The padlock on the side door released.

A flashlight beam sliced through the darkness, illuminating scattered rubble and steel rods on the ground.

"Father, watch your step."

Satsuki led the way, gripping a large flashlight. She had dressed warmly for the occasion: a white down jacket that made her look like a small snowman, paired with sturdy work boots.

"I am fine."

Shuichi followed, carrying a wicker picnic basket. With his free hand he steadied himself on the unfinished concrete stairs, still lacking handrails; his leather shoes rang hollow against the dusty steps.

The building was undergoing total renovation.

Rotten wooden floors had been ripped out to expose the foundation. Load-bearing walls had been reinforced, and the original narrow windows enlarged into sweeping floor-to-ceiling frames. The air carried the mingled scents of wet cement, fresh sawdust, and the stale mustiness that clung stubbornly to old brick and stone even after renovation.

"That madman Ando actually wants to remove the roof of the central courtyard," Shuichi remarked, glancing upward at the exposed steel beams as they climbed.

"He intends to install a full-glass dome so moonlight can fall directly onto the dance floor. That single change has added two hundred million yen to the budget."

"Let him do it."

Satsuki's voice echoed in the empty stairwell.

"If he were not mad, it would not be the rokumeikan we desire."

They continued to the third floor.

This had once been the room of the legendary "maid's suicide" and still commanded the finest view in the entire building.

The wall had been demolished, opening onto a vast semicircular terrace.

The terrace remained unfinished—bare concrete underfoot, no railings yet installed, only a few naked steel rods standing like sentinels. The space felt raw and precarious.

Yet the view was breathtaking.

Less than a kilometer away, Tokyo Tower rose against the night sky like a colossal orange-red candle. Its steel lattice glowed with light, aviation warning beacons at the summit flashing rhythmically, as though the tower itself were breathing.

It stood so close that one almost felt the heat of its blaze.

Whoosh—

A cold wind swept across the terrace, lifting fine cement dust.

Satsuki set the flashlight upright on the ground; its beam shot skyward like a lightsaber.

"Right here."

She crossed to the edge, found an abandoned wooden table stacked with blueprints, and wiped the dust away with a tissue.

Shuichi placed the picnic basket on the table and lifted the lid.

Inside lay a bottle of Dom Pérignon champagne, a bottle of deep-purple premium grape juice, two crystal tulip glasses wrapped in cotton cloth, and a box of roast chicken that had long since gone cold.

On this night, this was the Saionji family head's Christmas feast.

Pop.

The cork came free with a soft sigh. White mist rose from the bottle's mouth and vanished into the wind.

Shuichi poured a glass of champagne; golden liquid swirled, fine bubbles racing upward. Then he filled half a glass of grape juice for Satsuki.

"To 1986," Shuichi said, raising his glass, his voice low.

"To us having survived it."

"Cheers."

Satsuki touched her glass to his. The crisp ring of crystal sounded especially pure amid the unfinished ruin.

Shuichi took a long sip. The cold wine stung his throat, then spread a welcome warmth through his chest.

He stepped to the edge of the terrace and rested his hands on the bare steel rod, gazing at the distant sea of lights.

"Satsuki."

"Hmm?"

"Do you remember what we were doing this time last year?"

Satsuki perched on the wooden table, swinging her legs and studying the juice in her glass.

"I remember."

Her tone was quiet.

"We were eating something much like this cold roast chicken. Only then you were still wondering whether the bank would seal the doors of the main residence the following month."

"Yes."

Shuichi gave a rueful laugh.

"Just one year."

He reached out as if to grasp the tail of time itself.

"Only one year."

"Back then, two hundred million yen in debt felt like the sky collapsing. I lay awake night after night, plotting how to beg relatives for help or sell ancestral property."

"And today…"

Shuichi glanced at the briefcase resting on the ground. Inside were copies of the land deeds acquired during the recent frenzied buying spree.

"Today we hold parcels worth twelve billion yen. We own a money-printing machine in Ginza. A golden sink is nearing completion in Akasaka. Hundreds of workers in Shanghai sew garments for us. We hold Microsoft shares in America."

"Even our overseas accounts contain several hundred million dollars in cash."

His voice trembled—not with fear, but with a dizzying vertigo. It was the sensation of a man who had been trudging mountain paths only to be suddenly strapped to a rocket and hurled into space.

Weightlessness.

Extreme weightlessness.

"Sometimes I wonder whether any of this is real," Shuichi said, turning toward his daughter where she sat in the shadows.

"Could it all be a dream I had on that New Year's Eve? When I wake, nothing has changed, and the Saionji family remains the same near-bankrupt shell?"

"This is not a dream."

Satsuki slid off the table.

She walked to his side and set her glass on the concrete ledge.

"If it were a dream, this wind would not feel so cold."

She pointed into the dark courtyard below.

"Father, do you think we are moving too fast?"

"Fast. Far too fast." Shuichi answered honestly. "So fast it feels as though we are violating the laws of physics."

"No."

Satsuki shook her head.

Her eyes caught the red glow of Tokyo Tower, making her pupils appear to burn.

"We are not fast enough. We can go even faster."

"You could say we have only finished warming up."

She turned, back to the tower, and spread her arms to embrace the biting wind.

"Father, do you truly understand what that 2.5 percent interest-rate cut Uncle Kato mentioned will mean?"

Shuichi considered the question. "Lower funding costs. Inflation."

"That is the textbook answer."

Satsuki scoffed.

"In reality, it means gravity has vanished."

She kicked a small pebble; it rolled and dropped into the darkness, falling for what seemed an eternity before a faint clatter rose from below.

"In a normal world, pigs cannot fly. Gravity prevents it."

"But next year," she continued, her voice soft yet edged with chilling certainty, "the central bank will switch gravity off."

"Then, whether it is a gold brick or a pile of dog excrement, whether it is a magnificent building or a worthless scrap of land fit only for parking bicycles—as long as it is an 'asset,' it will rise."

"The wind is coming, Father."

Satsuki looked at him, her eyes shining with fanatical light.

"It is the wind that can lift pigs into the sky."

Shuichi gazed at the distant skyline of buildings of every height. In his daughter's description they seemed to have shed their weight, swaying gently as they floated in mid-air.

"Then what of us?" he asked. "Are we pigs as well?"

"No."

Satsuki leaned against the railing, still smiling with that same reserved elegance. Yet her words rang with absolute arrogance.

"We are dragons."

"Dragons that command the wind and rain."

She turned to face him.

"Pigs fly only to fall and die. We…"

"We remain on the ground, spreading our net, waiting for them to drop into it."

Looking at his daughter, Shuichi suddenly understood.

Every arrangement she had made over the past year—the scattered parcels of land, the seemingly unrelated ventures—had been weaving that very net.

A net large enough to catch the wealth of all Tokyo.

"I have seen Ando's blueprints," Satsuki said, abruptly changing the subject.

"He has excavated an enormous wine cellar beneath the central courtyard. It can hold twenty thousand bottles of red wine."

"Hmm." Shuichi nodded. "He said it is so the wine may 'sleep.'"

"Fill that cellar next year," Satsuki instructed.

"Buy only Bordeaux Grand Cru Classé—Lafite, Margaux, Mouton. Price is no object. Acquire them all."

"Why? We have not even opened yet…"

"Because after next year the Japanese will drink the world's entire supply of red wine." Satsuki swirled the grape juice in her glass. "A bottle of Lafite will then cost ten times what it does today, and even money will not secure one."

"It is liquid gold."

"…Very well."

Shuichi had long since stopped asking why.

He refilled his champagne glass.

"One more thing," Satsuki said, gazing at Tokyo Tower. "Has the name for this building in Azabu-Juban been decided?"

"Not yet. We have been calling it 'Rokumeikan · Showa,' but it feels overly retro."

"Call it simply 'The Club.'"

Satsuki's tone was decisive.

"Simple. Direct. Arrogant."

"No prefix is needed. I want every person in Tokyo, whenever they speak of 'that club,' to know without question that they mean this place."

"The Club…"

Shuichi repeated the name.

The English words felt slightly stiff in a Japanese context, yet they carried precisely the unbridled arrogance required.

"Good. Let it be The Club."

Shuichi raised his glass toward Tokyo Tower.

"To The Club."

"To the wind."

Satsuki lifted her juice.

Clink.

They toasted once more.

At that moment a firework soared from distant Roppongi.

Boom!

A green burst lit the sky, followed by red and gold—some wealthy reveler's private celebration of Christmas Eve.

The brilliant flash illuminated the unfinished ruin and, for an instant, Satsuki's face.

That youthful face still wore its faint smile.

Yet her eyes burned with restless fervor.

The fireworks faded. Darkness reclaimed the terrace.

"Time to go back," Shuichi said, setting down his glass. The cold had finally penetrated his coat. "Fujita is waiting in the car below. This place is too chilly, and you are still growing."

"Hmm."

Satsuki nodded obediently, picked up the flashlight, and jumped down from the table.

"Let us go, Father."

She turned, the beam lighting their descent.

"This time next year, this place will feel like spring."

"And it will be noisy."

Shuichi gathered the picnic basket and followed.

"Noisy?"

"That will be the sound of gold coins clinking."

Satsuki's voice drifted up from the stairs below.

"By then the most powerful people in Tokyo will crowd these rooms, begging us to accept their money."

Shuichi smiled, his steps light as he descended after her.

One behind the other, they walked down the unfinished stairs still lacking handrails, descending step by step into the darkness.

Behind them on the terrace the open bottle of champagne stood alone in the cold wind. The golden liquid inside swayed gently, reflecting the never-extinguished lights of Tokyo Tower.

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