Interlude_6.1 (218)
âArisu!â
Fuma Arisu, an officer of the Police Force, and the second-in-command of the Narcotics Taskforce, looked up from the intelligence file on her desk. At the end of the bullpen, Chunin Yakumi, the head of the Narcotics Taskforce, stood at the threshold of his office, motioning her to his office.
She shut the file and walked across the bullpen used by the Narcotics Taskforce. As she entered the office and closed the door behind her, Arisu noticed two men sitting there. When they looked at her, she didnât recognize their faces, and neither of them had the Police Force insignia on their sleeve, which meant they werenât from the Police Force.
âArisu, these people are from the Hot Waters war commission,â said Yakumi, pointing to the two men, âthey would like to talk to you about a few things.â
âWhat things?â she asked.
âAbout Genin Takuma,â said the bald of the two men.
âOh, what about him?â Arisu asked, crossing her arms.
Seeing the change in Arisuâs body language, the two men looked at Yakumi, who shrugged. He wasnât going to help them with Arisu. Takuma might not be working in the Police Force, but he was still a part of it, and Arisu and Yakumi wouldnât talk if it would be used against him.
The second man got up and cleared his throat. âHeâs not in trouble, Genin Arisu. Genin Takuma is being considered as a potential candidate for an important mission, and we need some information about his work here. Youâre close to him, and weâre wondering if you could give us some clarity about it all.â
âWhat kind of mission?â asked Arisu.
âWe canât reveal many details, but itâs dangerous, and thus, we need to verify if heâs up for the job. We want to know his history with snitches, informants, and moles, those sorts of people. We know he was experienced in cultivating people into assets and having them feed information to your team. How did he get their trustââ
Arisu scoffed as though she had just heard a joke.
âFirst, Takuma is very good at cultivating assets, so if he wants the mission, give it to him, he wonât disappoint. Now, trust really isnât a factor for Takuma. There are people who get attached to their assets, treat them as friends, which is fine and allâbut Takumaâs philosophy was the exact opposite. He sees his assets as nothing but what they are.â
âThen how does he make them do what he wants?â
âLeverage,â she said, âhe liked saying that word a lot. Itâs quite straightforward for Takuma. When he finds a target that would make a beneficial asset, he would research them intensively. A lot of hours in fieldwork. He would find everything there was to find about them, and then he would find something that would motivate them to help, and then use that.â
âSo blackmail?â said the bald one.
Arisu shrugged. âPersuasion. Most people donât want to spend their next few years working in a lumber or mining operation, so they open their mouths quick and easy. Takuma made it worth their whileâletting them go back to their lives to continue their jobs or choose new careers, and he would guarantee them anonymity so nothing came back to bite them⦠Itâs surprising what people would say when a few little conditions are met.
âHe was straightforward and kept his word. Eventually, even with all anonymity, we developed a reputation. Open up, and we will give you a fair deal,â she said.
They had done it so many times that they had perfected the routine. Pick up(kidnap) the people from the streets and dump them in an off-site interrogation room so that no one saw them bought in. They would let the perp stew in the small room, letting their mind make up stories about what was about to happen to them. A lot of them wouldâve scared themselves by the time the interrogation started.
âBut those are low-level guys; even if they fess up, thereâs often no evidence to back it up,â said the man with hair. It looked like the guy had some experience in policing and interrogation. âTakuma might not deal in trust, but thereâs loyalty or fear in many guys that stops them from parroting.â
âSure, there are people like that, but for most, you just have to find the correct leverage,â said Arisu. âOne time, there was this higher-up guy we really wanted, but he had a reputation of being tight-lipped, and he was rich and connected enough, which got him out of all sorts of troubles even if he was brought in⦠We had no idea what to do, but this guy was really important, his cooperation wouldâve made our caseâ¦â
âSo, what did you do?â
âNothing, we didnât do anythingâbut Takuma did a lot,â said Arisu, sighing. âThe guy had a sister who ran an illegal whore house, real nasty stuff.â She spat with disgust. âTakuma found out that the sister was the guyâs only family, and they were really close, so he helped another officer in the Police Force who was trying to get the sister. Takuma built a case for that officer against the sister, and promised complete credit. Unlike the brother, the sister wasnât as careful or good at keeping herself cleanâ¦â
The man with hair nodded in understanding. He said, âThe sister became the leverage?â
âIndeed. The guy tried to get his sister out, but the case against her was so solid that she was looking at a decade of hard labor. And to make it worse, Takuma pulled some strings so that if she was found guilty, they were planning to send her to the other side of the nation so that the guy would never get the chance to see herâ¦â
âDid it work?â
âYes, it did. The guy found out that Takuma was behind it and tried to negotiate just as Takuma expected. The guy first threatened him, then offered him money, but in the end, Takuma got what he wanted.â
Arisu smiled. In fact, that guy was giving the Narcotics Taskforce information from the inside. The case was going very well. They were supposed to close it in a month or two.
âI have a question,â said the bald man. âWhat happened to the officer who was promised the credit? Didnât he get screwed in the end?â
Instead of Arisu, Yakumi answered that question.
âThe officer was furious that the case he had been working on for so long became a dead-end because Takuma used it as leverage in a negotiation with scum. That officer even went to his higher-up, but they supported Takuma as well⦠The officer was pissed for weeks, but then Takuma gave a guy a case just as juicy, with all the work done perfectly. That helped in making it up to him,â said Yakumi.
The bald guy laughed. âLet me guess, you were the officer?â
Yakumi nodded.
âAnd now you have his job,â said the bald guy.
âThat also helped,â Yakumi laughed.
Arisu sighed to herself. She liked it better when Takuma was the Head of the Narcotics Taskforce. They were new and operated with frightening freedom because they didnât have an established culture like most of the Police Force. Everyone could do their work in their own way without getting bogged down by some convoluted processâit was chaotic, but the team was small enough to correct and sort out everything by the end. Since Yakumi had taken over, he had established operating procedures and due process, which had its advantages because the team had grownâbut Arisu could see the Narcotics Taskforce slowly heading towards operating like any other department.
âTakuma is not above lying, harassing, blackmailing, entrapment, or anything,â said Arisu, getting the conversation back on track. âOnce he wants something, thereâs not much Takuma wonât do to make it happen. If he gets the information, he will use it to his advantage. So, if you want someone whoâll hold peopleâs hand and persuade them through charm, and inspire confidence with his personality, thatâs not him. But if you want someone who gets the job done, heâs your guy.â
Arisu clicked her tongue and looked at the two men.
âThis mission⦠is he going in alone?â she asked.
The two men looked at each other for a moment before saying that Takuma would be part of a team.
âWhy do you ask?â
Arisu took in a deep breath. âNothing, I was just worried if he was going in alone. You said the mission is dangerous,â she said with pursed lips
They seemed to be satisfied with her answer.
Arisu was relieved that Takuma would have a team with him. She chose not to tell them about Takumaâs excessive aggressiveness. When Takuma was running the Narcotics Taskforce, one of the most important parts of Arisuâs job was to reel him in. Takumaâs way of doing things matched his combat philosophyâto be aggressive. He was always in a rush, pushing forward without ever taking a moment to catch his breath. There were times heâd be so laser-focused that he got tunnel vision. At times like that, he needed someone to pull him out and make him aware of his surroundings.
They talked for another ten minutes before the two men from the war commission declared they had heard enough and left.
âYou didnât tell them about the other way Takuma cultivated assets,â Yakumi said.
Arisu looked at him. âYou never know how people will react⦠They couldâve thought he was colluding with criminals,â she said.
Threatening criminals with leverage against them wasnât the only way Takuma cultivated assets. There was another way he was known to do businessâsomething that wasnât popular among the Narcotics Taskforce, but Takuma did it anyway because he was the boss. Since Yakumi took over, they abandoned the method.
âMaybe he was,â said Yakumi.
âThen why didnât you say anything?â Arisu asked with narrowed eyes.
One of the first things Yakumi did after taking over was an internal audit to see how Takuma managed the Narcotics Taskforce because Takuma had refused to provide any help to Yakumi on how things worked.
Officially speaking, every asset for the Police Force had a file in the system. The Narcotics Taskforce followed the same process and maintained files for their assets. They were highly protected, âeyes-onlyâ documents that couldnât be removed from the office space assigned to the Narcotics Taskforce. Takuma was serious about the anonymity he promised.
But Takuma also maintained unofficial assets that werenât filed into the system. They were high-level assets because of their identity and influence in the drug trade in the Hidden Leaf. Takuma had somehow gotten access to these people and had managed to rope them into helping the Narcotics Taskforce put away other big players.
These people were high up in the drug trade, and Takuma didnât have any leverage on them. It couldnât be more abundantly clear that they were cooperating with Takuma because he was going after their competition. And he didnât log any of them into the system, keeping it entirely off-the-books, which looked extremely shady. It was a practice heavily frowned upon in the Police Force, and Takuma was using it aggressively.
From one perspective, it looked like Takuma was helping them, which brought up an allegation against him: Was Takuma being paid by the people he was cooperating with? When he called it a true collaboration of the police and the criminals to put away other criminals, a good number of people in the team suspected him of colluding with criminals.
Takuma was blind to his teamâs thoughts as he was so focused on targeting criminals. Arisu had to shove the problem in his face for him to look at his team, properly explain the situation to the team, and truly bring everyone on the same page. Some of them remained doubtful until the results started coming in, and the team could see what Takuma envisioned.
Yakumi found out about Takumaâs practice, and he couldâve passed on his findings to the higher ups but didnât because a lot of ongoing cases, many of them close to crossing the finish line, were built on the foundation of Takumaâs collaboration with his unregistered assets. If he had brought it to the higher-ups, they wouldâve ordered Yakumi to dump all of them, and he wouldâve been forced to start all over again.
But Yakumi didnât want that because the performance of the Narcotics Taskforce would suffer, and all the blame would fall on the new and current head, who had failed to keep up the Narcotics Taskforceâs bullish moment established by Takuma. So, while Yakumi ended all relationships with Takumaâs shady assets, he never reported them to the higher-ups.
Under Arisuâs glare, Yakumi stayed silent.
She walked out and looked at the bullpen with all her co-workers.
If the people who worked closely with Takuma suspected him of being a mole and a corrupt sell-out, then two strangers who knew nothing about Takuma could think of him as much worse.
As she walked back to what she was doing, Arisu wondered what he was doing now. Things had ended on an awkward note, and the one letter he had sent had avoided any mention of the kiss. Arisu was disappointed he didnât write anything but relieved at the same time because she was scared of what Takuma would say and preferred for things to remain ambiguous.
Arisu ruffled her hair in frustration.
âHe better appreciate it⦠that idiot.â
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