EMI “The money goes in here—” (taps screen) “—and comes out here. But there’s a gap. Forty million yen. Just... gone.”
TAKEDA (V.O.) “Did I carry the zero wrong?”
His brother Kenji, now a lieutenant, ordered a hit on a rival family’s accountant. Shigeo was to verify the kill. He arrived at a love hotel to find a man named Takeda, a father of three, bleeding out. Takeda’s final words were not a curse, but a question: “Did I carry the zero wrong?”
KATAOKA “The gap is a person.”
KATAOKA “This isn’t a laundering case, Miss Tachibana. This is a ledger of the dead.”
He became the kaikei (accountant) for the Matsuba-gumi. But he was no desk man. To collect a debt, he would sit across from a deadbeat, open a notebook, and calmly explain—in the language of compound interest and late fees—exactly how many fingers the man would lose per 100,000 yen. He never raised his voice. He never had to.
Kataoka doesn’t look up. His soroban clicks. Click-click-click-click. shigeo kataoka
KATAOKA “No. I did.” Act I – The Debt: Kataoka is hiding. He refuses a case involving a former Matsuba-gumi front company. Emi forces his hand. His brother Kazuo finds his address and leaves a single white envelope—empty—on his doorstep. Meaning: “Your apology is nothing.”
He closes his eyes. When he opens them, Takeda is sitting in the corner, smiling sadly.
EMI “What?”
Kataoka traces the money to a massive real-estate fraud that implicates a sitting city councilman. He is kidnapped, beaten, and forced to “correct” the books at gunpoint. Instead, he adds a single, invisible line of code to the digital ledger—a timestamp that will self-destruct in 72 hours unless he enters a password. The password: his brother’s birthday.
He turns a receipt around. On the back, faintly: a handprint in dried blood.
By 18, his father’s shop was bankrupt. Kenji had joined a kumi (Yakuza clan). Shigeo followed, not out of loyalty, but because he realized: EMI “The money goes in here—” (taps screen)