Homako Tani had been a shrewd hotelier.
La-La Land scuttlebutt had it that the Neo Edo’s builder had liberated the original during the 1657 conflagration which had destroyed Edo Castle; but Kit had never found any trace of it, not even in Homako’s private safe. Of course, scuttlebutt also had it that Homako Tani had been murdered by the irascible Musashi, himself, during a down-time visit to feudal Japan, for some minor insult the ronin samurai hadn’t been willing to overlook. Other rumors had him last seen stepping through an unstable gate into Tang Dynasty China; and others that he’d gone into permanent retirement in Tibet as the Dalai Lama.
The point was, nobody knew what had become of Homako, not even the named partners in the law firm of Chase, Carstedt, and Syvertsen, who had delivered the impressive envelope deeding him ownership of the Neo Edo for “payment of debts.’ The only debt Homako Tani had ever owed Kit Carson was having his backside hauled out of that incendiary fiasco in Silver Plume, Colorado. So far as Kit knew, Homako never had gone back to the Old West: The stink of burnt saloons, banks, and cathouses had lingered in Kit’s lungs for weeks afterward. He still mourned that sweet little four-inch “Wesson Favorite” he’d lost during the confusion. Only a thousand of the S&W Model .44 cal. DA revolvers were ever made, and his had gone up in smoke.
Kit sighed. Whatever the true fate of Homako Tani, the “inheritance” had come just as Kit was being forced into retirement. He’d needed a job, more to justify hanging around La-La Land than anything, since he didn’t really need money. The Neo Edo had seemed a gift from the gods. After three years of managing the hotel, Kit had begun to suspect Homako Tani had simply come to hate government paperwork and tourists so desperately he’d bailed out before his sanity snapped.