The Dragon 4 – Tokyo Empire Read Online Kenya Wright

Categories Genre: Alpha Male Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 160
Estimated words: 161615 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 808(@200wpm)___ 646(@250wpm)___ 539(@300wpm)
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I nodded. "Tradition and luxury in one space. See the roofline?"

"Yeah. It looks like a temple, but it’s also very modern too."

"Exactly."

The palm shadows shifted across us as we walked.

Somewhere, a bird called—a distinctive three-note song that echoed through the trees.

Ho-ho-kekyo.

Nyomi tilted her head, listening.

"That’s the uguisu." I stopped us and scanned the foliage, searching for it and hoping I could show her the bird. "It’s the Japanese bush warbler.”

“What does it look like?”

“Small brown bird with an olive-green back. Nothing much to look at, but the song. . ." I paused as it called again, clear and melodious.

Ho-ho-kekyo. Ho-ho-kekyo.

"The song is why people have kept these birds for centuries."

“Wow.” Her face brightened with intrigue. “And these birds are native to this island?”

“Tora.” I laughed. “Do you not know me?”

“Kenji. . .you brought the birds here too?"

"Ten breeding pairs.” I had us head toward the pavilion again. “They've thrived here."

“Okay. I think you may have taken it a bit far."

“If I’m bringing sand, Tora, I’m definitely bringing birds.”

She snorted.

“Besides, Bashō wrote about them.” I thought for a minute and then recited what he said, “‘The uguisu sings, hopping from branch to branch of the plum tree.’”

“And what does that mean?”

“He meant that even the most beautiful song moves on. Nothing stays the same."

She was quiet for a moment, listening to another call drift through the warm air.

Ho-ho-kekyo. Ho-ho-kekyo.

She lifted her gaze to the trees and spotted the bird singing to us. "Flowers that bloom for a short time. Birds that sing, yet move on. Things that don't last for too long. And then all of that surrounding a modernized temple of worship in the middle of a small, isolated island."

She moved her gaze away from the bird and studied me.

I could see it in her eyes that she had shifted to journalist mode. Her intense attention felt like she was zipping me open and peering at the contents on the inside.

She tilted her head. "Were you going through something when you decided to redesign this island?"

The question landed like a blade between my ribs.

Very smart, Tora.

Of course she'd seen it. The journalist in her could read the architecture of trauma—how every imported flower and relocated tree was just another way of saying I couldn't save them, but I could save this.

I tensed. "I was still battling grief over my mother and brother’s death. I’d bottled it up for so long that it finally began to spill out and I found that. . .I needed a place to go where. . .no one was around to see me. . .break apart.”

"So, you were building a sanctuary?"

"I told myself I was creating a place where I could escape from everyone—my enemies, father, men—somewhere I didn't have to be the Dragon." I gestured toward the beach, where waves lapped gently at the shore. "I envisioned myself here alone. Walking these shores at dawn with only waves and my own thoughts. Reading in the pavilion while rain drummed on the roof. Swimming in absolute silence."

My voice roughened. "No complicated entanglements. No mafia politics. No voices. No one requiring pieces of myself I wasn't willing to give."

"A curated fortress of solitude."

"Yes." I turned back to face her with the sun warm on our skin and the sound of the ocean as a constant backdrop. "But never—not once in all those years of redesigning this island—did I imagine it would become something else entirely."

"What do you mean? What has it become now?”

"Every detail I obsessed over—the imported sand, the positioned pines, the flowers, the birds, and even the angle of the pavilion’s roof to perfectly catch the sunset—I chose for myself alone. But standing here with you now, watching your eyes widen, seeing you take it all in. . ."

She parted her lips.

My heart warmed. "I realize I was building this for you all along. I just hadn't met you yet."

And one day—if I survived this war, if I could keep her safe from my father and his spies—I would bring her back here.

Not as my lover.

Not as my Tiger or Heart.

As my wife.

I'd propose on this beach. Watch the sun catch the ring as I slid it onto her finger. Watch her belly grow round with our child while the Satsuki bloomed and died and bloomed again.

Watch our kids play on the beach.

The visions felt more real than the war waiting for us.

Her eyes watered like she could see all the things playing out in my mind. “Baby. . .”

"This island isn't mine anymore, Tora. It's ours. And the truly terrifying part is. . .”

“What?”

“Now that you’re in my life, I don’t think I can ever be here without you."

Before she could respond, my chef, Bunzō approached with a lacquered tray carrying two tall crystal glasses.

"Sir." He gave me a slight bow and turned to Nyomi. “It is good to see you again.”


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