The Iris Fan : A Novel of Feudal Japan
By Laura Joh Rowland
Series: Sano Ichiro Mystery Series (Book 18)
Publisher: Minotaur Books
Publication Date:
December 9, 2014
Genre: Historical
Mystery
Formats: eBook,
Hardcover
Length: 352 Pages
ISBN: 978-1250047069
ASIN: B00IWUXQLK
About
the book:
Japan, 1709. The shogun is old and ailing.
Amid the ever-treacherous intrigue in the court, Sano
Ichiro has been demoted from chamberlain to a lowly patrol guard. His
relationship with his wife Reiko is in tatters, and a bizarre new alliance
between his two enemies Yanagisawa and Lord Ienobu has left him puzzled and
wary. Sano’s onetime friend Hirata is a reluctant conspirator in a plot against
the ruling regime. Yet, Sano's dedication to the Way of the Warrior—the samurai
code of honor—is undiminished.
Then a harrowing, almost inconceivable crime takes place.
In his own palace, the shogun is stabbed with a fan made of painted silk with
sharp-pointed iron ribs. Sano is restored to the rank of chief investigator to
find the culprit. This is the most significant, and most dangerous,
investigation of his career. If the shogun's heir is displeased, he will have
Sano and his family put to death without waiting for the shogun's permission,
then worry about the consequences later. And Sano has enemies of his own, as
well as unexpected allies.
As the previously unimaginable death of the shogun seems
ever more possible, Sano finds himself at the center of warring forces that
threaten not only his own family but Japan itself. Riveting and richly
imagined, with a magnificent sense of time and place, The Iris Fan is the
triumphant conclusion to Laura Joh Rowland's brilliant series of thrillers set
in feudal Japan.
The San Ichiro Mystery Series
Titles
Shinju
Bundori
The
Way of the Traitor
The
Concubine's Tattoo
The
Samurai's Wife
Black
Lotus
The
Pillow Book of Lady Wisteria
The
Dragon King's Palace
The
Perfumed Sleeve
The
Assassin's Touch
The
Red Chrysanthemum
The
Snow Empress
The
Fire Kimono
The
Cloud Pavilion
The
Ronin's Mistress
The
Incense Game
The
Shogun's Daughter
The
Iris Fan
Buy the Book
EXCERPT
Prologue
Slow,
hissing breaths expanded and contracted the air in a chamber as dark as the
bottom of a crypt. Wind shook the
shutters. Sleet pattered onto the tile
roof. In the corridor outside the
chamber, the floor creaked under stealthy footsteps. The shimmering yellow glow of an oil lamp
diffused across the room’s lattice-and-paper wall. The footsteps halted outside the room; the
door slid open as quietly as a whisper.
A hand draped in the sleeve of a black kimono held the lamp across the
threshold. The flame illuminated a
futon, covered with a gold brocade satin quilt, in which two human shapes
slumbered.
The
quilt rose and fell with their breathing.
The black-robed figure hovered at the threshold, then tiptoed, on feet
clad in split-toed socks, into the bedchamber.
The hem of its silk kimono slithered across the tatami floor. Its breathing was shallow, ragged with
anxiety. It paused by the bed, holding
the light over the two sleepers, whose gentle, rhythmic respirations
continued. Then it crept to the one on
the left, nearest the door. Kneeling, it
set the lamp on the bedside table without a sound. In the dim light from the flame, a hand
slowly, carefully, drew back the quilt.
Underneath,
a man lay on his stomach, his head turned away from the intruder. He wore a white night cap over his hair; his
body was naked. The intruder
contemplated his thin back, his protruding ribs and spine, his scrawny
limbs. Red blotches covered his sallow,
sweaty skin. He coughed in his sleep; he
didn’t wake.
The intruder sat back on its heels. Its ragged breaths quickened as its hand
withdrew from beneath its sash a long, thin object with a sharp, gleaming metal
end. The intruder glanced over its shoulder
toward the door.
The corridor was silent, still.
Sleet battered the roof with a noise like raining
arrowheads.
The wind moaned.
The intruder sucked in a deep, tremulous gasp,
raised the weapon high above the sleeping man, and brought it slashing down.
Chapter 1
“It’s
a bad night for a trip to the pleasure quarter,” Detective Marume said.
“It’s
a good night when we’re following up on the first lead we’ve had in this
investigation in more than four years,” Sano said.
They
rode their horses along the Dike of Japan, the long causeway above the rice
fields northeast of Edo. Metal lanterns
swung from poles attached to their backs.
On this winter night just after the New Year, they had the road to
Yoshiwara to themselves. Their cloaks
were drenched by sleet that lashed and stung their faces. Ice coated their metal helmets. Cold wind seeped through the heavy padding in
Sano’s cloak, under his armor tunic and his kimono. As sleet turned to snow, a veil of white
crystals obscured the distance.
“How did you get us assigned to patrol the dike
tonight?” Marume asked.
“I didn’t even have to try. You know the captain likes giving the worst
assignments to the shogun’s disgraced former chamberlain and
second-in-command.” Bitterness edged
Sano’s wry tone.
In four years he’d been demoted four times, from
chamberlain down to patrol guard, the Tokugawa regime’s lowest rank. His son Masahiro, aged seventeen, was also a
patrol guard, with no prospects for advancement, and their family had been
evicted from their estate inside Edo Castle.
It was a great humiliation for Sano, but he was lucky to have a position
at all. For more than four years he’d
been pursuing a forbidden investigation, a thankless mission of honor.
Marume
laughed. “He did us a favor without
knowing it.” The big samurai relished
humor in any situation. “How do you know
our new suspects are in Yoshiwara tonight?”
“An
informer.” Sano had bribed a servant of
Lord Tokugawa Ienobu, the shogun’s nephew and designated heir to the
dictatorship.
Ahead,
Yoshiwara rose up from the rice fields, a city unto itself, the only place in
Edo where prostitution was legal. Lights
within its high walls made the falling snow above it glow like a halo. Sano and Marume rode across the moat to the
gate where two sentries occupied a guardhouse.
Moat, gate, and sentries were there to prevent troublemakers from
entering the pleasure quarter and unhappy courtesans from escaping. The sentries opened the gate, Sano and Marume
rode in.
Naka-no-cho,
the long main street that extended between rows of brothels, was almost
empty. A few drunks stumbled to and
fro. Snow frosted the tile roofs of the
brothels; icicles grew between the red lanterns that hung from the eaves. Storm shutters covered the window cages where
courtesans usually sat on display. Sano
heard faint music played on samisens, flutes, and drums.
“The
cold is keeping the customers at home,” Marume said.
“Or the measles epidemic is.”
The epidemic had been raging across the country
since autumn. It had come to Japan via
Chinese priests visiting Nagasaki, the only place where foreigners were
allowed. In Nagasaki some ten thousand
people had died. Hundreds of people in
Edo were sick. The disease was often but
not invariably fatal. Here in Yoshiwara,
as well as in town, incense burned outside doors to chase away the evil spirits
of disease, and citizens feared contagion.
“Speaking of measles, how is the shogun?” Marume
asked. The shogun had come down with the
measles just before the New Year.
“I hear he’s recovering, but I haven’t seen for
myself,” Sano said. He’d been banned
from court four years ago. That had been
his punishment after the shogun had ordered him to stop the investigation and
he’d disobeyed. Sano had continued
pursuing it for the good of the regime, to the detriment of his own career and
domestic peace.
He and his wife Reiko were seriously at odds over
his actions. Long hours of patrol duty
were a blessing for a man who didn’t want to go home.
“So it looks like the shogun isn’t going to die,”
Marume said with relief.
“Yes, but he’s badly weakened. His health has always been frail, and he’s
sixty-three. Lord Ienobu is going to
inherit the dictatorship sooner rather than later.”
That was why this new lead was so crucial.
Sano and Marume turned their horses down one of the
narrow lanes that crossed Naka-no-cho and stopped outside a small brothel. Laughter burst upon them as they peered
through the window whose shutters were cracked open to clear out the smoke from
charcoal braziers and tobacco pipes. A
party occupied a room bright with lanterns.
Young women as colorful as butterflies in their gay kimonos, their faces
heavily made up and their hair spangled with ornaments, flirted with four
samurai and plied them with sake.
“Who’s who?” Marume asked.
“The old fellow at the head of the table is Manabe
Akira, Lord Ienobu’s chief retainer.”
Manabe, in his late fifties, had a gray topknot and
wore gray robes. His shaved crown and
face were brown and shiny like an iron war mask, from martial arts practice in
the sun. He’d been a top swordsman in
his day. When a courtesan teased him, he
responded with grunts.
“A real sociable type,” Marume said.
“The men seated with their backs to us are
Setsubara Ihei and Ono Jozan,” Sano said. They were big and muscular, their
kimonos were fashionable with garish patterns, their black topknots slick with
oil. They raised their cups in a
toast. “They’re Manabe’s aides.”
“The one across from them must have been a kid at
the time of the murder.”
“Kuzawa Daimon, age nineteen. He’s a guard.”
Kuzawa was as big and strong as Manabe’s aides, and
dressed like them, but his face and body had the softer look of youth. A courtesan stroked his beefy arm while
telling him a joke. He laughed
uproariously.
“Why do you think it’s those men who killed the
shogun’s son?” Marume asked.
“Yoshisato wasn’t the shogun’s son,” Sano reminded
him.
“I know.
It’s just easier to call him ‘the shogun’s son’ than ‘the cuckoo’s egg
that Chamberlain Yanagisawa foisted off on the shogun.’”
Six years ago, Yanagisawa had put Yoshisato, his
own son, in line to inherit the dictatorship by proclaiming that Yoshisato was
really the shogun’s secret, long-lost son and he himself was only Yoshisato’s
adoptive father. Sano had tried to
debunk the story and failed. The shogun
believed it. So did enough top
government officials and daimyo—the feudal lords who ruled the provinces. The shogun had named Yoshisato as his
successor, and Yanagisawa had been set to rule Japan through him and gain
absolute power. But two years later, a
fire set in the heir’s residence had killed Yoshisato.
Sano began the answer to Marume’s question. “Yoshisato’s death cleared the way for Lord
Ienobu to succeed the shogun, and we know Ienobu is responsible for the arson.”
“The woman who set the fire said he put her up to
it, but she died right after confessing.”
Marume watched Manabe puff on his pipe.
“You think he helped Lord Ienobu set up Yoshisato’s murder?”
“Yes. My
informer says that shortly before the fire started, Manabe and the other three
left Ienobu’s estate. They didn’t come
back until the next day. They’re the
only people from the estate who were unaccounted for at the time of the
murder.”
“But what part did they play in it?”
“That’s what we’re going to find out. And then we’ll have proof that Lord Ienobu is
guilty of at least one murder.”
Sano already knew that Ienobu was responsible for
the murder of the shogun’s daughter. The
culprit in that crime, also unfortunately dead, had implicated Ienobu. Sano wanted the proof as urgently as a
starving man salivates for food. It
wasn’t just duty that compelled him to deliver Ienobu to justice and prevent a
murderer from becoming the next shogun.
Sano had liked Yoshisato even though he was Yanagisawa’s son and
Yanagisawa was Sano’s longtime enemy.
Sano wanted to avenge Yoshisato’s death, and he had another, even more
personal motive for bringing Lord Ienobu down.
Ienobu was the one who’d demoted Sano, as punishment for telling the
shogun that Ienobu had murdered Yoshisato.
The shogun didn’t want to believe that his nephew and heir had murdered
the man he thought was his son. He kept
Sano in the regime, but Lord Ienobu constantly found ways to make life
miserable for Sano.
Manabe spoke in a gruff, peremptory voice to his
subordinates. All four men drained their
sake cups and headed for the door. Sano
and Marume backed their horses into an alley, watched the men emerge from the
brothel, then exited the gate behind them.
Across the moat, the men retrieved their horses from a stable and
attached lanterns on poles to their backs.
They didn’t notice Sano and Marume trailing them as they rode along the
dike; patrol guards were ubiquitous, invisible.
All Sano could see of them was their lights like swinging stars in the
darkness. He was fifty years old, and
his night vision was poor.
A glow in the distance signaled that they were
nearing Edo. Sano and Marume spurred
their horses to a gallop. “Stop!” Sano
called as he and Marume caught up with their quarries.
The four men looked over their shoulders. Their lanterns threw arcing beams across the
road. They reached for their swords as
they turned their horses around, their expressions wary as they squinted
through the snowflakes. Recognition
appeared on Manabe’s hard, shiny face.
“Sano-san.”
His gruff voice rasped with disapproval.
“What do you want?”
At long last Sano was about to solve Yoshisato’s
murder and defeat Lord Ienobu.
Apprehension coiled within his excitement: This was his one chance, a big risk. “To talk
with you four.” Beside him, Marume put
his hand to his sword.
“You’re
supposed to stay away from us and everybody else in Lord Ienobu’s retinue,”
Setsubara said. With his strong jaws,
prominent nose, and sharp cheekbones, he was a caricature of masculinity.
“Those are Lord Ienobu’s orders, and you know
it.” Ono’s lumpy features reminded Sano
of a bitter melon.
Even as his heart raced, Sano spoke calmly. “When you hear what I have to say, you’ll be
glad I disregarded those orders.” He
eyed Kuzawa. The young samurai looked
nervous; he hadn’t learned to hide his emotions.
“When Lord Ienobu hears that you’ve disobeyed him,
he’ll have your head.” Manabe jerked his
chin at the other men. They all started
to turn their horses.
Sano said quickly, “You four left his estate
shortly before the fire in the heir’s residence started. Isn’t that an interesting coincidence?”
The four men went still. Sano focused on Kuzawa, whose eyes were wide,
stricken. Seeing that he was right about
the four men, Sano felt a rush of exhilaration.
“We went night-fishing on the river,” Manabe said
in annoyance.
“Did you catch a big one?” Detective Marume asked
scornfully.
“We can vouch for each other,” Ono said.
“Meaning, no one else can,” Sano said. “You weren’t fishing. You were up to your necks in Yoshisato’s
murder.”
Manabe uttered a disgusted sound. Setsubara and Ono shook their heads, as if
pitying Sano’s foolishness. Detective Marume
laughed and pointed at Kuzawa, who looked scared enough to wet his
trousers. “Whoops, your young friend as
good as admitted you’re guilty.”
Kuzawa ducked his head. Manabe said to Sano, “You can’t prove
anything.”
“You’re wrong.
I have evidence,” Sano bluffed.
“What evidence?” Ono asked disdainfully.
“The shogun will be first to know.”
“You won’t be able to tell him anything.” Contempt didn’t quite mask Setsubara’s
worry. “You’re banned from court.”
“I’ll make sure the information is shouted by every
news seller in Edo,” Sano said. “Soon it
will be on the tongue of every samurai at the castle. It will reach the shogun eventually. He’ll know you’re as guilty as the woman who
set the fire.”
“And then he’ll have your heads,” Marume added.
Kuzawa gulped.
Setsubara and Ono glared at him, but they looked scared, too. Manabe’s hand tightened on his sword.
“If you’re thinking of killing us to shut us up,
forget it,” Sano said. “Other people
know. If anything happens to us, they’ll
make the evidence public. You’re going
down for treason.”
The penalty for treason was death. The three subordinates looked anxiously to
Manabe; he scowled. Sano urged his horse
forward, advancing on them. “But it
doesn’t have to be that way, if you confess that you arranged Yoshisato’s
murder on orders from Lord Ienobu.”
The four men looked stunned as they realized what
Sano was after.
Detective Marume
clarified, “He doesn’t want your fat rear ends.
He wants Lord Ienobu’s skinny one.”
“Give me Lord Ienobu, and I’ll see that you’re
pardoned,” Sano said.
He knew he was asking a lot from them. They owed their master their complete
loyalty. That was Bushido, the Way of the Warrior, the samurai code of
honor. And although the shogun was the
lord over everyone in Japan, their ties to Ienobu were closer; they were his
personal retainers. Anger darkened their
faces as they comprehended that Sano was making them choose between dooming
themselves and betraying Lord Ienobu, the ultimate sin.
Manabe spoke through clenched teeth. “We will not submit to blackmail. We will not help you destroy our
master.” The other men nodded.
Sano had to break them, or heaven help him. “Fine.
Be good samurai. But don’t expect
Lord Ienobu to protect you when it comes out that you were involved in
Yoshisato’s murder.”
“He’ll let you take the entire blame rather than
admit you acted on his orders and be put to death along with you,” Detective
Marume said.
That was Bushido, too: Loyalty didn’t cut both ways. Emotions flickered across their faces as the
four men stared down Sano and Marume.
Sano detected fear, confusion, and something oddly sly in their
expressions. The wind keened. The lantern’s flames hissed as snowflakes hit
them. In the instant that Sano realized
what was going to happen, the four men drew their swords and charged.
Sano and Marume barely had time to draw their own
weapons before the men were upon them.
Horses collided, whinnied, and reared.
Sano lashed out. His sword
cleaved falling snowflakes. The lanterns
attached to his back and the other men’s swung crazily. He glimpsed his opponents in flashes—a red
embossed breastplate; a chain-mailed arm; Ono’s snarling face. Everything was dark except where the light
momentarily touched. Sano’s poor night
vision put him at a serious disadvantage.
His opponents flew at him out of nowhere. A blade struck his helmet, and the metallic
clang shuddered his skull. He dodged and
swung frantically. This was his first
battle in more than four years. He
practiced martial arts every morning, but real combat was different, not bound
by rules, chaotic. And although Sano had
won battles in which he was hugely outnumbered, he was older now. Maybe he could beat Manabe, but he couldn’t
outmatch the three younger samurai whose vision was sharper, their reflexes
quicker and stamina greater.
Marume yelled.
Lights swung. In their path
appeared a brief image of Marume covered with blood, arms thrown out,
falling. Sano was horrified, and not
just because Marume was his only ally tonight and among the few retainers he
had left; he’d discharged the others when he was demoted and his government
stipend reduced. Marume had been his
friend for twenty years. Heedless of his
own safety, Sano leapt off his mount. He
faltered through the tumult of hooves pounding and blades slicing at him,
desperate to save Marume.
Marume staggered up from the ground. “I’m all right! My horse was cut.”
The other men jumped off their horses. Kuzawa grabbed Sano from behind. Sano struggled, but he couldn’t break the
young man’s grip. Setsubara and Ono
wrestled Marume to the ground. His face
red with horse blood, Marume shouted curses.
Setsubara and Ono bound his wrists.
Kuzawa tied Sano’s wrists so tight that the rope cut into his
flesh. Sano glared helplessly at Manabe.
“Four against two—are you really that stupid?”
Manabe scoffed. He told his men, “We’ll
take them to Lord Ienobu. He’ll want to
deal with them personally.”
The men boosted Sano and Marume onto Sano’s horse,
knotted rope around them so they couldn’t escape, and confiscated the swords
they’d dropped.
“You think you know so much, but you don’t know
anything,” Manabe said with a pitying look at Sano. “You’re going to wish you’d minded your own
business.”
EXCERPT
PrologueSlow, hissing breaths expanded and contracted the air in a chamber as dark as the bottom of a crypt. Wind shook the shutters. Sleet pattered onto the tile roof. In the corridor outside the chamber, the floor creaked under stealthy footsteps. The shimmering yellow glow of an oil lamp diffused across the room’s lattice-and-paper wall. The footsteps halted outside the room; the door slid open as quietly as a whisper. A hand draped in the sleeve of a black kimono held the lamp across the threshold. The flame illuminated a futon, covered with a gold brocade satin quilt, in which two human shapes slumbered.The quilt rose and fell with their breathing. The black-robed figure hovered at the threshold, then tiptoed, on feet clad in split-toed socks, into the bedchamber. The hem of its silk kimono slithered across the tatami floor. Its breathing was shallow, ragged with anxiety. It paused by the bed, holding the light over the two sleepers, whose gentle, rhythmic respirations continued. Then it crept to the one on the left, nearest the door. Kneeling, it set the lamp on the bedside table without a sound. In the dim light from the flame, a hand slowly, carefully, drew back the quilt.Underneath, a man lay on his stomach, his head turned away from the intruder. He wore a white night cap over his hair; his body was naked. The intruder contemplated his thin back, his protruding ribs and spine, his scrawny limbs. Red blotches covered his sallow, sweaty skin. He coughed in his sleep; he didn’t wake.The intruder sat back on its heels. Its ragged breaths quickened as its hand withdrew from beneath its sash a long, thin object with a sharp, gleaming metal end. The intruder glanced over its shoulder toward the door.The corridor was silent, still.Sleet battered the roof with a noise like raining arrowheads.The wind moaned.The intruder sucked in a deep, tremulous gasp, raised the weapon high above the sleeping man, and brought it slashing down.Chapter 1“It’s a bad night for a trip to the pleasure quarter,” Detective Marume said.“It’s a good night when we’re following up on the first lead we’ve had in this investigation in more than four years,” Sano said.They rode their horses along the Dike of Japan, the long causeway above the rice fields northeast of Edo. Metal lanterns swung from poles attached to their backs. On this winter night just after the New Year, they had the road to Yoshiwara to themselves. Their cloaks were drenched by sleet that lashed and stung their faces. Ice coated their metal helmets. Cold wind seeped through the heavy padding in Sano’s cloak, under his armor tunic and his kimono. As sleet turned to snow, a veil of white crystals obscured the distance.“How did you get us assigned to patrol the dike tonight?” Marume asked.“I didn’t even have to try. You know the captain likes giving the worst assignments to the shogun’s disgraced former chamberlain and second-in-command.” Bitterness edged Sano’s wry tone.In four years he’d been demoted four times, from chamberlain down to patrol guard, the Tokugawa regime’s lowest rank. His son Masahiro, aged seventeen, was also a patrol guard, with no prospects for advancement, and their family had been evicted from their estate inside Edo Castle. It was a great humiliation for Sano, but he was lucky to have a position at all. For more than four years he’d been pursuing a forbidden investigation, a thankless mission of honor.Marume laughed. “He did us a favor without knowing it.” The big samurai relished humor in any situation. “How do you know our new suspects are in Yoshiwara tonight?”“An informer.” Sano had bribed a servant of Lord Tokugawa Ienobu, the shogun’s nephew and designated heir to the dictatorship.Ahead, Yoshiwara rose up from the rice fields, a city unto itself, the only place in Edo where prostitution was legal. Lights within its high walls made the falling snow above it glow like a halo. Sano and Marume rode across the moat to the gate where two sentries occupied a guardhouse. Moat, gate, and sentries were there to prevent troublemakers from entering the pleasure quarter and unhappy courtesans from escaping. The sentries opened the gate, Sano and Marume rode in.Naka-no-cho, the long main street that extended between rows of brothels, was almost empty. A few drunks stumbled to and fro. Snow frosted the tile roofs of the brothels; icicles grew between the red lanterns that hung from the eaves. Storm shutters covered the window cages where courtesans usually sat on display. Sano heard faint music played on samisens, flutes, and drums.“The cold is keeping the customers at home,” Marume said.“Or the measles epidemic is.”The epidemic had been raging across the country since autumn. It had come to Japan via Chinese priests visiting Nagasaki, the only place where foreigners were allowed. In Nagasaki some ten thousand people had died. Hundreds of people in Edo were sick. The disease was often but not invariably fatal. Here in Yoshiwara, as well as in town, incense burned outside doors to chase away the evil spirits of disease, and citizens feared contagion.“Speaking of measles, how is the shogun?” Marume asked. The shogun had come down with the measles just before the New Year.“I hear he’s recovering, but I haven’t seen for myself,” Sano said. He’d been banned from court four years ago. That had been his punishment after the shogun had ordered him to stop the investigation and he’d disobeyed. Sano had continued pursuing it for the good of the regime, to the detriment of his own career and domestic peace.He and his wife Reiko were seriously at odds over his actions. Long hours of patrol duty were a blessing for a man who didn’t want to go home.“So it looks like the shogun isn’t going to die,” Marume said with relief.“Yes, but he’s badly weakened. His health has always been frail, and he’s sixty-three. Lord Ienobu is going to inherit the dictatorship sooner rather than later.”That was why this new lead was so crucial.Sano and Marume turned their horses down one of the narrow lanes that crossed Naka-no-cho and stopped outside a small brothel. Laughter burst upon them as they peered through the window whose shutters were cracked open to clear out the smoke from charcoal braziers and tobacco pipes. A party occupied a room bright with lanterns. Young women as colorful as butterflies in their gay kimonos, their faces heavily made up and their hair spangled with ornaments, flirted with four samurai and plied them with sake.“Who’s who?” Marume asked.“The old fellow at the head of the table is Manabe Akira, Lord Ienobu’s chief retainer.”Manabe, in his late fifties, had a gray topknot and wore gray robes. His shaved crown and face were brown and shiny like an iron war mask, from martial arts practice in the sun. He’d been a top swordsman in his day. When a courtesan teased him, he responded with grunts.“A real sociable type,” Marume said.“The men seated with their backs to us are Setsubara Ihei and Ono Jozan,” Sano said. They were big and muscular, their kimonos were fashionable with garish patterns, their black topknots slick with oil. They raised their cups in a toast. “They’re Manabe’s aides.”“The one across from them must have been a kid at the time of the murder.”“Kuzawa Daimon, age nineteen. He’s a guard.”Kuzawa was as big and strong as Manabe’s aides, and dressed like them, but his face and body had the softer look of youth. A courtesan stroked his beefy arm while telling him a joke. He laughed uproariously.“Why do you think it’s those men who killed the shogun’s son?” Marume asked.“Yoshisato wasn’t the shogun’s son,” Sano reminded him.“I know. It’s just easier to call him ‘the shogun’s son’ than ‘the cuckoo’s egg that Chamberlain Yanagisawa foisted off on the shogun.’”Six years ago, Yanagisawa had put Yoshisato, his own son, in line to inherit the dictatorship by proclaiming that Yoshisato was really the shogun’s secret, long-lost son and he himself was only Yoshisato’s adoptive father. Sano had tried to debunk the story and failed. The shogun believed it. So did enough top government officials and daimyo—the feudal lords who ruled the provinces. The shogun had named Yoshisato as his successor, and Yanagisawa had been set to rule Japan through him and gain absolute power. But two years later, a fire set in the heir’s residence had killed Yoshisato.Sano began the answer to Marume’s question. “Yoshisato’s death cleared the way for Lord Ienobu to succeed the shogun, and we know Ienobu is responsible for the arson.”“The woman who set the fire said he put her up to it, but she died right after confessing.” Marume watched Manabe puff on his pipe. “You think he helped Lord Ienobu set up Yoshisato’s murder?”“Yes. My informer says that shortly before the fire started, Manabe and the other three left Ienobu’s estate. They didn’t come back until the next day. They’re the only people from the estate who were unaccounted for at the time of the murder.”“But what part did they play in it?”“That’s what we’re going to find out. And then we’ll have proof that Lord Ienobu is guilty of at least one murder.”Sano already knew that Ienobu was responsible for the murder of the shogun’s daughter. The culprit in that crime, also unfortunately dead, had implicated Ienobu. Sano wanted the proof as urgently as a starving man salivates for food. It wasn’t just duty that compelled him to deliver Ienobu to justice and prevent a murderer from becoming the next shogun. Sano had liked Yoshisato even though he was Yanagisawa’s son and Yanagisawa was Sano’s longtime enemy. Sano wanted to avenge Yoshisato’s death, and he had another, even more personal motive for bringing Lord Ienobu down. Ienobu was the one who’d demoted Sano, as punishment for telling the shogun that Ienobu had murdered Yoshisato. The shogun didn’t want to believe that his nephew and heir had murdered the man he thought was his son. He kept Sano in the regime, but Lord Ienobu constantly found ways to make life miserable for Sano.Manabe spoke in a gruff, peremptory voice to his subordinates. All four men drained their sake cups and headed for the door. Sano and Marume backed their horses into an alley, watched the men emerge from the brothel, then exited the gate behind them. Across the moat, the men retrieved their horses from a stable and attached lanterns on poles to their backs. They didn’t notice Sano and Marume trailing them as they rode along the dike; patrol guards were ubiquitous, invisible. All Sano could see of them was their lights like swinging stars in the darkness. He was fifty years old, and his night vision was poor.A glow in the distance signaled that they were nearing Edo. Sano and Marume spurred their horses to a gallop. “Stop!” Sano called as he and Marume caught up with their quarries.The four men looked over their shoulders. Their lanterns threw arcing beams across the road. They reached for their swords as they turned their horses around, their expressions wary as they squinted through the snowflakes. Recognition appeared on Manabe’s hard, shiny face.“Sano-san.” His gruff voice rasped with disapproval. “What do you want?”At long last Sano was about to solve Yoshisato’s murder and defeat Lord Ienobu. Apprehension coiled within his excitement: This was his one chance, a big risk. “To talk with you four.” Beside him, Marume put his hand to his sword.“You’re supposed to stay away from us and everybody else in Lord Ienobu’s retinue,” Setsubara said. With his strong jaws, prominent nose, and sharp cheekbones, he was a caricature of masculinity.“Those are Lord Ienobu’s orders, and you know it.” Ono’s lumpy features reminded Sano of a bitter melon.Even as his heart raced, Sano spoke calmly. “When you hear what I have to say, you’ll be glad I disregarded those orders.” He eyed Kuzawa. The young samurai looked nervous; he hadn’t learned to hide his emotions.“When Lord Ienobu hears that you’ve disobeyed him, he’ll have your head.” Manabe jerked his chin at the other men. They all started to turn their horses.Sano said quickly, “You four left his estate shortly before the fire in the heir’s residence started. Isn’t that an interesting coincidence?”The four men went still. Sano focused on Kuzawa, whose eyes were wide, stricken. Seeing that he was right about the four men, Sano felt a rush of exhilaration.
“We went night-fishing on the river,” Manabe said in annoyance.“Did you catch a big one?” Detective Marume asked scornfully.“We can vouch for each other,” Ono said.“Meaning, no one else can,” Sano said. “You weren’t fishing. You were up to your necks in Yoshisato’s murder.”Manabe uttered a disgusted sound. Setsubara and Ono shook their heads, as if pitying Sano’s foolishness. Detective Marume laughed and pointed at Kuzawa, who looked scared enough to wet his trousers. “Whoops, your young friend as good as admitted you’re guilty.”Kuzawa ducked his head. Manabe said to Sano, “You can’t prove anything.”“You’re wrong. I have evidence,” Sano bluffed.“What evidence?” Ono asked disdainfully.“The shogun will be first to know.”“You won’t be able to tell him anything.” Contempt didn’t quite mask Setsubara’s worry. “You’re banned from court.”“I’ll make sure the information is shouted by every news seller in Edo,” Sano said. “Soon it will be on the tongue of every samurai at the castle. It will reach the shogun eventually. He’ll know you’re as guilty as the woman who set the fire.”“And then he’ll have your heads,” Marume added.Kuzawa gulped. Setsubara and Ono glared at him, but they looked scared, too. Manabe’s hand tightened on his sword.“If you’re thinking of killing us to shut us up, forget it,” Sano said. “Other people know. If anything happens to us, they’ll make the evidence public. You’re going down for treason.”The penalty for treason was death. The three subordinates looked anxiously to Manabe; he scowled. Sano urged his horse forward, advancing on them. “But it doesn’t have to be that way, if you confess that you arranged Yoshisato’s murder on orders from Lord Ienobu.”The four men looked stunned as they realized what Sano was after.Detective Marume clarified, “He doesn’t want your fat rear ends. He wants Lord Ienobu’s skinny one.”“Give me Lord Ienobu, and I’ll see that you’re pardoned,” Sano said.He knew he was asking a lot from them. They owed their master their complete loyalty. That was Bushido, the Way of the Warrior, the samurai code of honor. And although the shogun was the lord over everyone in Japan, their ties to Ienobu were closer; they were his personal retainers. Anger darkened their faces as they comprehended that Sano was making them choose between dooming themselves and betraying Lord Ienobu, the ultimate sin.Manabe spoke through clenched teeth. “We will not submit to blackmail. We will not help you destroy our master.” The other men nodded.Sano had to break them, or heaven help him. “Fine. Be good samurai. But don’t expect Lord Ienobu to protect you when it comes out that you were involved in Yoshisato’s murder.”“He’ll let you take the entire blame rather than admit you acted on his orders and be put to death along with you,” Detective Marume said.That was Bushido, too: Loyalty didn’t cut both ways. Emotions flickered across their faces as the four men stared down Sano and Marume. Sano detected fear, confusion, and something oddly sly in their expressions. The wind keened. The lantern’s flames hissed as snowflakes hit them. In the instant that Sano realized what was going to happen, the four men drew their swords and charged.Sano and Marume barely had time to draw their own weapons before the men were upon them. Horses collided, whinnied, and reared. Sano lashed out. His sword cleaved falling snowflakes. The lanterns attached to his back and the other men’s swung crazily. He glimpsed his opponents in flashes—a red embossed breastplate; a chain-mailed arm; Ono’s snarling face. Everything was dark except where the light momentarily touched. Sano’s poor night vision put him at a serious disadvantage. His opponents flew at him out of nowhere. A blade struck his helmet, and the metallic clang shuddered his skull. He dodged and swung frantically. This was his first battle in more than four years. He practiced martial arts every morning, but real combat was different, not bound by rules, chaotic. And although Sano had won battles in which he was hugely outnumbered, he was older now. Maybe he could beat Manabe, but he couldn’t outmatch the three younger samurai whose vision was sharper, their reflexes quicker and stamina greater.Marume yelled. Lights swung. In their path appeared a brief image of Marume covered with blood, arms thrown out, falling. Sano was horrified, and not just because Marume was his only ally tonight and among the few retainers he had left; he’d discharged the others when he was demoted and his government stipend reduced. Marume had been his friend for twenty years. Heedless of his own safety, Sano leapt off his mount. He faltered through the tumult of hooves pounding and blades slicing at him, desperate to save Marume.Marume staggered up from the ground. “I’m all right! My horse was cut.”The other men jumped off their horses. Kuzawa grabbed Sano from behind. Sano struggled, but he couldn’t break the young man’s grip. Setsubara and Ono wrestled Marume to the ground. His face red with horse blood, Marume shouted curses. Setsubara and Ono bound his wrists. Kuzawa tied Sano’s wrists so tight that the rope cut into his flesh. Sano glared helplessly at Manabe.“Four against two—are you really that stupid?” Manabe scoffed. He told his men, “We’ll take them to Lord Ienobu. He’ll want to deal with them personally.”The men boosted Sano and Marume onto Sano’s horse, knotted rope around them so they couldn’t escape, and confiscated the swords they’d dropped.“You think you know so much, but you don’t know anything,” Manabe said with a pitying look at Sano. “You’re going to wish you’d minded your own business.”
About the Author
Granddaughter of Chinese and Korean immigrants, Laura Joh Rowland grew up in Michigan and where she graduated with a B.S. in microbiology and a Master of Public Health at the University of Michigan. She is the author of sixteen previous Sano Ichiro thrillers set in feudal Japan.
The Fire Kimono was named one of the Wall Street
Journal's "Five Best Historical Mystery Novels"; and The Snow Empress
and The Cloud Pavilion were among Publishers Weekly's Best Mysteries of the
Year.
She currently lives in New Orleans with her husband.
She has worked as a chemist, microbiologist, sanitary inspector and quality
engineer. For more information please visit Laura’s website. You can also follow her on Facebook.
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