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Table of Contents

Title Page

Copyright Page

Acknowledgements

CHAPTER ONE - THE TWO CLERKS

CHAPTER TWO - TEMPTING SOGA’S WRATH

CHAPTER THREE - GHOSTS

CHAPTER FOUR - THE BLIND STREET SINGER

CHAPTER FIVE - THE SHACKLES OF LIFE

CHAPTER SIX - KOBE

CHAPTER SEVEN - OLD MEN

CHAPTER EIGHT - THE NUN

CHAPTER NINE - FORTUNE TELLING

CHAPTER TEN - THE HIDDEN GARDEN

CHAPTER ELEVEN - THE B OY

CHAPTERTWELVE - THE BEAUTIFUL LADY YASUGI

CHAPTER THIRTEEN - THE STOREHOUSE

CHAPTER FOURTEEN - BROKEN TIES

CHAPTER FIFTEEN - CAUGHT

CHAPTER SIXTEEN - PURPLE AND WHITE WISTERIA

CHAPTER SEVENTEEN - TO THE DEATH

CHAPTER EIGHTEEN - THE EVIL OMEN

CHAPTER NINETEEN - HASEO’S SWORD

CHAPTER TWENTY - HASEO’S CRIME

CHAPTERTWENTY-ONE - SMOKE OVER TORIBENO

CHAPTERTWENTY-TWO - HIROKO

CHAPTERTWENTY-THREE - KOBE

CHAPTERTWENTY-FOUR - EVENING BELLS

HISTORICAL NOTE

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First published in Penguin Books 2009

Copyright © I. J. Parker, 2009

eISBN : 978-1-101-05094-1

1. Sugawara Akitada (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. Murder—Investigation—

Fiction. 3. Exiles—Fiction. 4. Smallpox—Fiction. 5. Japan—History—Heian

period, 794-1185—Fiction. I. Title.

PS3616.A745C66 2009

813’.6—dc22 2008043475

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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

I am indebted to a number of friends and fellow writers who were kind enough to read and make comments on this novel, among them especially John Rosenman and Jacqueline Falkenhan.

To my great delight, I also worked with a new editor, Rebecca Hunt—an association that was not only a pleasure but helped make this the best of my novels so far.

My debt to my agents, Jean Naggar, Jennifer Weltz, and Jessica Regel, increases with every book and every contract. They are simply the best in the world.

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CHARACTERS

Japanese family names precede given names.

MAIN CHARACTERS

CHARACTERS CONNECTED WITH THE CASES

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OTHERS

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ALSO: Assorted noblemen, thugs, merchants, soothsayers, beggars, peasants, servants, and children.

PRONUNCIATION OF JAPANESE WORDS

Unlike English, Japanese is pronounced phonetically. Therefore vowel sounds are approximately as follows:

“a” as in “father”

“e” as in “let”

“i” as in “kin”

“o” as in “more”

“u” as in “would”

Double consonants (“ai” or “ei”) are pronounced separately, and

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or
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are doubled or lengthened. As for the consonants:

“g” as in “game”

“j” as in “join”

“ch” as in “chat”

This fleeting world is

A star at dawn,

A bubble in a stream,

A flash of lightning

In a summer cloud,

A flickering light,

A phantom,

And a dream.

—THE DIAMOND SUTRA

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TEMPLE BELLS

The fifteenth day of the Fifth Month was the day Tomoe died. It was also the day of her birth, but otherwise unremarkable. She knew her way, had walked it daily now for two years, always before dark, because then she could dimly make out shapes.

She passed the restaurant, caught the rich smell of fish soup, and felt a fierce craving for it and for a cup of wine to celebrate. But there would be no wine, not even the cheapest, and no fish soup either, though there was a silver coin among the coppers she had earned today. She clutched her lute to her chest to feel the pressure of the coins inside her robe.

As she passed under the market gate, she was jostled by someone. Suddenly, a hand came from behind and felt her breast. She swung around with an angry cry and pulled the scarf from her face. The man who had touched her so familiarly cursed. He had not fondled a pretty young harlot, but an ogress. Tomoe was tempted to hiss and bare her teeth at the unseen tormentor, but she resisted.