who'd married Sano's mother.
Major Kumazawa nodded. His eyes narrowed, scrutinizing Sano. 'You take after your father.'
Sano knew that Major Kumazawa wasn't referring to the physical similarities. His uncle was implying that he'd inherited bad character traits, chiefly his determination to follow his own will. And Major Kumazawa was blaming heredity on his father's side for what Major Kumazawa perceived as Sano's mishandling of the investigation. Sano burned with rage, and not only because Major Kumazawa would disparage his bloodline.
'It's obvious you didn't get to know my father very well,' Sano said coldly. His father had been an old-style samurai with conventional notions about duty and bowing to authority and a distaste for individual initiative- everything Sano was not. 'Making snap judgments about people based on limited acquaintance isn't very smart. Perhaps you take after your father.'
Now it was Major Kumazawa's turn to bristle. 'Perhaps I was wrong about you, Honorable Chamberlain. Perhaps you're more like your mother.'
He must think that was the ultimate blow, to be compared to a disgraced woman. But Sano had reason to be proud of his mother, of her blood that ran in his veins. 'If you say so, then I must thank you for the compliment. My mother did a great service for Japan.' She'd been accused of murder and, in a startling instance of irony, emerged a heroine. 'The shogun holds her in the highest esteem. He's pronounced himself in her debt forever.'
The shogun had not only attended her recent wedding; he'd insisted on providing her dowry. He'd given her and her second husband enough gold to support them for the rest of their lives.
'My mother has managed to distinguish herself,' Sano said, 'probably more than anyone else in her family has.' The bitter antipathy in Major Kumazawa's eyes said he resented Sano for pointing out the truth that his mother had risen above her estranged clan. Before Major Kumazawa could retort, Sano thought of something he'd been wanting to know. 'After my parents were married, did you ever see my mother again?'
Caught off guard, Major Kumazawa said, '… No.'
Sano didn't miss the pause before his answer. 'Did you ever see me when I was a child?'
'Of course not.'
'Are you sure?'
'Are you calling me a liar?' Major Kumazawa demanded.
'Only if you deserve the name,' Sano said evenly.
'I never saw her, or you,' Major Kumazawa said. 'That's the truth, whether you believe it or not.'
But Sano knew his uncle was lying. He was sure now that he had been to the Kumazawa house, had seen his uncle and aunt, who had seen him, too. He didn't know when or why, but he intended to find out, later.
Major Kumazawa started to speak, but Sano raised a hand. 'That's enough about the past. Our main priority is catching the kidnapper. We should put our differences aside and concentrate on the investigation.'
'I couldn't agree more,' Major Kumazawa said with controlled hostility. 'And since you insist on pursuing the matter of those other women, I will lead my own troops in a hunt for the man who raped my daughter.'
'I've been meaning to speak to you about that,' Sano said. 'When I was looking for Chiyo, I came across many people that you and your men had bullied and threatened while you were looking for her.'
'So we shook them up a little,' Major Kumazawa said. 'I did what I had to do.'
'That's not the way to conduct an investigation,' Sano said. 'At best, it'll make people less willing to cooperate than if you treated them politely. At worst, you'll get false confessions, punish innocent folks, and waste your time. If you keep on, you'll only make my job harder. So don't interfere.'
Major Kumazawa glared. 'It's my daughter who was hurt. It's my right to avenge her.'
'I certainly understand your position.' If Akiko were hurt, Sano wouldn't let anyone stand between him and her attacker. 'But I'm not going to change mine. Stay out of the investigation. That's an order.'
Major Kumazawa flushed with humiliation because Sano had pulled rank on him yet again. 'And if I don't obey?' he said, even though they both knew he must.
'You saw all the people in my anteroom. Hundreds of them come to see me every day. They all want me to do things for them. I don't need this investigation to keep me busy.'
Now Major Kumazawa laughed, scorning Sano's hint that he would abandon the quest for justice for Chiyo unless Major Kumazawa cooperated. 'No, but you won't walk away from Chiyo. Everybody knows your reputation. Once you've committed to doing something, you don't give up. You're an honorable man, I'll give you that. You would never break your word.'
That had always been true in the past. Sano kept his promises and stayed the course even at the risk of his life. But things had begun to change when his mother had been accused of murder and Sano had learned that his background was different from what he'd always believed. During his investigation into the murder, he'd done things he'd never thought himself capable of; in particular, staging the trial and execution of Yoritomo, his onetime friend. Sano felt as if discovering the truth about his family had altered him in some fundamental way.
He no longer knew what he would or wouldn't do.
He wanted justice for Chiyo, but he was vexed by how his uncle treated him even while he was doing the Kumazawa clan a favor. Come to think of it, Sano was fed up after years of other people, the shogun among them, demanding service from him while throwing obstacles at him. Bushido dictated that he do his duty to his lord and his family without minding how they treated him or expecting rewards, but still…
Might he walk away from this investigation before it was done?
It wouldn't hurt to let his uncle think so.
'There's always a first time,' Sano said.
15
Shinobazu Pond was a popular attraction in the Ueno temple district. Lotus plants bloomed on its wide expanse. A causeway led from the shore to an island in the middle, upon which stood a shrine dedicated to the goddess Benten. Along the embankments around the pond, teahouses offered splendid views and rooms for lovers to spend the night.
Today Hirata found the pond desolate in the rain that had started to fall again. Egrets stood like white specters among the lotus leaves in the mist. Lumber lay piled in the mud near the approach to the causeway. Teahouse proprietors stood on their verandas, gloomily surveying the scene. When they saw Hirata climb off his horse and walk toward them, they brightened and called, 'Welcome, honorable master!'
One youthful, agile man with an ear-to-ear smile ran from his teahouse and intercepted Hirata. 'Come in, come in. May I serve you a drink?'
'Yes, please,' Hirata said, glad to get out of the rain.
Inside a room that smelled of mildewed tatami, the proprietor heated sake over a charcoal brazier. Two other men wandered in, perhaps hoping to woo Hirata to their establishments later. Hirata drank. The liquor was cheap and harsh, but it relieved the chill of the wet day. Introductions were exchanged; then Hirata said, 'I'm investigating the kidnapping of Jirocho's daughter.'
The three men nodded. The proprietor, whose name was Kanroku, said, 'We heard about it. Such a terrible shame.'
'I wouldn't wish that on anyone, not even Jirocho,' said another man, called Geki. He was in his fifties, with a sardonically humorous face accented by bushy eyebrows.
'Did you see anything suspicious the day Fumiko was kidnapped?' Hirata said.
'Not a thing. We didn't even know she was gone until Jirocho sent his men looking for her,' Geki answered.
The third man, named Hachibei, who was old, white-haired, and spry, said, 'Neither did anyone else we know. Everybody said it was as if she'd vanished into thin air.'
Just as Chiyo had, Hirata recalled. 'What about when she turned up?' he asked.
'That I did see,' Geki said, 'being that I'm the one who found her.'
'Tell me what happened,' Hirata said.
'It was an hour or so before dawn. I woke up because I needed to make water. When I was finished, I heard whimpering out there.' Geki pointed toward the embankment. 'I went to have a look.' His humorous face turned