Red Chrysanthemum Read Online Free Page B

Red Chrysanthemum
Book: Red Chrysanthemum Read Online Free
Author: Laura Joh Rowland
Tags: Fiction, General, detective, Historical, Thrillers, Mystery & Detective, Mystery Fiction, Political, Japan, Police Procedural, Sano; Ichirō (Fictitious character), Public Officers, Police spouses, Public officers - Crimes against, Samurai, Japan - History - Genroku period; 1688-1704, Sano; Ichiråo (Fictitious character)
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The customers laughed and groped under the dancers’ skirts. Reiko climbed out of her palanquin and peered at the women. She couldn’t recognize Lily, whom she’d only met once.
    The proprietor greeted Reiko’s escorts with a broad smile. “Welcome, gentlemen. Join the fun!”
    “My mistress is here to see a dancer named Lily,” said Lieutenant Asukai, who was Reiko’s chief bodyguard.
    Surprise showed on the proprietor’s face as he beheld Reiko: Ladies of her class didn’t frequent places such as this. “Who’s your mistress?”
    “Lady Reiko, wife of the Honorable Chamberlain Sano.”
    Now the proprietor looked dumbfounded by a visit from such an exalted personage. Before he could reply, one of the dancers rushed out of the teahouse.
    “Merciful gods! You came!” She dropped to her knees before Reiko. “I’ve waited for nine days since I sent the letter to you. I’d given up hoping. I can’t believe you’re really here.” Lily gazed up at Reiko as if entranced by a celestial visitation. “A thousand thanks!”
    “Yes, I’m here to help you,” Reiko said, moved by her gratitude. As Lily stood up, Reiko remembered her. She was perhaps forty years old, thin and gaunt under her bright robes. She had once been pretty, but the bones of her face were sharp, the skin sagging on them, her hair limp. “Can we go somewhere and talk?”
    “Lily, get back to work,” the proprietor interrupted. “You know you’re not allowed to entertain personal company.” The customers called and motioned for Lily to rejoin them.
    Lieutenant Asukai rattled coins in the pouch that hung from his sash. “Our business in exchange for a moment of her time.”
    The man relented. “All right,” he told Lily, “but make it short.”
    As her escorts entered the teahouse, Reiko noticed a food stall across the street. “Let’s go over there.” Lily looked as if she could use a meal.
    The food stall was a narrow storefront equipped with a ceramic hearth on which the cook boiled two big pots. Reiko and Lily sat on the raised floor. When their meal was served, Reiko dubiously eyed the scummy tea and the soup that contained noodles, withered bean sprouts, and gray, rancid bits of fish. But Lily wolfed down hers.
    “In your letter you said your son was stolen,” Reiko said. “When did this happen?”
    Lily paused between bites; tears spilled into her bowl. “Two months ago. I haven’t seen him since.”
    “What is his name?”
    “Jiro.”
    “I have a son a bit older,” Reiko said. She and Lily smiled at each other; their common experience as mothers transcended their class differences. “In order for me to get Jiro back, first I need to find out who stole him.”
    “I already know,” said Lily. “It was Lord Mori.”
    “How do you know?”
    “I gave Jiro to him. He was supposed to give him back. That was the deal. But he didn’t.”
    There was obviously more to this case than the kidnapping it had seemed when Reiko had read the letter. “What kind of deal are you talking about?”
    Lily resumed eating. Between gulps of broth, she said, “I heard that Lord Mori likes little boys. So I took Jiro to his house. Lord Mori paid me to have him for the night.”
    Reiko couldn’t believe what she’d heard. “Do you mean for sex?”
    “Yes.” Lily eyed Reiko as if she were daft. “What else?”
    Shocked, Reiko blurted out, “You rented Jiro as a prostitute to Lord Mori?” Although she knew that child prostitution was legal and common, she’d never come face to face with an example. Now she remembered hearing of the cruelty, moral degradation, and physical pain suffered by the children at the hands of the men. “How could you do that to your own son?” Her sympathy for Lily was rapidly turning to revulsion.
    “Do you think I wanted to? Do you think I liked for some man to maul my little boy? I only did it because I had no choice.”
    Lily glared at the teahouse. “The boss pays me two coppers a day. That, and

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