Silence fell.
The painter broke it first. “But,” he said, “that means someone else killed her.”
Akitada nodded. “Yes, someone did kill her.”
Koshiro flung himself down before Akitada, knocking the go board aside and scattering the stones. “I swear I’m innocent. I don’t know what happened.”
Akitada sighed and got to his feet, extending a hand to Lady Akiko. “Come,” he said. “There’s nothing more for us here. We must find the killer elsewhere.”
Koshiro wailed, “What will happen to me?”
“If you’re innocent, nothing. But if you have lied or kept anything hidden again, I’ll see to it that the law falls upon you with special heaviness.”
Outside again, he turned to his sister. “Be warned by his story. These people have led rough lives. If we confront the murderer, he may become violent.”
She laughed. “I look forward to it. Life gets pretty dull when you see nobody but people of your own kind. And I’m not at all the refined creature you take me for.”
She was probably right about that.
They walked back to the main house and entered the wing occupied by Genshin’s guests.
Hearing their steps, the professor opened his door and looked out into the corridor. He was bleary-eyed and stank of wine. His eyes moved from Akitada and Tora to Lady Akiko and widened. “Dear me,” he said. “Do my eyes deceive me or is this a celestial being?”
“You may remember me,” Akitada said coldly. “The lady is my sister. She takes an interest in Lady Ogata’s story. Akiko, this is Professor Suketada.”
The professor blinked. “I hardly dare offer my hospitality,” he said, bowing, “but I’m a poor man and perhaps, in her kindness, her ladyship may overlook the shortcomings of my current abode.”
He stepped aside. Akiko looked at the cluttered room, wrinkled her nose, and decided to stand near the doors to the veranda.
“We needn’t trouble you long,” Akitada said. “What do you know about the caretaker?”
“He’s as lazy as they come. Caretaker? He only takes care of himself.”
“How long has he been here?”
“Let me see. About as long as I. I think he showed up right after I moved in and introduced himself. I’m afraid I don’t waste my time talking to caretakers. You’ll have to ask Yoshizane. They’re fast friends.”
Akiko interjected, “Do you ever take on private pupils, Professor?”
Akitada stared at her. Surely she was not thinking of hiring this wine-sodden individual for his children.
The professor made her another bow. “Very rarely, my dear lady. My research takes up all of my time. I’m engaged in writing a history of the Imperial University, you see.”
“It will be a most learned work, I’m sure,” Akiko said. “But you have had private students in the past?”
The professor waved a hand. “A few. Not worth the effort. The young are irritating dolts. I offered to help our young Akushiro recently and found him very unstable. Apart from the fact that he can’t keep his mind on anything but women, he’s dangerously violent.”
Akitada asked, “Violent? He seemed more the frightened rabbit type. What happened?”
The professor rubbed his chin and grimaced. “He was supposed to be writing an essay on Kung Fu Tse and scribbled some silly poem instead. I made a scathing comment on his poetic skills and he hit me. That ended our lessons.”
Akitada raised his brows. “It seems I was wrong about that young man. I intend to have a word with him. Where is his room?”
The professor took them along the corridor and pointed to a door. “He may not be in,” he cautioned. “Now and then he actually attends a lecture at the university.”
As soon as the tall figure of the professor had bowed and disappeared into his own room again, Akitada tapped on the student’s door. Getting no response, he opened it and walked in, followed by Akiko and Tora.
The student’s room was not very tidy, but since he had not accumulated as many books and papers as Professor Suketada, it appeared cleaner and more spacious. The shutters to the outside were closed, but strips of light filtered in and revealed a clothing trunk, a small desk, a stand with books, a roll of bedding, a few utensils, and an old wooden box of the type that held money or important papers.
Akitada made straight for this box and found it locked.
Tora joined him. “It looks pretty flimsy. Shall I have a try at breaking it open, sir?”
Akitada hesitated.
“Go ahead!” urged Lady Akiko.
Tora picked up the box with both hands and shook it. It made a rustling sound. “Not money anyway,” he said. “Sounds like papers.”
“Papers,” cried Lady Akiko. “That’s much better than money. Open it.”
The lock turned out to be loose, having lost a nail in the past and being held by a single remaining nail which Tora pried out with his knife. Opened, the box revealed loose sheets of paper covered with poetry and a thin notebook.”
Lady Akiko snatched the notebook, while Akitada leafed through the poems. They seemed to be passionate love poems or dealt with death. Clearly the student had been in love with Lady Ogata. Akitada sighed and put the poems back. “Anything there?” he asked his sister.
She was absorbed in the notebook. “It’s a diary,” she muttered. “I think … it’s a woman’s diary. It must be hers.”
“Let me see.”
“Just a moment. Yes, she talks about her husband’s death here. It’s very sad.”
Akitada took hold of the diary and tugged.
“Wait. I want to see the end. It may give us a clue about her killer.
At that moment, the door opened, and the student walked in. He stopped, flushed as red as the lacquered railings outside the Takashina mansion, and gasped, “What are you doing in my room?”
With his next glance he recognized the diary in Lady Akiko’s hands, howled like some mad thing, and flung himself at her. Akitada moved to intercept him, but the impact threw him to the floor, where he landed so awkwardly that he nearly passed out from the pain in his half-healed back and shoulder.
As everything turned black, he heard Akiko’s scream and a shout from Tora. More screams and shouts followed, and when Akitada finally managed to catch his breath and open his eyes, the student flailed on the floor with Tora kneeling on his back and twisting one of his arms across it. The screams came from the student. Akiko lay beyond them, curled up and moaning.
Tora asked Akitada, “Are you all right, sir?”
“Yes.” Akitada struggled to sit up and fell back. “I’ll be all right in a moment,” he ground out.
Tora cursed and punched the side of the student’s head; the student screamed again. “Shut up, you disgusting coward,” snarled Tora and twisted his arm viciously.
Akitada remonstrated weakly.
Attracted by all the screaming, the professor walked in and stared at the scene. “What’s going on?”
This time, Akitada managed to sit up. “Stop twisting his arm, Tora,” he said. The screams turned to whimpers. Akitada crawled over to his sister. “Akiko? Are you hurt?”
She took a hand from her face and held it out to him. It was covered with blood. “He hit me,” she said in a tone of outrage.
Akitada helped her to sit up and took a look. “A nosebleed,” he said. “I don’t think it’s broken. He found a paper tissue in his sash and handed it to her.
She held this to her nose and peered at Tora and the student. “He’s the killer!” she said in a muffled voice and a tone of conviction.
“Oh, yes,” said Akitada, feeling his back to see if his wounds had opened up again. They had not, though they still hurt. “Yes, I think so. Everything points to it.”