No one answered him.

  Aki’s body shuddered and arched and she cried out. He looked down and saw that the snake had fastened itself to her ankle, its fangs sunk deep, the venom already coursing through her veins.

  “Akihime!” he called, seeing her life flee from her before his eyes. He looked around. “Sesshin, master, help her! Kuro, is there some antidote?”

  “There is no antidote,” Sesshin said. “I warned you.”

  “You should have kept quiet, old man,” Kiku said. “You upset Kuro. When he is upset he likes to hurt people. That’s his nature, and mine, too.”

  Shika was barely able to speak. He could not look at either Kiku or Kuro. “Go,” he whispered. “Let me never set eyes on you again.”

  “But you will see us again,” Kiku said. “You know our lives are bound together. You know we carry out your secret desires.”

  He hardly heard them, nor did he see them, as they faded into invisibility and passed unseen through the doorway. He continued to hold Aki close while his tears pooled behind the mask and spilled like a waterfall through the eyeholes.

  “The Princess is dead,” Sesshin said.

  “No,” he wept. “No, she cannot be.”

  “Lord,” Eisei said at his side. “She is gone.”

  Sesshin said, “Be thankful for this moment, for it is part of your journey. It shows you the true nature of existence. Everything suffers, everything will be lost.”

  Shika said, “Why should you be spared death, you who are old, blind, and powerless? Why did you not die in her place?”

  “It is not my fate. It is hers and yours. You have come into full possession of your powers. You overcame the Prince Abbot, with her help. The dragon child himself answered her call, then recognized you and helped you. I am proud of you, my boy.”

  Shika would have killed him at that moment, except that the old man would not die.

  Eisei touched his arm. “We must go. The fire is taking hold.”

  Where shall I go? he thought. There is nothing left for me.

  Eisei lifted Aki. Her arm moved, making his heart leap with hope, but he saw clearly that life had fled from her.

  “What about the old man?” Eisei said. “Will he come with us?”

  “No!” Shika said.

  “I must stay here,” Sesshin said. “My place is at Ryusonji now. I must turn my attention to the Book of the Future.”

  The outer yard was flowing with water. Nagatomo was waiting with Shika’s weapons, Jato and Kodama. Nyorin was stamping and fretting in the shrine. Shika could hear Risu squealing somewhere. The foal cantered up to him, its eyes huge and dark with meaning.

  He took the sword and the bow from Nagatomo and said, “Untie the white stallion and the brown mare.”

  “But they belong to the horse god,” Eisei said.

  “They were my horses before that. They will be mine again.”

  He hoped the horses would attack and kill him, but Nyorin came with him docilely, and Risu followed, calling out to him in her old way.

  They fastened Aki’s body to the stallion’s back. All three horses lowered their heads and moisture formed in their eyes as though they were weeping.

  The water came up to their hocks as Shikanoko led them through the flooded city. The deer’s child was returning to the Darkwood.

  AUTHOR’S NOTE

  The Tale of Shikanoko was partly inspired by the great medieval warrior tales of Japan: The Tale of the Heike, The Taiheiki, the tales of Hōgen and Heiji, the Jōkyūki, and The Tale of the Soga Brothers. I have borrowed descriptions of weapons and clothes from these and am indebted to their English translators Royall Tyler, Helen Craig McCullough, and Thomas J. Cogan.

  I would like to thank in particular Randy Schadel, who read early versions of the novels and made many invaluable suggestions.

  ALSO BY LIAN HEARN

  TALES OF THE OTORI

  Across the Nightingale Floor

  Grass for His Pillow

  Brilliance of the Moon

  The Harsh Cry of the Heron

  Heaven’s Net Is Wide

  Blossoms and Shadows

  The Storyteller and His Three Daughters

  THE TALE OF SHIKANOKO

  Emperor of the Eight Islands

  A Note About the Author

  Lian Hearn is the pseudonym of a writer—born in England, educated at Oxford, currently living in Australia—who has had a lifelong interest in Japan, has lived there, and studies Japanese. She is the author of the bestselling series Tales of the Otori. You can sign up for email updates here.

  All four volumes of Lian Hearn’s The Tale of Shikanoko will be published in 2016.

  EMPEROR OF THE EIGHT ISLANDS

  April 2016

  AUTUMN PRINCESS, DRAGON CHILD

  June 2016

  LORD OF THE DARKWOOD

  August 2016

  THE TENGU’S GAME OF GO

  September 2016

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  Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  Epigraph

  The Tale of Shikanoko List of Characters

  Map

  1. Shikanoko

  2. Masachika

  3. Aki

  4. Takaakira

  5. Shikanoko

  6. Aki

  7. Yoshi

  8. Shikanoko

  9. Hina

  10. Aki

  11. Masachika

  12. Hina

  13. Masachika

  14. Tama

  15. Takaakira

  16. Aki

  17. Shikanoko

  Author’s Note

  Also by Lian Hearn

  A Note About the Author

  Books in the Tale of Shikanoko Series

  Copyright

  Farrar, Straus and Giroux

  18 West 18th Street, New York 10011

  Copyright © 2016 by Lian Hearn Associates Pty Ltd.

  All rights reserved

  Originally published in 2016 by Hachette Australia

  Published in the United States by Farrar, Straus and Giroux

  First American edition, 2016

  Map by K1229 Design

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Names: Hearn, Lian, author.

  Title: Autumn Princess, Dragon Child / Lian Hearn.

  Description: First American edition. | New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2016. | Series: The tale of Shikanoko series; 2

  Identifiers: LCCN 2015042557 | ISBN 9780374536329 (softcover) | ISBN 9780374715021 (ebook)

  Subjects: LCSH: Japan—History—1185–1600—Fiction. | BISAC: FICTION / Literary. | FICTION / Fantasy / General. | GSAFD: Fantasy fiction. | Adventure fiction. | Historical fiction.

  Classification: LCC PR9619.3.H3725 A96 2016 | DDC 823/.914—dc23

  LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2015042557

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  Lian Hearn, Autumn Princess, Dragon Child

 


 

 
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