Hannibal Rising

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Book: Hannibal Rising by Thomas Harris Read Free Book Online
Authors: Thomas Harris
Tags: Fiction, thriller
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pay.”
    In front of the post office was a post box on a pole. The dog strained toward it against the leash and raised his leg.
    Seeing a face above the mailbox, Rubin said, “Good evening, Monsieur,” and to the dog, “Attend you do not befoul Monsieur!” The dog whined and Rubin noticed there were no legs beneath the mailbox on the other side.
    The motorbike sped along the one-lane paved road, nearly overrunning the cast of its dim headlight. Once when a car approached from the other way, the rider ducked into the roadside trees until the car’s taillights were out of sight.
    In the dark storage shed of the chateau, the headlight of the bike faded out, the motor ticking as it cooled. Lady Murasaki pulled off the black balaclava and by touch she put up her hair.
    The beams of police flashlights converged on Paul Momund’s head on top of the mailbox.
Boche
was printed across his forehead just below the hairline.Late drinkers and night workers were gathering to see.
    Inspector Popil brought Hannibal up close and looked at him by the light glowing off the dead man’s face. He could detect no change in the boy’s expression.
    “The Resistance killed Momund at last,” the barber said, and explained to everyone how he had found him, carefully leaving out the transgressions of the dog.
    Some in the crowd thought Hannibal shouldn’t have to look at it. An older woman, a night nurse going home, said so aloud.
    Popil sent him home in a police car. Hannibal arrived at the chateau in the rosy dawn and cut some flowers before he went into the house, arranging them for height in his fist. The poem to accompany them came to him as he was cutting the stems off even. He found Lady Murasaki’s brush in the studio still wet and used it to write:
    Night heron revealed

By the rising harvest moon—

Which is lovelier?
    Hannibal slept easily later in the day. He dreamed of Mischa in the summer before the war, Nanny had her bathtub in the garden at the lodge, letting the sun warm the water, and the cabbage butterfliesflew around Mischa in the water. He cut the eggplant for her and she hugged the purple eggplant, warm from the sun.
    When he woke there was a note beneath his door along with a wisteria blossom. The note said:
One would choose the heron, if beset by frogs
.

26
    CHIYOH PREPARED for her departure to Japan by drilling Hannibal in elementary Japanese, in the hope that he could provide some conversation for Lady Murasaki and relieve her of the tedium of speaking English.
    She found him an apt pupil in the Heian tradition of communication by poem and engaged him in practice poem exchanges, confiding that this was a major deficiency in her prospective groom. She made Hannibal swear to look out for Lady Murasaki, using a variety of oaths sworn on objects she thought Westerners might hold sacred. She required pledges as well at the altar in the attic, and a blood oath that involved pricking their fingers with a pin.
    They could not hold off the time with wishing. When Lady Murasaki and Hannibal packed forParis, Chiyoh packed for Japan. Serge and Hannibal heaved Chiyoh’s trunk onto the boat train at the Gare de Lyon while Lady Murasaki sat beside her in the train, holding her hand until the last minute. An outsider watching them part might have thought them emotionless as they exchanged a final bow.
    Hannibal and Lady Murasaki felt Chiyoh’s absence sharply on the way home. Now there were only the two of them.
    The Paris apartment vacated before the war by Lady Murasaki’s father was very Japanese in its subtle interplay of shadows and lacquer. If the furniture, un-draped piece by piece, brought Lady Murasaki memories of her father, she did not reveal them.
    She and Hannibal tied back the heavy draperies, letting in the sun. Hannibal looked down upon the Place des Vosges, all light and space and warm red brick, one of the most beautiful squares in Paris despite a garden still scruffy from the war.
    There, on the field below,

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