Authors: John Donohue
Also by John Donohue…
Novels
Sensei
Deshi
Tengu
Nonfiction
The Overlook Martial Arts Reader
Complete Kendo
Herding the Ox: The Martial Arts as Moral
Metaphor
Warrior Dreams: The Martial Arts and the
American Imagination
The Human Condition in the Modern Age
The Forge of the Spirit: Structure, Motion, and
Meaning in the Japanese Martial Tradition
YMAA Publication Center
Wolfeboro, NH USA
John Donohue
YMAA Publication Center, Inc.
PO Box 480
Wolfeboro, NH 03894
1-800-669-8892 • www.ymaa.com • [email protected]
Paperback edition
Ebook edition
978-1-59439-210-8 978-1-59439-239-9
1-59439-210-2
1-59439-239-0
© 2011 by John Donohue
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in
any form.
Editor: Leslie Takao
Cover Design: Axie Breen
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
POD XXXX
Publisher’s Cataloging in Publication
Donohue, John J., 1956-
Kage : the shadow / John Donohue. -- Wolfeboro, NH : YMAA
Publication Center, c2011.
p. ; cm.
ISBN: 978-1-59439-210-8 (pbk.) ; 978-1-59439-239-9
(ebook)
“A Connor Burke martial arts thriller”--Cover.
1. Burke, Connor (Fictitious character) 2. Smuggling--
Arizona--Fiction. 3. Martial artists--Fiction. 4. Arizona--Fiction.
5. Martial arts fiction. 6. Suspense fiction. I. Title.
PS3604.O565 K34 2011
2011927806
813/.6--dc22
2011
Printed in Canada.
iv
Kage
To the Sweeney family
for welcoming me in.
v
Prologue
Dawn. I lay for a time coming back to the world: the
warmth of a blanket, the cool air of a day yet unborn touching
my face. The hitch of old injuries. The tug of memory.
A Tibetan monk once told me I walked a path as narrow
and dangerous as a razor’s edge. As in many situations, he could
see far and well. That monk wasn’t just concerned with peril in
the normal sense: life is, after all, suffering. He was worried,
instead, about things of the spirit.
I look across the room where I have slept alone: even in the
half light I can see a table against a wal . My swords rest there in
a wooden rack that I made by hand. The stand is nothing fancy;
merely the functional product of the whine of a saber saw, my
hands’ guidance, attached to the familiar aroma of cut wood.
The weapons had become so much a part of me that I felt they
deserved a holder that was equal y personal. I’ve read comments
about the cold steel of a blade, but they’re written by people who
are strangers to my art. The blade isn’t cold; it is warm, a thing
alive like the cycle of breath or the pulsing of blood.
The old adage is that the sword is the soul of the
samurai
. I
used to dismiss it as equal parts hyperbole and mystic mumbo-