Imbued with the magic, myth and wonder of India, the haunting new novel from the author of 'The Tiger By The River'.
When a diplomat at the Madagascan Embassy in Delhi is stabbed to death, the ambassador asks his old friend and fellow chessplayer, Jay Samorin, to help find the murderer. Samorin is a man with a profound interest in the nature of evil and an unorthodox approach to criminal psychology. The Delhi police are also involved, and the Deputy Commissioner put in charge of the investigation is Anna Kahn - recently transferred from Kashmir where her ruthless pursuit of terrorists had threatened to cause a scandal.
Wary of each other, Samorin and Kahn each have highly personal reasons for their obsession with such crime: his father, a war hero, was hanged for the murder of his mother, while her husband was killed by Kashmiri Mujahedeen, and they become uneasy allies in the hunt for the killer.
Untangling a web of corruption, of prostitution rings, medical malpractice and embezzlement of foreign aid, their quest takes them into the darkest recesses of their own lives, and beyond as they explore older, deeper mysteries that are outside the more usual boundaries of a criminal investigation. It is a trail that is fraught with danger, a trail that will eventually bring them to the village of widows . . .