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The Kempei ebook excerpt
Not in the History Books…
Presenting The Kempei, by Richard M. Baker, Jr.

One of the few war novels written by an American from the
Japanese point of view, The Kempei illuminates unrestrained and
authorized 20th-century terrorism whitewashed from the pages
of Japanese history.

Decent-hearted farm boy, Junichiro Inouye, is drawn into a world
of brutal military intimidation and terror as a Kempeitai soldier in
the violent subjugation of Manchuria prior to a planned takeover
of China and Southeast Asia. He epitomizes the two-sided
personality of a dedicated military policeman indoctrinated by an
imperialist nation.

Recaptured through the literary lens of the author, his exacting
research of period events identifies a military rule that reportedly
claimed 20 to 30 million lives throughout occupied Asia.

(Historical Fiction) $9.95 (online download); $19.95 (on USB stick).
400 pages.

Visit the website at: www.thekempei.com

Read an excerpt by scrolling below
The Kempei
a novel by



Richard M. Baker, Jr.
Copyright © 2010 The Tri-Screen Connection, LLC

All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.



                                                                   ™



 P.O. Box 1291 | Portland | ME | 04104 | USA



This book is a work of fiction. Names and characters are products of the author’s imagination or are used
fictionally with the exception of period references to public figures for historical setting.

First of The Tri-Screen Connection trade e-book edition 2010

For information about The Kempei or The Tri-Screen Connection, please see:
www.thekempei.com
www.tri-screenconnection.com

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.
Part One

        It was a short distance but long uneasy walk from the infantry training grounds to
the headquarters of the Imperial Kempei. The command to report at once to Captain Semba
had cast fear over the entire platoon, but Second Class Private Junichiro Inouye was the
only soldier ordered to step out. Terrified to have attracted the attention of the 11th
Division Military Police, he hurried along the neat walks, roads and grounds of the large
Zentsûji army installation, his nearly 18-year-old frame solid and handsome, matured by
six months of intensive instruction in the 43rd Infantry Regiment.
        It was the morning of the last day of the seventh month in the sixth year of Shôwa,
1931. On the hot, dry parade ground, Inouye had submitted to the impatient orders of an
assistant platoon sergeant. Now in his baggy tan uniform, wet in the armpits and back,
approaching a building he had never entered, a place friends warned should be avoided,
the peasant soldier examined his military training for times he’d been disciplined by
superiors with slaps, kicks and blows. Any of those instances, or the accumulation of them,
might have drawn the eyes of a Kempei officer to his dossier. And yet, he had been quick to
learn, and obey his superiors without question.
        Inouye sighed and faltered before the entrance of a grey stone building flanked by
sentinels. He passed without acknowledgment and wondered what he had expected…to be
struck and downed by rifle butts, or seized and assisted through the doorway by bayonet-
point?
        Pausing a moment in the entryway, Inouye bent to remove his shoes and, cap in
hand, entered a wide busy room and approached a lean sergeant occupying a place of
seemingly greatest prominence. An old wooden clock mounted on the wall above the
seated man read ten o’clock precisely. Inouye stopped, saluted, and bowed, but stood too
far from the desk to hear the sergeant. He advanced and repeated the procedure, bowing
lower, hands to belly.
        “What?” snapped the superior, a Sergeant of the First Class with three stars and a
vertical gold band on his collar patches. He was hot, tired, and cross after Semba’s tirade
about inefficiency when the sergeant had been seconds late with a conscript’s records...
probably this one, the man thought, killing a fly on his desk with the flat of his hand.
        Inouye bowed lower. “Sir, I beg your pardon, but I was ordered to report to Captain
Semba at once.”
        “Lick this mess off my hand, private!”
        Inouye complied instantly, swallowing with no sign of distaste. Somewhere in the
room a man giggled and the sergeant glared him into silence. For several minutes, the clock
made the only sound. Inouye began to perspire heavily; his lips were dry, but he resisted
moistening them for fear of drawing attention to his face. He strove to maintain a cold,
blank expression and stand straight and motionless, but was startled by the sergeant who
snapped: “And who are you?”
“Sir! Inouye, Junichiro, Second Class Private!” Inouye replied smartly. His arms
ached from tension.
        “What else?” the man demanded, his eyes slit. “State your organization, stupid
ignorant son of a stupid ignorant rice-planter! Dono chûtai ni zokushita imasu ka?”
        Inouye blushed. “Second Company, sir--”
        The man clenched his fists and Inouye braced for a battering.
        “Second Company, sir!” he repeated loudly. “Third Battalion, 43rd Regiment of
Infantry, 11th Division, Fourth Military Jurisdiction!”
        The superior glowered. “Kokodo mate!” He stood abruptly and disappeared through
a rear door. Inouye waited for a time before the man reappeared and ordered Inouye to
follow him. Led down a long dark hallway behind the reception room, he stopped short
when the sergeant said, “Tomare!” and knocked on a door.
        “Hairo!” a voice growled.
        The sergeant opened the door and pushed Inouye in to a small office.
        “Private Inouye, captain!”
        The boy failed to salute and bow fast enough to please the sergeant who delivered a
hard slap to Inouye’s ear. Without looking up the officer spoke calmly: “That’s enough,
sergeant.”
        The man bowed, exited the room and shut the door. Inouye stood stiffly and waited
as the officer read through a file of papers. As time passed and Inouye dared look down, he
studied the man.
        Immaculately dressed in a well-fitted summer uniform, Semba wore brown, thick-
rimmed eyeglasses, and close-cut hair. His strong, impassive, rather ugly face bore a bushy
black moustache and a scar across the lower lip that gave his mouth a twisted look. He was
bent so far over the papers that Inouye wondered why he didn’t use a brighter bulb in the
socket hung by a cord over the desk. The stark, windowless room was painted Kempei
black.
        “How many people have you murdered?” Captain Semba asked suddenly.
        Wild thoughts took hold of the young soldier...prison…execution…torture.
        “Tomma! Idiot! Answer me! How many?” The officer glared with eyes accustomed to
watching victims squirm with but few words from him. “How many?” he asked again in a
low mean tone.
        “None, sir,” Inouye replied.
        “Have you ever had the desire to kill?”
         “No, sir.”
         “Truthfully now, wouldn’t you like to kill me this instant?”
         “Oh, no sir!”
        Semba glanced at the soldier, a faint smile on the twisted mouth. “If I ordered a man
to sever your fingers, would you want to kill me?”
        Inouye swallowed and shook his head.
        “Well, private?”
“It would be your right to order my fingers severed, sir.”
       Semba nodded and grinned, revealing large yellow teeth. “If I brought in your
family, tortured then murdered them and drank your mother’s blood, would you want to
kill me?” The captain fixed his cruel, unblinking eyes on Inouye’s. “I’m waiting for an
answer, private!” Semba snapped, wanting to break the boy despite aversion to his orders.
Like every gendarme in the 11th Division area, he thought the experiment ridiculous.
       “If you had a reason, sir, you could do nothing that would make me want to kill
you,” Inouye said, glancing at the door to his right, fearing his parents and sister were
behind it.
       “The Kempei needs no reason! Rape, torture and murder would be for my pleasure
only! O-wakari ni narimashita ka?”
       “Yes, sir, I understand,” said Inouye, though thinking hai, I’d want to kill you. But
the thought frightened him. Tennô-heika could be listening. Perhaps the captain could read
his mind, too.
       “If I ordered you to do the same, would you obey?”
       “Hai, sir, I am a soldier.”
       Semba knew the boy was lying and wished for the opportunity to test him.
       “Have you fornicated with your mother?”
       Inouye did not understand. “Shôchi shimash’ ta.”
       “You have, have you? What did your father think about that?”
       “I don’t know, sir.”
       “Did he watch you do it?”
       Ashamed of his ignorance, Inouye eyed the floor. “I don’t understand the word, sir.”
       “What word?”
       “Fornicated, sir.”




Thank you for reading this excerpt from The Kempei. To purchase
the entire 400-page novel as a PC e-book, go to:

                          https://www.thekempei.com

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The Kempei ebook excerpt

  • 2. Not in the History Books… Presenting The Kempei, by Richard M. Baker, Jr. One of the few war novels written by an American from the Japanese point of view, The Kempei illuminates unrestrained and authorized 20th-century terrorism whitewashed from the pages of Japanese history. Decent-hearted farm boy, Junichiro Inouye, is drawn into a world of brutal military intimidation and terror as a Kempeitai soldier in the violent subjugation of Manchuria prior to a planned takeover of China and Southeast Asia. He epitomizes the two-sided personality of a dedicated military policeman indoctrinated by an imperialist nation. Recaptured through the literary lens of the author, his exacting research of period events identifies a military rule that reportedly claimed 20 to 30 million lives throughout occupied Asia. (Historical Fiction) $9.95 (online download); $19.95 (on USB stick). 400 pages. Visit the website at: www.thekempei.com Read an excerpt by scrolling below
  • 3. The Kempei a novel by Richard M. Baker, Jr. Copyright © 2010 The Tri-Screen Connection, LLC All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form. ™ P.O. Box 1291 | Portland | ME | 04104 | USA This book is a work of fiction. Names and characters are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictionally with the exception of period references to public figures for historical setting. First of The Tri-Screen Connection trade e-book edition 2010 For information about The Kempei or The Tri-Screen Connection, please see: www.thekempei.com www.tri-screenconnection.com Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available.
  • 4. Part One It was a short distance but long uneasy walk from the infantry training grounds to the headquarters of the Imperial Kempei. The command to report at once to Captain Semba had cast fear over the entire platoon, but Second Class Private Junichiro Inouye was the only soldier ordered to step out. Terrified to have attracted the attention of the 11th Division Military Police, he hurried along the neat walks, roads and grounds of the large Zentsûji army installation, his nearly 18-year-old frame solid and handsome, matured by six months of intensive instruction in the 43rd Infantry Regiment. It was the morning of the last day of the seventh month in the sixth year of Shôwa, 1931. On the hot, dry parade ground, Inouye had submitted to the impatient orders of an assistant platoon sergeant. Now in his baggy tan uniform, wet in the armpits and back, approaching a building he had never entered, a place friends warned should be avoided, the peasant soldier examined his military training for times he’d been disciplined by superiors with slaps, kicks and blows. Any of those instances, or the accumulation of them, might have drawn the eyes of a Kempei officer to his dossier. And yet, he had been quick to learn, and obey his superiors without question. Inouye sighed and faltered before the entrance of a grey stone building flanked by sentinels. He passed without acknowledgment and wondered what he had expected…to be struck and downed by rifle butts, or seized and assisted through the doorway by bayonet- point? Pausing a moment in the entryway, Inouye bent to remove his shoes and, cap in hand, entered a wide busy room and approached a lean sergeant occupying a place of seemingly greatest prominence. An old wooden clock mounted on the wall above the seated man read ten o’clock precisely. Inouye stopped, saluted, and bowed, but stood too far from the desk to hear the sergeant. He advanced and repeated the procedure, bowing lower, hands to belly. “What?” snapped the superior, a Sergeant of the First Class with three stars and a vertical gold band on his collar patches. He was hot, tired, and cross after Semba’s tirade about inefficiency when the sergeant had been seconds late with a conscript’s records... probably this one, the man thought, killing a fly on his desk with the flat of his hand. Inouye bowed lower. “Sir, I beg your pardon, but I was ordered to report to Captain Semba at once.” “Lick this mess off my hand, private!” Inouye complied instantly, swallowing with no sign of distaste. Somewhere in the room a man giggled and the sergeant glared him into silence. For several minutes, the clock made the only sound. Inouye began to perspire heavily; his lips were dry, but he resisted moistening them for fear of drawing attention to his face. He strove to maintain a cold, blank expression and stand straight and motionless, but was startled by the sergeant who snapped: “And who are you?”
  • 5. “Sir! Inouye, Junichiro, Second Class Private!” Inouye replied smartly. His arms ached from tension. “What else?” the man demanded, his eyes slit. “State your organization, stupid ignorant son of a stupid ignorant rice-planter! Dono chûtai ni zokushita imasu ka?” Inouye blushed. “Second Company, sir--” The man clenched his fists and Inouye braced for a battering. “Second Company, sir!” he repeated loudly. “Third Battalion, 43rd Regiment of Infantry, 11th Division, Fourth Military Jurisdiction!” The superior glowered. “Kokodo mate!” He stood abruptly and disappeared through a rear door. Inouye waited for a time before the man reappeared and ordered Inouye to follow him. Led down a long dark hallway behind the reception room, he stopped short when the sergeant said, “Tomare!” and knocked on a door. “Hairo!” a voice growled. The sergeant opened the door and pushed Inouye in to a small office. “Private Inouye, captain!” The boy failed to salute and bow fast enough to please the sergeant who delivered a hard slap to Inouye’s ear. Without looking up the officer spoke calmly: “That’s enough, sergeant.” The man bowed, exited the room and shut the door. Inouye stood stiffly and waited as the officer read through a file of papers. As time passed and Inouye dared look down, he studied the man. Immaculately dressed in a well-fitted summer uniform, Semba wore brown, thick- rimmed eyeglasses, and close-cut hair. His strong, impassive, rather ugly face bore a bushy black moustache and a scar across the lower lip that gave his mouth a twisted look. He was bent so far over the papers that Inouye wondered why he didn’t use a brighter bulb in the socket hung by a cord over the desk. The stark, windowless room was painted Kempei black. “How many people have you murdered?” Captain Semba asked suddenly. Wild thoughts took hold of the young soldier...prison…execution…torture. “Tomma! Idiot! Answer me! How many?” The officer glared with eyes accustomed to watching victims squirm with but few words from him. “How many?” he asked again in a low mean tone. “None, sir,” Inouye replied. “Have you ever had the desire to kill?” “No, sir.” “Truthfully now, wouldn’t you like to kill me this instant?” “Oh, no sir!” Semba glanced at the soldier, a faint smile on the twisted mouth. “If I ordered a man to sever your fingers, would you want to kill me?” Inouye swallowed and shook his head. “Well, private?”
  • 6. “It would be your right to order my fingers severed, sir.” Semba nodded and grinned, revealing large yellow teeth. “If I brought in your family, tortured then murdered them and drank your mother’s blood, would you want to kill me?” The captain fixed his cruel, unblinking eyes on Inouye’s. “I’m waiting for an answer, private!” Semba snapped, wanting to break the boy despite aversion to his orders. Like every gendarme in the 11th Division area, he thought the experiment ridiculous. “If you had a reason, sir, you could do nothing that would make me want to kill you,” Inouye said, glancing at the door to his right, fearing his parents and sister were behind it. “The Kempei needs no reason! Rape, torture and murder would be for my pleasure only! O-wakari ni narimashita ka?” “Yes, sir, I understand,” said Inouye, though thinking hai, I’d want to kill you. But the thought frightened him. Tennô-heika could be listening. Perhaps the captain could read his mind, too. “If I ordered you to do the same, would you obey?” “Hai, sir, I am a soldier.” Semba knew the boy was lying and wished for the opportunity to test him. “Have you fornicated with your mother?” Inouye did not understand. “Shôchi shimash’ ta.” “You have, have you? What did your father think about that?” “I don’t know, sir.” “Did he watch you do it?” Ashamed of his ignorance, Inouye eyed the floor. “I don’t understand the word, sir.” “What word?” “Fornicated, sir.” Thank you for reading this excerpt from The Kempei. To purchase the entire 400-page novel as a PC e-book, go to: https://www.thekempei.com