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Book
Information:
Genre:
Fantasy
Author:
Sean Russell
Name: Gatherer
of Clouds
Series:
Book two of a Duology
======================
Gatherer
of Clouds
BY Sean Russell
One
The wind known as the
Nagana blew in its season, turning the capital of the
In the late afternoon the
Nagana came out of the north to haunt the city with the voices of its past, and
the people in the streets hurried on their way, attempting to ignore the sounds.
No family had been untouched by the plague and the whispering of ghosts spoke
to everyone.
By the curb of a lesser
avenue, on the low wall of a bridge that arced over the canal, sat a Neophyte
Botahist monk. Apparently oblivious to the life of the city, he chanted—a
low, barely melodic sound that mingled with the wind echoing down an empty
stone stairwell and off a nearby wall.
If he was unaware of the
city around him, it could be said that the city, or at least those who walked
its streets, were barely more aware of him. Their only acknowledgment, the
reflex action of a sign to Botahara as they passed, but few turned their gaze
to look for the source of the chant. A monk sitting by his alms cup was as
common a sight as a river man at his oar.
A coin rattled dully into
the monk’s leather cup and he gave a quick double bow, not interrupting
his chant or looking up to see who his benefactor might be.
Without warning the
already cool air turned colder and the wind died to a calm. The whispering of
ghosts fell
to a hush. It seemed only
the chanting of the young monk moved the air, and the pedestrians hesitated as
though they’d suddenly forgotten the purpose of their outings.
There was a long moment
of this eerie stillness, and then a deep roll of thunder shook the walls of
Rhojo-ma, seeming for all the world to have originated in the depths of the
earth, so substantial did it feel.
The air took on form and
turned to white as hail palted down in a sudden torrent. The staccato of ice
stones drumming on tile drowned out all other sounds, but in moments it reduced
its volume to a mere drizzle, then turned to rain.
At the first crash of
thunder the residents of Rhojo-ma hurried to cover, leaving the monk alone on
his wall, still chanting, apparently oblivious to the pelting hail despite the
thinness of his robe.
The monk’s recent
benefactor stood under the bridge, hoping the downpour would not last and
contemplating the timing of his offering with the bursting of the clouds. It
was not the blessing he had hoped Botahara would bestow. He shook the
hailstones from his robe, brushing the white pebbles off the shinta blossom and
flying horse emblems embroidered over his heart.
Several of Seh’s
more humble residents shared the man’s refuge, but they stood apart from
him and had bowed deeply before stepping into the shelter, waiting for his
invitation. Though still a very young man, Corporal Rohku was a member of
Governor Shonto’s personal guard and, as such, a person of some
importance despite his lack of years and low rank.
The corporal’s
father was the Captain of Lord Shonto’s personal guard and it was the
young man’s secret hope to bear this rank himself in his time. Even more,
it was his dream that the Rohku name would be bound to that of the Shonto over
generations of important service—as the Shigotu of old had attained fame
for their service as elite guards to seven generations of Mori Emperors. For
the time being he would have to accept a more humble position, for he was not
sure that Lord Shonto even knew his name.
Beyond the shelter of the
bridge, hailstones flowed down tiny rivers that ran between cobbles,
disappearing before they made their circuitous way to the canal. Cor-
poral Rohku found himself
following their progress, trying to decide where the stones ceased to be ice
and became part of the water. A second rumble of thunder shook the earth and,
as though this were a signal, an ornate barge took form in the mist that hung
over the canal. Before Rohku truly registered this, the barge faded again,
reappeared, and then disappeared wholly into the clouds as though it had been
only a specter of mist shaped by an errant eddy of wind.
Rain and hail forgotten,
the Shonto guard mounted the stairs back to the avenue three at a time and ran
out onto the bridge. So absorbed was he in trying to part the clouds with an
act of will that he failed to notice the Neophyte monk was now standing at the
bridge’s far end staring into the fog with equal focus.
They did not have long to
wait, for the barge appeared again, this time in more substantial form. It was
intricately carved, painted crimson and gold, with banners hanging limp in the
teeming rain.
One pennant did not need
to stretch itself in the wind to be recognized for it was Imperial Crimson. A
five-clawed Imperial Dragon would circle the sun within those folds of silk.
The other pennants were unrecognizable.
Corporal Rohku waited
with all the patience his young spirit could summon. A second barge, a typical
river craft, appeared in the wake of the Imperial Barge, for that is no doubt
what it was. Just when the young guard thought he could bear it no more, a hint
of a breeze, a mere sigh, tugged at the pennants. Against a dark field, a Choka
hawk spread its wings, appeared to take a single beat, and then collapsed as
the fickle breeze died.
The guard was off at a
run toward the Governor’s Palace. As he crossed the bridge, a young
Botahist monk hurried past in the opposite direction though the young soldier
did not notice, let alone return, the monk’s half bow. There was no time
to be polite to strangers. Jaku Katta had arrived—and several days before
he was expected.
Corporal Rohku pushed on,
keeping up his pace until reaching his destination, whereupon he spent several
moments regaining his breath before he could give his report with any show of
dignity.
r
General Hojo Masakado,
Lord Shonto Motoru’s senior military advisor, knelt so that he was
between his liege-lord and the two openings to the room—screens leading
to an outer room and the balcony. It was an old habit, one which he had
developed in service to Shonto’s father during the Interim Wars. Having
served two generations of Shonto was a source of great pride to Hojo and he
often found himself comparing the two lords. Physically they were obviously
father and son, the high, broad Shonto forehead seemed to miss few generations,
and both lords were exactly the same height and weight-slightly more than
average in both. Personalities differed, however. The father had been more
reserved and formal, a biographer and historian of some note; his humor was dry
and intellectual. Motoru was far less formal, more inclined to a social life,
enjoying the company of those much older and noticeably younger than himself.
He had the ability of great leaders to make everyone comfortable in his
presence.
Lord Shonto sat before a
low table across from Hojo and the Shonto family Spiritual Advisor, Initiate
Brother Shuyun, each of whom bent over the table in turn and examined three
small coins that lay on the fine-grained wood—square gold coins with
round holes in their centers.
“There is no
question, Sire,” General Hojo said, “they are identical.”
Shonto turned to the
Botahist Brother, raising an eyebrow in characteristic fashion. Shuyun held the
coin in the palm of his small hand, staring with the ageless eyes remarked upon
by everyone who met him. Hojo reminded himself that this small monk, no larger,
and barely older than Lady Nishima, had once defeated the most famed kick boxer
in all of Wa. Despite his appearance and quiet manner, he was as formidable a
warrior as General Hojo—perhaps more so.
“I agree entirely,
Lord Shonto,” Shuyun said. “They have even been struck by the same
die. A small irregularity can be felt along the inner edge.” He turned
the coin over and ran the ball of his index finger around the central hole.
Both Hojo and Shonto did the same, with some concentration. Shonto looked at
his general and Hojo shook his head almost imperceptibly.
“I do not doubt
that you are right, Shuyun-sum,” Shonto said, “though it is beyond
my senses to feel this.” The lord turned the disk over in his hand and
realized he held the coin that had been taken from the raiding barbarian
warrior. The strange dragon etched into its lustrous surface seemed to look at
him with some suspicion. “Lord Kintari’s dissolute son, a barbarian
warrior, and now the coins Lady Nishima brings from Tanaka: ‘from a trunk
the Imperial Guard spirited onto a ship,’ Tanaka tells us. A ship bound
north. That is all we know.”
They fell silent and a
sudden cloudburst unleashed a torrent of hail which battered the tile roof with
a clatter that would not allow quiet conversation—private conversation.
Shonto reached over and opened the screen a crack that they might watch the
spectacle.
Hail turned to rain and
Shuyun broke the silence. ‘ ’It is one of the lessons of the
Botahist-trained that there are times when speculation serves little purpose,
Lord Shonto, General Hojo, if you will excuse me for saying so. If we have
considered all possibilities, then we must accept that we do not yet know
enough. Coins come from Yankura and make their way into the desert: that is truly
all we know. There are, however, other concerns which we can act upon. My
teachers taught that we should begin where we may and practice patience where
we must.“
“Your teachers were
wise, Shuyun-sum,” Shonto said, surprising Hojo. He had never heard anyone
but their former Spiritual Advisor, Brother Satake, come so close to
criticizing his liege-lord. It was a measure of how much Lord Shonto had come
to trust this monk in the short time he had been in the Shonto house. The lord
turned the coin over in his hand one last time and then returned it to the
table.
An almost imperceptible
knock sounded on the inner screen and Hojo moved to open it a crack. He
listened to a voice neither Shuyun nor Lord Shonto could hear, nodded, and
pushed the shoji closed.
Lord Shonto raised an
eyebrow, a gesture his staff did not need explained.
“Jaku Katta has
arrived in Rhojo-ma, Sire.”
Shonto reached
unconsciously for the coins again but stopped himself. “Huh.” He
turned his gaze back to the opening in the shojis. “It would be
interesting to know what the Emperor’s Guard Commander could tell us of
these coins.”
Hojo nodded.
“Please arrange a
meeting with General Jaku as soon as convenience allows. We shall see if it is
true—in the dark tigers see more than men.”
Even by Botanist
standards the Prefect of Seh was a very old man and his age inhabited his body
in manner uncommon among the Botahist trained. Monks typically remained lithe
and youthful far past the age when the untrained had slipped into infirmity if
they remained alive at all.
Brother Nyodo, Master of
the Botahist faith and Prefect of Seh, moved so slowly that he seemed always to
be progressing toward an early closure of the Form.
He set a tightly rolled
scroll on his writing table and very slowly turned back to his guest; Senior
Brother So-tura, the chi quan Master of Jinjoh Monastery.
“There is no
brother by that name in our registry; Hitari,
yes but no Hitara. Was Brother Shuyun
certain?”
“Prefect, I do not
think it is possible for him to make such a mistake.”
“You think highly
of this young Initiate, Brother So-tura. I begin to wish to make his
acquaintance.”
“Perhaps that will
become possible at some future time, Prefect. It is the Supreme Master’s
wish, for the time being, that we keep our meetings with Brother Shuyun
infrequent. It is important that Lord Shonto feel that his Spiritual Advisor is
truly his.”
“I only hope this
will not lead to…” the monk searched for a word, “… to
the willfulness we experienced with Brother Satake.”
“That is my hope
also, Prefect.”
“Hitara…
?” the Prefect said slowly. “It is not possible that he was an
imposter.” It did not seem to be a question, so Sotura did not respond.
“Is there not a Hitara in the Book of Illusion, Sotura-sum? I seem to
remember…” He trailed off, a look of confusion and then dismay at
his failure of memory.
“In the description
of the Divine Vale.” Sotura picked up the thread. “I had forgotten.
Hitara—he who died and was reborn. The
servant who served the Perfect Master faithfully when all others left for fear
of the Emperor. Hitara rose from the flames of his funeral pyre: It was as though he stepped from the mist, and though
the smoke and flames threatened to consume him, Hitara was untouched by them.
He was like one arising from a dreamless sleep. When told of the seven days he
had lain dead while his family mourned, he fell to his knees and offered up his
prayers. And his funeral became the celebration of his rebirth and the
celebration of his birth became the celebration of his life to be, for no other
man had known such a miracle.‘ ”
Both monks fell silent at
this. Rain fell on the tiles in the courtyard, washing away the hail that had
collected earlier. A knock rattled the inner shoji.
“Please
enter,” the Prefect said, surprised that his words came out in a near
whisper.
The shoji slid aside,
revealing an Initiate of the faith, head bowed to the mat.
“Initiate?”
the old man said, regaining his voice somewhat.
The young monk moved
forward and placed a small stand bearing a neatly folded letter within reach of
his superior, then retreated and waited in silence.
“Please excuse me,
Brother Sotura, I must attend to this.” He unfolded the crisp paper and
read quickly. The Prefect nodded as though acknowledging spoken words and
turned back to the attending Initiate. “He must be observed whenever
possible. I will receive daily reports.”
The messenger nodded,
bowed and retreated from the room, the screen closing behind him.
The Prefect turned to the
chi quan Master. “General Jaku Katta has entered Rhojo-ma. He comes in an
Imperial Barge, making one wonder at Brother Hutto’s recent news.”
Sotura paused for a
moment, reflecting. “The Son of Heaven has made no public gesture that
would indicate that Katta does not stand in the light of the Throne. But I have
found that one ignores Brother Hutto’s information at great risk.”
The older man nodded.
“I agree, Brother. Appearances mean little in the world of the Emperor.
He treats Lord Shonto as a great favorite, but only a fool would accept this as
the truth.”
“Jaku Katta in Seh…
this is a cause for concern. I find this too much like the opening of a game of
gü. There are too many pieces for one to see clearly. It is complicated
even more with tales of alleged barbarian armies. It is as though another
entire set of pieces waited to sweep onto the board at any second.”
Sotura met the Prefect’s eyes. “We must inform the Supreme Master
of these developments immediately.”
“Oh, certainly,
Brother Sctura. There is no question. I have only hesitated so that I may
decide how much credence to give your young protegees report.”
“Brother Shuyun did
not see the number of warriors that the encampment indicates, I agree, but I do
not think this was a barbarian ruse. As Shuyun-sum has said, riders from Seh
were unexpected there. I fear his information is horribly true, Prefect. I
propose that we send word to Brother Hutto and to the Supreme Master
immediately, and under both our signatures.”
“I am not certain,
Brother Sotura.” The older man seemed to return to his former state of
confusion. “It is so difficult to believe. An army of that size? How is
that possible? Even the barbarians are not bred from the sand. We would appear
to be alarmists at the very least if this army does not exist. I hesitate to
sign my name to a report that is based on so little information.”
“Excuse me,
Prefect, but may I remind you that Lord Shonto does not question what
Shuyun-sum reported.”
The old man shook his
head. “One can never know the true meaning of anything Lord Shonto says
or does, Brother. He is engaged in a struggle for his life and the future of
his House. If the Son of Heaven sent an army to Seh to save his Empire from the
barbarians and Lord Shonto could control that army… consider—the
balance in the Empire could be altered.” The Prefect gestured slowly
toward the walls as though they encompassed all of Wa.
“I do not profess
to know the secrets of this Shonto’s mind, Prefect, but I take nothing he
does or says at
its apparent value. We do
have a Brother in the Shonto House, however—a trusted advisor to the lord
himself.“
The Prefect’s
motion suddenly lost its flow and became almost stiff. “We have had a
trusted advisor in Shonto’s House before, excuse me for reminding you,
Brother, and he was more loyal to his lord than to his Order. We do not have
verifiable evidence of the size of the army in the desert. I should tell you
that this is not the first report of barbarian hordes I have heard.”
Sotura considered this
for some time. “If I send a warning to our superiors under my own
signature, what will the Prefect do?”
‘ ’I will
feel obliged to report that I am not convinced by Brother Shuyun’s
evidence.“
“Conflicting
reports will certainly ensure that no action is taken. If Shuyun’s
information is correct, there is little time for hesitation. Little time to
seek more information.”
“Excuse me for
saying so, Brother Sotura, but Lord Shonto’s Spiritual Advisor, for all
his abilities, is a young man and new to the north. No experience from all my
years in Seh would indicate that such an army could exist in the wastes. I do
not feel I would be acting as my position requires to give credence to
Shuyun-sum’s report.”
The old man seemed to
slump a little as though this rebuttal had taken all the energy of his ancient
spirit.
“I fear I have
tired you, Prefect. Please excuse me if I have destroyed your harmony.”
The chi quan master bowed. He rocked slowly back on his heels, a look of
concern registering on his face. I’m sorry, old man, Sotura thought, but
I cannot allow your fears to stop what must be done. There is more at stake
than your comfortable position. May Botahara forgive me.
Lady Nishima sat before a
low table looking at the design for a robe which her servants would embroider.
Only moments before, as was often the case, she had a melody in her mind, a
folk tune that a talented court composer had borrowed to create a composition
for the Imperial Sonsa troupe. But her visitor had disturbed her harmony and
the music faded away as
r
though the musicians in
her mind traveled off into the distance.
“It is of no
consequence to me, cousin,” Lady Nish-ima said, trying to keep her voice
even. “Jaku Katta could arrive at my door and I would not interrupt my
painting.”
The mere mention of
Jaku’s name brought back memories she would rather have left undisturbed.
She feared she colored with embarrassment, perhaps even shame, at the thought
of what had happened between her and Jaku when they last met. / went to his rooms, she whispered to herself.
Lady Kitsura Omawara
nodded in response. “I did not mean to suggest that you would be…
pleased by the news, cousin, I am merely the messenger.” She smiled the
smile that disarmed the coldest hearts.
“I did not mean to
be abrupt, Kitsu-sum. Please excuse me. I am thankful for your consideration in
this matter.” She tried a smile in return. Kitsura had not intended to
cause her discomfort, after all; Kitsura was entirely unaware of what had
happened between Jaku and herself. Deciding it would be best to change the
subject, Nishima observed, “You seem to be very well informed, Lady
Kitsura. Does Lord Shonto have this information? Or does he rely upon
you?”
“I’m quite
certain your esteemed father has all the information that I possess, ten times
over.” She looked down at her hands folded in her lap and began to turn a
delicate gold ring until the design had gone full circle. When Kitsura did not
look Nishima in the eye, it was a sign that she had been engaging in certain
activities that she believed her cousin disapproved of. “I simply wish to
keep us both informed. I have befriended certain members of your father’s
staff and often act as a confidante to them. After all, whom could they talk to
who would be more concerned for their lord’s welfare, except perhaps the
Lady Nishima?”
“I am not entirely
convinced that their lord would view these breaches of security quite so
benignly.” Nishima said this with feigned disapproval while she fought
the feelings of confusion that set her heart whirling. Despite
all efforts, she was
afraid that these feelings must show on her face. She tried to cover this with
words. “However, it is important to know as much as we can.”
“I agree entirely,
cousin. So much is hidden and yet everything that is important to us is in
danger of being lost.” She moved to the next ring, turning it a little
more urgently. “Do you think it’s possible that Lord Shonto could
be wrong? Could the Emperor’s general really be in disfavor at
court?”
Nishima took a last look
at the design and began to clean her brush. This would not be a brief interruption.
“I do not know Lord Shonto’s source of information at court,
Kitsu-sum, so I cannot judge. But my father has an uncanny ability to weigh
information on the scale of truth. It is worth noting that he does not speak of
Jaku’s present situation in absolute terms.”
“This is what
worries me, cousin. If Lord Shonto is right, then Jaku Katta’s fall from
favor and banishment are but a ploy to place the Guard Commander within our
circle of trust. But if Jaku has truly fallen, and one with so many ambitions could
certainly do so, then Lord Shonto cannot hope to win the Emperor’s
support to battle the barbarians through Jaku. This situation is of great
concern. It is as you have said; so much depends on so little knowledge.”
“If Jaku Katta
engineered the attempt on my father at Denji Gorge without the Emperor’s
approval, as Lord Shonto suspects, then it is possible that our handsome
general is not in favor.” Nishima pushed her table aside. “It is
all very confusing. Being sent north to restore order to the canal is hardly a
sign of disfavor.”
“Being sent to Seh
as its governor would not seem to indicate disfavor either, Nishi-sum.”
Kitsura held her ring up to the light, examining it carefully. “It is as
Brother Shuyun says; at the gü board an opponent’s design does not
need to be strong if you are unable to see it.”
“I did not realize
you discussed gü with Brother Shuyun,” Nishima said, her tone
registering something close to disapproval.
“Shuyun-sum has
been kind enough to instruct me in the intricacies of the board… and to
discuss matters of the spirit, also.”
The two women fell
silent. A distant thunder rumbled, like a far-off dragon. Rain beat on the
gravel border of the garden outside.
“Nishima-sum?”
Kitsura said quietly. “We must be absolutely certain of Jaku
Katta’s situation at court.”
Lady Nishima nodded. Yes,
she thought, and I must know what this man expects of me. She remembered the
last thing she had said to Jaku the night she had gone to his
quarters—they would speak in Seh. Now she did not know what they would
say.
“I think I know how
this can be done,” Kitsura said quietly, “though I fear you will
not approve.”
Sister Yasuko held the
paper up and blew gently on the ink, careful not to spread it. The dampness of
the evening invaded her rooms and she huddled close to the charcoal burner and
her single lamp. She blew again, careful not to spoil the fine brush work.
“There,” she
whispered and held the paper up to the lamp. It was a letter to her superior,
Prioress Saeja.
Honored Sister:
In this time of great doubt, I wish I had
better news. Our dear Sister, Morima-sum, shows little sign of improvement
since I last put brush to paper. She has times when her crises seems to be
passing, but the scrolls of the Brothers haunt her dreams still. We do not give
up hope, Sister. We do not give up hope.
The young Acolyte who accompanied
Morima-sum has not fared well. It pains me to report that she left us three
days ago. This was a tragedy, certainly, but nothing compared to the loss of a
Sister ofMorima’s abilities. Our young Acolyte had her own faith shaken
by the crises of Morima-sum and as she said to me; ‘ ’If the way is
too difficult for one such as Senior Sister Morima, how do I presume to walk
such a path?“ Perhaps she will return to us yet. I pray that this will be
so.
The rumor that Lord Shonto’s
Spiritual Advisor went into the desert in the company of Lord
Komawara seems, incredibly, to be true.
Our friend in the Governor’s Palace tells us that Shonto is convinced a
large barbarian army will attack Seh in the spring. We can neither prove nor
disprove the theory at this time, but if Governor Shonto and his staff believe
this, it is my opinion that our Order should act as though there were no doubt.
When I think of the suffering that a war
would bring and how it would affect our own efforts, my heart grows heavy. We
always hope calamity will not overtake us in this lifetime, rather like
children trying to avoid difficult lessons. But they must be learned: if not
now, later.
Jaku Katta arrived today. It will be
difficult to place someone close to him, but be assured our efforts will be
tireless. We have a trusted friend close to the Lady Nishima, however, and will
certainly know if she continues to correspond with the Emperor’s guard
commander.
At this time Lord Shonto’s daughter
seeks her companionship with the Ladies Kitsura Omawara and Okara Haroshu,
although the Shonto Spiritual Advisor is also one of her regular visitors—occasionally staying in her rooms later than could be
considered strictly proper: I know no more at this time.
There have been no cases of plague
reported in Seh for several months now, for which we may thank the Botahist
Brothers even if they have done little else worthy of praise. Chiba has not
been so fortunate, I am told. The many followers of Tomso in that province have
suffered terribly.
The rumor that the Uduntbara blossomed
(Botahara be praised, Sister!), is not given credence in Seh—it is a rumor all have heard many times before—and, as you predicted, the Brotherhood have denied it.
I find nothing in all the Brotherhood’s treacherous history as
disconcerting as this denial. If an Enlightened Master walks among us, why do
they deny it? I am cold with fear over this.
Work on the Priory goes well and at less
expense than we dared hope: Botahara watches over us. I would inquire of your
well-being, Prioress, but I know the polite response. I, too, am well enough to
serve His Purpose.
May Botahara chant your name, Sister
Yasuko
I
Two
Distant hills rise up Through an
Peaks become islands
In a chaos of pale crested seas
The erratic spatter of
snow-melt on the undergrowth seemed to grow progressively louder. Lord
Koma-wara tugged at the reins and moved his mare another twenty paces into the
mist, stopped, and listened for the hundredth time.
Deep in the mist that had
hung for days in the Jai Lung Hills it was impossible to determine the origin
of sounds. They echoed and distorted and seemed to emanate from everywhere at
once.
Komawara turned in a
complete circle, a motion almost as slow as Brother Shuyun practicing his
meditations of movement. Nothing… only the suggestion of mysterious
forms: to his right a twisted, pointing limb perhaps belonging to an ancient
pine; behind him, an outcropping of rock suggesting the face of a disapproving
Mountain God.
Shifting the horse-bow to
his right hand Komawara worked the fingers, cramped from holding a notched
arrow for far too long. He returned the bow to the ready position and moved
forward ten paces more, listening.
Years had passed since
Komawara had last hunted the Jai Lung Hills—in company with his father
then, when the old man still had strength to ride. Much had changed, more than
he ever expected.
There were bandits in the
hills now. Holdings had seen
their gates battered down
in the night and only armed parties would chance the roads.
The lord stopped again,
listening as Shuyun had taught when they traveled in the desert. Armor bit into
Koma-wara’s shoulder blade where the leather shirt had worn through, his
left hand cramped again, his boots oozed when he walked, and his horse favored
her right forefoot. If that was not enough, he was also hopelessly separated
from his companions and had only the vaguest notion of where he was. A soft
drizzle fell, slowly soaking into the lacings of his light armor. He listened.
Snow, heavy with rain,
slipped from a tree branch and fell in a sodden pile at the lord’s feet,
causing his horse to shy. That, Komawara realized, was a true indication of the
turmoil of his spirit—his mare had sensed it, had caught it in fact.
Every few seconds the same soft thudding could be heard somewhere out in the
fog.
He moved forward, then
paused, straining to hear. Was that the sound of a horse, far off? The creaking
of a tree distorted by the distance, by the imagination?
Komawara tried to stretch
the tension out of his back and shoulders. In a fog there could be more to fear
than brigands: his own men he trusted, but the local men who had joined the
hunt for bandits suffered in a silence of poorly hidden fear. Men quickly lost
their inner calm in fog such as this. It was as Shuyun had said, robbed of
sight, every sound became a threat—even a falling lump of snow would be
in danger from an arrow quickly loosed. The arrow from an ally ended more lives
in battle than men would speak of.
Ten paces forward. Stop.
Listen.
And then, among all the
thousand imagined sounds, unmistakably, the thud of hooves on stone. His own
mount pricked up her ears. Komawara jigged at the bit and pulled her nose up to
his cheek.
“Shh,” he
whispered as though she understood. Three paces put them among a stand of
long-needled pines. The lord pulled the reins over the mare’s head and
made her lie down, saddle and bags still in place. Automatically testing his
sword in its scabbard, he crouched down, intent on becoming part of his
surroundings.
Horses moving, the scrape
of loose rock shifting, the creaking of leather. Komawara drew the arrow back
by
half. A horse stumbled
and a man’s voice could be heard making comforting sounds, but the words
were not clear.
Where? Komawara turned
his head from side to side, certain at first that the sound came from uphill,
then equally sure its source was to his right.
He listened for a voice
he might know. Be still, he told himself, let them pass, they would be easy to
track in this snow. They’ll make camp at dusk and it will be easy to find
out who they are. But even as he gave himself this advice, he saw a movement in
the mist not twenty paces away. A dark form in the blinding white. Moving
toward him? Away? He tried to catch any hint of color, a familiar silhouette. A
man on foot, walking slowly. Komawara almost stood for a better view, so
surprised was he by the sight: dark beard on a face tanned to leather by
relentless wind and sun, a vest of doeskin over light mail. A barbarian! A barbarian warrior leading a horse through the Jai
Lung Hills.
Komawara sank lower as
the man picked his way up the slope toward him. Behind the walker came others,
their size amplified by the fog. Knowing that a man could look directly at him
in this fog and see nothing, Komawara held himself utterly still. His mare
shifted, he could almost feel her quiver. Do not move, he willed her, make no
sound. Concentrating on stillness, he found himself controlling his breathing,
forcing his muscles to relax.
The barbarians turned to
Komawara’s right and made their way across the slope, led by the man on
foot who searched out the path between the trees and rock. Sixteen armed men
and they did not have the look of the hunted.
Is it possible they do
not know we pursue them? And then he felt reality waver for an instant. Cold
awareness. No, there were no wounded, no riderless mounts. It was impossible
that they could have escaped a meeting with Komawara’s guard unscathed,
of that he was certain.
The last man of the party
disappeared into the fog less than a stone’s throw away and Komawara let
out a long held breath. Barbarians in the Jai Lung Hills! Bandits suddenly
seemed an insignificant threat—a mere annoyance. Barbarians in the Jai Lung Hills!
The lord waited,
listening as the creak of leather and the clatter of hooves faded. Looking
around at the sha-dowless light he wondered how long it would be until
darkness fell. He thought
often of his companions, twenty of his guard and half as many local men,
wandering somewhere in the mist. They were well enough armed, as one would
expect of men of Seh, but they were not fully armored.
Komawara had made a
careful assessment of the men who had passed into the fog—they traveled
light—little armor in evidence and only short bows and swords. They would
carry skinning knives also, they always did. Weapons well chosen for fighting
in the hills. He wished Shu-yun was with him for there was no telling what his
powers of observation might have added.
Komawara took up the
reins and coaxed his mount to her feet. He began to follow. The footing in the
melting snow was treacherous to leather soles, but the young lord chose to walk
all the same. The mare would carry him, she had heart enough for that, but he
preferred to give her a chance to recover—and walking allowed him to
examine at first hand the barbarians’ tracks in what appeared to be
fading light.
The occasional distorted
echo of horses passing came out of the fog and Komawara soon found the trail
led out onto a narrow road that wound its way around the shoulder of the hill.
Although this seemed vaguely familiar to him, Komawara was still not sure where
he was.
Here and there hoofprints
remained clear in the snow and a closer examination stopped Komawara abruptly.
He’d watched the barbarians pass and not even marked that they rode horses, and fine ones, too. They rode horses like men of
Seh—like bandits or barbarian chieftains! The horse was not adapted to
life in the steppe and desert and was replaced there by the barbarian’s
hardy pony.
“Barbarians,”
Komawara whispered. And here he was, an advisor to the Imperial Governor,
separated from his companions and lost in the hills. That would be a prize for
a barbarian chieftain! If they had any idea that a man with intimate knowledge
of the governor’s plans wandered the hills alone, they would be searching
the very clouds for him even now.
The Komawara who advised
a governor knew that he acted rashly, but the young lord who was bora and
raised to the ways of the north could not ignore a threat to his
province. It was
opportunities like this that men of Seh prayed for—poems were made of
such exploits, songs sung in the Governor’s Palace and in the court of
the Emperor.
The sound of falling
water echoed out of the mist, how near, it was impossible to know. The
barbarians’ trail suddenly broke out of the trees and ran onto a wider
path between the tall pines and cedars, their shapes barely suggested in the
fog.
Walking in the clouds,
Komawara thought, and then he found himself stepping onto a wooden bridge over
a narrow stream. A small pool formed upstream and feeding that a twisting
ribbon of white, falling water appeared like mist that had acquired density and
weight.
A breeze stirred his
horse’s mane and began to move the surrounding fog in chaotic patterns.
Out of the mist a granite wall formed above him and the smell of horses seemed
to mingle with the odors of rotting vegetation and the indescribable smell of
snow-melt.
The young lord brought
his mount up sharp before her hooves drummed on the wooden planks. Would they
make camp by the water? He backed her up five paces and dropped the reins to
the ground. The faint breeze pushed holes in the mist—holes that opened
like pupils for mere seconds and then swirled closed. It was like looking
through a blowing curtain: a glimpse of something, then gone.
Komawara moved back to
the bridge, straining to hear above the sound of falling water. The tracks of
the barbarians became confused here and Komawara realized they had stopped to
water .horses at the pool. He crossed the bridge as silently as he could and
discovered the trail leading on: there was no place to make camp.
Komawara followed the
barbarians’ lead and watered his mount, drinking himself and filling his
water skin. It was growing noticeably darker now and despite the breeze moving
through the mist, visibility would soon be left to one’s imagination
alone. There would no longer be a trail to follow. Komawara realized he would
have to close the gap with his quarry or lose them in the darkness.
I have to give up this
hope that my companions will overtake me, he told himself, it slows me and fosters
indecision. He pressed
on, leading his mount at a faster pace. The bow went back to the saddle and he
kept his right hand free for his sword; at the pace he traveled now he would be
upon someone in this mist before realizing it.
The young lord found himself
wishing Brother Shuyun was with him, as he had been at Denji Gorge and in the
desert. The Botahist monk did not seem to need his sight in the darkness and
Komawara was sure this cloud would offer no greater challenge than the desert
night. As well as possessing uncanny hearing, Komawara suspected that Shuyun
could sense other living beings, could feel their presence. He senses chi, the young lord thought, whatever that might mean.
Despite his imminent
danger Komawara found his focus slipping. He found himself wondering about the
Lady Nishima and her cousin, Lady Kitsura Omawara. Since their arrival in Seh
he had spoken with them only once, but he was left with a strong impression.
Compared to the ladies of the Capital, even the most sought after women of Seh
seemed like the unaccomplished daughters of peasant farmers. Komawara feared
that, having seen women of true culture and great beauty, he would have little
hope of a happy life with the match he would likely make.
Another clump of falling
snow brought him back to matters at hand. He could no longer see the barbarian
tracks. Darkness had become complete. Bending close to the ground and feeling
lightly with his hand, he discovered that the trail had not merely been hidden
by darkness—it was gone.
An owl hooted somewhere
in the mist. A dark-wing rattled its bill. They must have left the trail not
far behind, he thought. By Botahara! the young lord found himself almost
whispering, what if I have passed close to them in the mist? He whirled around
and half drew his sword without intending to, convinced that barbarian warriors
stalked him. Calming his heart with an effort, Komawara listened for what he
feared most: the small sounds of armored men attempting to move in silence.
Waiting without the
tiniest movement until his muscles ached, Komawara decided finally that the
barbarians remained unaware of him. He began to retrace his steps,
counting them
consciously. Five paces, then stop; listen. He searched the ground as best he
could, his hands beginning to ache from the cold of the wet snow and melt
water. Five paces more.
The tracks reappeared.
Komawara could feel the depressions made by many hooves in the soft mud.
Following them carefully, he found a path branching off down the slope into the
black curling mist.
He searched about in the
darkness until his hand encountered a sapling to which he tethered his horse,
hoping she would not spook when he left her. As a precaution he took his
saddlebags from her back and set them out of reach of her hooves, praying that
he would be able to find them again. Opening one bag he found some bread that
was not yet soaked and ate, crouched in the darkness and light rain. The
barbarians would be forced to make a camp nearby, he thought, they are as blind
as I in this darkness and fog.
He listened. The sounds
of the Jai Lung Hills surrounded him: creaking trees, meltwater running into
streams. An owl called again and the lord wondered if it truly was an owl. But
nothing seemed amiss; there were no sounds that rang untrue to this place nor
was there an unnatural silence. The tribesmen are part of their world, even
here, he thought.
Finishing his bread
Komawara set off to follow the track, now crouching, now on all
fours—fighting an absurd fear that he would come upon a sleeping man in
the darkness, discovering too late that he had blundered into the barbarian
encampment. But this was not to be. The sounds of voices came to him and then,
unmistakably, the smell of smoke.
Komawara stopped again.
What would he do now? If the fog lifted in the morning, he could go looking for
his guard, but the barbarians might well disappear while he searched. The lord
was not confident that they could track the tribesmen, especially if they did
not wish to be followed. Bandits, he thought, and snorted. Bandits indeed.
He moved toward the
voices. I will watch them for now, he told himself, and make decisions when I
know what they will do at sunrise.
The barbarians made their
camp in an opening amidst the pines, a rock outcropping on one side giving
protec-
tion from prevailing
winds. Even before he could see the light, he could hear the hissing of wet
wood as it steamed and smoked on the fire. Komawara felt his hunger waken as
the smell of cooking came to him. They poach the Emperor’s deer, he found
himself thinking, and almost smiled at his reaction.
Hiding himself behind
fractured rocks, the lord lowered himself to the wet ground, prepared for a
long vigil but not sitting in a manner that would prevent him from rising
quickly. He could see the barbarian encampment now. There were two fires
burning, and men cooked at each. Crude shelters had been made of what appeared
to be the roofs of the tents the wandering tribesmen called homes. Komawara
knew this material—tough and, when treated with the boiled sap of the
tekko root, virtually waterproof.
The men drank something
which steamed in their bowls and though they were subdued, the lord realized
they were all at least slightly intoxicated.
No one stood watch, not
yet, not while the entire party was still awake. Later, no doubt, they would
place sentries, but at this point it was clear that these were men who did not
realize they were hunted.
The hunter looked on,
unnoticed in the darkness; more than a little envious of the men who drank warm
liquor and would soon be eating.
I must remain still,
Komawara told himself, or I will quickly become the hunted. He made himself
follow a simple breathing exercise that Brother Shuyun had taught him, but his
heart would not slow to a resting pace and he realized his muscles remained
knotted.
A hard, cold point pushed
into the back of his neck and a voice, heavy with the accent of the desert,
whispered close to his ear; “Be very still, Lord. Be also quiet.”
The scene before Komawara
seemed to disappear and all that remained was a dark man-shape on the periphery
of his vision. The fire flared briefly and Komawara felt sweat break out on his
brow. They use fire to question their captives, Komawara thought, before
letting them die.
Suddenly the pressure of
the knife disappeared. “Brother Shuyun sends the Kalam with message.
Friend,“ the voice
whispered again. And then Brother Shuyun’s servant, the tribesman who had
become their guide in the desert, slipped down beside the astonished lord.
Komawara let out a long
breath and then found himself almost immediately hot with anger.
“Why… ?” He reached back, feeling for blood.
The tribesman shrugged.
“You see desert man in darkness, how can you know it is the Kalam? You
take your sword and I die and these,” he gestured toward the men
clustered around the fire, “hear and make hunt Lord Komawara.” He shrugged,
then turned his attention to the tribesmen and said nothing more for some time.
“How did you find
me?”
“My guard are
lost,” he said, waving a hand at the darkness. Then, pointing at the
barbarians, “I find them. Find you.”
“Who?”
Komawara whispered. “What do they do here?”
The Kalam seemed about to
answer, but then he shook his head and Komawara could see him struggling with
the language—missing his translator, Brother Shuyun.
“In desert…
dragon bones… ”He shook his head again, showing frustration.
“Ama-Haji?”
Komawara offered.
The tribesman nodded: he
seemed surprised Komawara remembered, as though the separation caused by
language somehow isolated their experiences as well. “Ama-Haji, yes. Men
of the Dragon.” He fell silent again, searching.
“The followers of
the Khan,” Komawara said.
The young barbarian shook
his head in frustration. “No, no. The men of the dragon… these
men,” he said pointing. “They come to find… to look. The eyes
of the dragon,” he said and pointed again.
“Ah,”
Komawara heard himself say, though he was not sure he grasped what his
companion meant.
They fell silent then,
turning their attention back to the barbarians who had begun to eat and
continued to drink. The conversation had not grown louder and though it was
punctuated by occasional laughter, it was subdued laughter.
r
Komawara
whispered, “from
“The message,
Shuyun-sum?”
The Kalam nodded.
“Yes.” He paused as if remembering. “A warrior… great
warrior comes—Daku Kaita.”
“Jaku Katta.”
Komawara corrected. “General Jaku Katta.”
“Yes,” the
tribesman nodded. “General means great warrior?”
“Yes,” Komawara
agreed, “very great. Is he here now? In Seh now?”
An outburst of laughter
brought their attention back to the men before them.
“In Seh,” the
Kalam said, “yes.”
“Ah.”
Komawara whispered, but if he meant to say more it was lost.
There was a wild cry and
armored men burst out of the trees, falling on the barbarians with drawn
swords. Komawara jumped to his feet and drew his own blade but then stopped and
grabbed his companion. “You must stay here!” He shouted into the
Kalam’s face. “My men will not know you!”
The young tribesman
nodded, but Komawara saw him draw his sword all the same.
There was no more time.
The battle before him was pitched and though they had the element of surprise
it was quickly apparent that the men of Seh were few in number. Komawara dashed
the ten steps to the struggle and cut down a barbarian who was about to finish
a man who had fallen. Not waiting to see if the man would rise, he leapt at
another. They crossed swords briefly and then this man also fell.
A soldier in full cavalry
armor, green-laced, turned on Komawara and the lord had to parry a blow before
his opponent realized he was not a barbarian.
But before Komawara could
find another opponent, his head seemed to explode and he found himself on his
knees, fumbling with his sword, slashing his hand on the blade. The green-laced
warrior jumped past him and Komawara watched him engage a man swinging a staif.
Komawara struggled to his feet in time to deflect a stroke from an enormous
tribesman.
The lord found himself
being driven back now, his
famed reflexes and
tactics dulled by the blow to his head. A second barbarian joined in, close on
his right, forcing Komawara to parry. The larger of his opponents lunged at
this opening and he tensed, waiting for the point to find him. But the pain did
not come. Instead, the barbarian seemed to freeze and then his knees buckled as
he was run through on the sword of another tribesman.
Komawara saw the Kalam
pull his blade free, but that glance almost cost the lord his arm. The man he
battled now sensed his present state and was intent on taking the weakened
lord’s life before he could recover.
Komawara found his vision
blurring and kept shaking his head, hoping to clear it. The firelight did not
seem to be helping. One second it would catch his opponent’s blade, but
as the sword moved and offered a different plane to the light it would appear
and disappear, causing Komawara great confusion. “Watch his hands,”
Komawara said aloud, reminding himself of lessons he had received from his
father. In failing light watch
the hands, they will tell you what the sword does.
Digging deep into his
experience, the young lord searched for something that would save him, for he
could not last long as things were. The man would soon find a hole in his
defense.
He overreaches, Komawara
thought and changed the movement of his retreat so he stepped back first with
his left leg. The man parried and lunged, point first at Ko-mawara’s
chest. The lord swayed and turned away but not quickly enough, and he felt the
point slip into his side through the gap in the armor under his left arm. But
even as he felt the barbarian’s steel, Komawara’s own sword caught
the man under the chin and it was over. The point wrenched free of the
lord’s side as the man collapsed at his feet.
Komawara was barely able
to keep his feet, and his vision narrowed to a dark tunnel.
Only a few men stood,
scattered about the encampment—but they were all men of Seh, green-laced
like the one who had saved him. They seemed to be staring at him, but Komawara
did not know why. Slowly Komawara became aware of a ringing of swords to his
left and he turned that way in horror. The Kalam fought two men in green and a
third was coming to their aid.
“No,”
Komawara said, but the shout came out as a whisper. He turned to intervene and
almost fell. “No,” he whispered again. Blood appeared on the
Kalam’s shoulder and quickly turned his arm red.
Komawara lifted his own
sword and his vision blurred. With all his remaining strength he swung and took
a sword out of one man’s hands. Parrying now, he put himself between the
men of Seh and his former guide.
“No,” he said
weakly, “he is mine.”
The men before him
hesitated, but none lowered their swords. They stared at him and Komawara could
not read the questions in their eyes.
“And who are you
that you claim this murderer as your own?‘’
Komawara looked at these
warriors now and realized that the blow to his head had affected his judgment.
These were not the locals who had joined his guard. They wore armor of good
quality, well used, and laced in green. There was no family nearby that wore
this color. The Kalam reached out and gripped his shoulder.
“I am Komawara
Samyamu and this man is my servant.”
Other men gathered before
him and Komawara realized that there was no escape into the trees now. He was
barely able to stand as it was.
The men in their green
lacing looked from one to the other and there were protests and harsh words in
low voices. Komawara heard someone curse.
“Lord Komawara, you
keep unusual company,” the man before him spoke. He pulled back his face
mask and gave a half bow, removing his helmet. A man behind him stepped
forward.
“Lieutenant, I saw
a barbarian cut down one of his own kind—a barbarian who was attacking
Lord Komawara. It surely was this man.”
The one addressed as a
lieutenant nodded his head. “Excuse my manners, Lord Komawara, I am
Narihira Chisato, late of Lord Hajiwara Harita’s cavalry.”
By Botahara, Komawara
thought, the green lacing-yes! The Hajiwara. The house I helped bring down at
Denji Gorge. Against his will Komawara lowered his sword as he felt his arms
were about to start shaking.
Blood soaked his side now
and a glance told him that the Kalam was faring no better than he.
Komawara returned the
man’s bow with a nod. “Lieutenant. I do not know your purpose, but
my own men are nearby. We search these hills for brigands. Yet the hills, it
seems, are full of surprises. I wish to thank you for your assistance in
bringing down our enemy.”
“Even as you
assisted in the fall of our lord’s house?” another man said
bitterly. The lieutenant raised his hand and silence returned.
“Lord Komawara, as
you might imagine, the fall of the Hajiwara House has left us feeling…
some resentment to those who brought about our misfortune. And though Lord
Shonto and… his allies were instrumental in this, we realize that it was
a betrayal by others that led to our lord’s fall. We honor his memory.
“It is the opinion
of those with experience in such matters that our liege-lord did not make the
wisest decision when he agreed to oppose Lord Shonto. Please realize that our
anger in this matter is reserved for others. Lord Shonto could not have acted
other than he did. Nor could you as his loyal ally. You are injured, Sire, and
though we do not understand the service of this man it is obviously your
prerogative.” He bowed again, lower this time.
“We will put up our
swords and see to our wounded. I would look to your own injuries myself, Lord
Komawara. I have some skill in this.”
Although there were dark
looks among some of the Hajiwara men, swords were sheathed and men turned back
to the fires. Komawara and the Kalam sheathed their own weapons and then
supported each other over the few steps to the fireside. The lord collapsed
close to the warmth, glad of it, for he found himself deeply cold. His ears
still rang from the blow to his head and he was dizzy and weak.
Beside him he heard the
tribesman dry heave. He has lost blood, Komawara thought, and he felt hands
begin to remove his laced mail and then cut away the side of his leather shirt.
He felt removed from his surroundings, as though everything he heard and felt
came from far away. Vaguely he heard a report of two deaths and found himself
hoping they were not his own guard.
Sleep. Komawara
desperately wanted to sleep. He tried to shake his head, but his muscles did
not seem to. respond. Beside him the Kalam seemed so distant Komawara wondered
how he had done that when, only a moment before, they had been within an
arm’s length. And then there was darkness.
When Komawara awoke, he
did not know where he was or how long he’d been sleeping. The bed he lay in
was soft and smelled of the forest. Pine boughs, he realized, and pulled
the covering of deerskin closer about him. The fires still burned and men sat
close to the warmth, faces out to the darkness, swords in hand.
Hajiwara, he remembered,
Hajiwara’s men. On the run now, without a House. Marked by the Butto and
their feud. He shook his head. Probing his side, he found it wrapped in
silk and damp from a small bloodstain. Not serious, he thought, but his head
still rang and the men sitting at the fire kept blurring and doubling. Bandits,
he thought, brigands in the Jai Lung Hills. He fell into a troubled sleep.
The mist was as thick
when Komawara awoke as it had been when he followed the barbarians. Men stirred
in the camp and Komawara smelled both cha and food. The ringing in his ears had
largely disappeared to be replaced by a deep throbbing throughout one side of
his head, extending down as far as his shoulder. He lay still for some time and
then stirred himself to sit up. This caused his vision to tunnel but he braced
himself and it passed. Someone crossed to him, bending to help him rise. The
Kalam looked greatly relieved as he took Komawara’s arm. The tribesman
helped the lord with his soft riding boots and Komawara had to shake him off so
he could walk the four paces to the fire himself.
“You are good, yeh?
Good?” the Kalam kept asking and smiling.
Komawara nodded and
lowered himself onto a rock set near the flames. Sitting alone with the
Hajiwara men had obviously not been a comfortable situation and even now men
cast unfriendly glances at the barbarian. The lieutenant bent over one of the
wounded, but when he saw Komawara he rose and crossed the clearing toward him.
“Lord
Komawara,” the lieutenant bowed and offered a cup of cha which Komawara received
gratefully. “We hope you are somewhat recovered. The wound in your side
does not appear to be serious, but I am concerned about the blow you took to
the side of your head. Is your vision clear? Do you feel unsteady or
ill?” The man stared at the lord with a look of concern and Komawara
noticed the man’s glance stray up to Komawara’s short
hair—the mark of his time as Brother Shuyun’s Botahist companion.
Whatever questions the man had in his mind he kept to himself.
“I’m sure
I will be well shortly, lieutenant. Thank you for the care and for the
attention you have shown to my guide.” Bandits, Komawara thought again.
Brigands.
The lieutenant waved
at one of his men and food came the lord’s way. He ate quietly and when
he had finished and was sipping cha the lieutenant returned.
“We have been
wondering, lord, what you might know of these barbarians—of their
purpose.”
Komawara nodded but
said nothing. What goes on here, he asked himself. What were these tribesmen
doing in the Jai Lung Hills? Eyes of the Dragon, the Kalam had said. Eyes of the Dragon?
“These
barbarians are of a sect, I believe, a sect that venerates the Dragon.”
Komawara offered no more, waiting, hoping the lieutenant would say something
that would help him understand what transpired. But the Hajiwara man offered
nothing.
Komawara tried again.
“You will find on their persons a gold impression of the dragon
embossed…” He stopped as the lieutenant held out a small gold figure
on a chain.
“This?”
the lieutenant asked.
The Kalam made a
warding sign and drew away.
“Yes,”
Komawara said. He took the figure in his hand against the protests of his
guide. It was not the embossed coin he had seen before but a tiny figure
of ornate beauty. The same dragon to be sure, the dragon of Ama-Haji,
but not the primitive depiction the barbarian raider had carried.
The Hajiwara
lieutenant cleared his throat. “Lord Komawara, you must realize that we
have come to Seh to escape the Butto. We have not done this from fear but
because we have an oath
to fullfil. Please do not ask its nature for I may not speak of it.
“There were eleven
of us when we crossed the border… now we are nine.” He looked around
at his companions who began to draw nearer. “We have lived in these hills
for some weeks now and, as you have no doubt guessed, our actions here have not
always followed the most honorable course. Of this we are not proud.” He
paused then as if to gauge Komawara’s reaction. The lord of Seh said
nothing. The lieutenant went on.
“We happened upon
the barbarians some days ago,” he began, but a moan from one of the
wounded drew his attention. A man rose immediately and went to see to this
companion. “We happened upon them by accident and we have watched their
camp since.
“We did not pursue
the barbarians for any personal gain but only because they are the ancient
enemy of our people and because there are rumors that they grow in strength
again. Yet now we find ourselves in a most difficult position, Sire.” He
nodded to his men who had gathered around them and two stepped forward bearing
a leather saddlebag between them. They set it down at Komawara’s feet and
pulled open the flap.
Coins glinted in the pale
light as only gold could do. An entire saddlebag brimming with gold coins!
Komawara reached forward
and took up one of the coins—square, finely minted with the round hole in
its center.
“Here is more money
than, together, we could have dreamed of seeing in a lifetime. It is most
unfortunate, however, that we should find this now, for we are men who have
lost our honor. Men who are hunted, not just by the family that murdered our
lord…”He shrugged and shook his head, started to speak, then stopped
again. He shook his head once more and went on.
“This gold can
never profit us, Lord Komawara. There is nowhere we could go that this past we
have made will not finally pursue us. Nor is there a way to escape our own
knowledge of our recent errors. Karma…” He shrugged. “No,
this gold will only tempt us from our chosen path.
“What we wish to
ask you, Lord Komawara, is that you take this gold and compensate those we have
wronged.“ He looked
down at the saddlebag. ”If that is not too much to ask.‘’
Such a plain bag, Komawara
found himself thinking.
“And you will do
what?” Komawara asked, not taking his eye from the gold—more gold
than his entire holdings were worth—many times more.
“As you slept,
Sire, we spoke. It is clear that under any other circumstances what we did yesterday
would have been considered a service to our Empire. I believe it is true to
surmise that, considering this great treasure we have found, we would have been
richly rewarded. But in our present situation this cannot be. There is a
certain irony in this. Rather like the plight of Shubuta when he was tricked by
the Goddess of Greed.” He gave half a laugh.
“So all that is
left to us is an oath that we swore when our House fell. It will guide us
now.”
Komawara thought for some
time, staring into the fire.
“I do not know the
exact nature of this oath, though it is obvious what it must be. Do you wish to
revenge yourself upon my ally, Lord Shonto, or members of his staff?”
“No, Lord
Komawara.”
“Who would offer
you service, lieutenant, if this oath would endanger their own House?”
“A House with the
same enemies, Sire.”
“Huh.”
Komawara tossed the coins
back into the bag. “It is not within my power to release those who have
broken the laws of our Empire, but as you say, you have performed a service and
it should not go unrewarded. Can you swear that carrying out this oath will not
endanger the purpose of my House or my allies?”
The lieutenant looked
around the group. “We are patient, Lord Komawara. We can wait until such
a time as we would not endanger the Komawara House.”
The lord nodded and
returned his attention to the fire. His head throbbed. Forcing himself to sit,
not slump, Komawara met the lieutenant’s eye. “Then will you
exchange your green for the colors of the Komawara house?”
There was a low murmur
among the Hajiwara men and they gathered about the lord and their lieutenant.
“You would offer
this knowing that we are hunted by the Butto and aware of our recent
actions?”
“Lieutenant
Narihira, I saw men fight the enemy of our Empire knowing that it would profit
them not at all. You could have easily ridden by—what do you owe the Emperor?
Men who would act so are men of honor, of this I have no doubt.”
The lieutenant withdrew
to confer with his men, leaving the Kalam and Lord Komawara to share food.
The Hajiwara men were not
gone long.
“Lord
Komawara,” the lieutenant began, “we have weighed your words and we
know that this offer is more than any of us had ever dared hope for. We were
resigned to living without House or honor. Yet there is the matter of the
Butto. They have sworn an oath to hunt down all of my lord’s followers,
sparing none. You would be standing between the Butto and ourselves and we
cannot allow this.”
Komawara smiled.
“Lieutenant, the Butto believe they owe the Komawara a debt that they
cannot repay in one hundred lifetimes. I think I can trade part of this debt
for your lives… in return for your sworn service, of course.”
“If this is as you
say, Lord Komawara, then I may speak for all of us. We would be honored to wear
the colors of the House of Komawara.”
The Hajiwara men knelt
before him and, one by one, laid their swords at his feet.
After this was done, Lord
Komawara stood with difficulty. “It is good that you have proven that you
can fight our enemies, for there is war awaiting us. Of this, have no doubt. In
this war we must stand shoulder to shoulder with those we would consider
enemies… or we will fall. And more than Seh will fall with us.”
Komawara looked at the men standing before him. Do they believe what I say? he
wondered. It hardly mattered. They would believe soon enough.
“What has happened
in this glade must never be spoken of. You have seen no barbarians in these
hills. You must never say differently. I have rewarded you with service to the
Komawara for dispatching the bandits who have threatened us, and also for
saving my life. No one will question this. But the graves must be hidden so
that
no one can ever suspect
otherwise. Likewise, you must say nothing of this gold. I do not claim it for
my own but will give it to the Imperial Governor, for it was carried by these
barbarians for purposes that I cannot speak of. When we arrive at my lands, you
will be honored for vanquishing the bandits in these hills, and in a way this
is the truth.“ He smiled.
“We must go down
out of the hills now. There is much that we must do.”
Three
The ships set off in
driving rain, heeled to a cold west wind, their sails reefed so small it seemed
impossible that they would weather the headland. Yet they made way, if not
quickly at least steadily.
Lord Shonto Shokan sat
his horse on a high cliff and watched the ships pass. He raised his arm once,
not at all sure he could be seen, and waved slowly. Turning his mount, he
picked his way down the track that ran along the cliff edge. He didn’t
wish to keep Tanaka out on deck in this terrible weather, for the old man must
stay at the rail until the son of his liege-lord was unquestionably lost to
sight—anything less would be an unforgivable insult. After all, Shokan
had ridden to the headland to see the older man on his way, paying him a great
honor. Honor, Tanaka deserved—protracted suffering, he did not.
If Shokan had known, he
would have been less anxious to leave, for Tanaka stood at the rail staring up
at the distant rider and the streaks on his face were not all from the rain and
salt spray. He looks much like his father did at that age, the merchant was
thinking. And he is as dear to me.
Tanaka watched as the
figure in Shonto blue waved and then turned back along the cliff, followed by
three guards. So few, Tanaka thought, it’s almost as if there were no
danger.
The young Lord Shonto
worked his way down to a stretch where the cliff path turned flat and broad and
pressed his mount into a canter. He was delighted, as always, by the
stallion’s motion. He had brought the animal back with him from Seh, and
it had survived the voyage, first by river and then by sea, without apparent
harm to body or spirit.
Seh… It was that
province and his father’s situation
to which his thoughts
constantly returned. Tanaka’s visit had been most unsettling, adding fuel
to the slow kindling of fear that had been smoldering since his father’s
most recent letter.
As he had feared all
along, there was more hidden in the wastelands than the proud men of Seh would
admit possible. And now this news from Tanaka.
He spurred his horse up a
steeper rise, hooves throwing clods of soft turf as they went. Reining in, he
turned back to the sea and took longer than he expected to catch sight of the
small fleet disappearing into the sheets of rain that shrouded the entire
Late, late in the season
for such folly. Shokan turned his mount toward the
Reaching down a heavily
gloved hand, Shokan patted the stallion’s shoulder as a sudden gust
whipped its un-plaited mane into a tangle. His father did not believe that Seh
could be held. He shuddered though he was not cold.
Did the Emperor know that
all that stood between his Imperial person and the loss of his throne to a
barbarian chieftain was Shonto Motoru? Shokan supposed that he did not.
If Shonto abandoned the
north and fell back to the south, how long could he keep control of the army he
was raising? Surely the Son of Heaven would order him to step down from his
command in shame the moment he crossed the border of Seh. Shokan had not liked
the tone of his father’s last letter. Staying in control of the army long
enough to defeat the invaders had seemed to be his father’s only concern.
Wa is in danger as never before. We
cannot be swayed by desires for revenge upon those who have allowed this to come
about. It is not a question of losing our fief or Shonto honor—we are in
danger of losing the entire Empire.
So his father had written
and Shokan did not doubt it for a moment. .
There would be no support
from the Emperor, and the men of Seh seemed equally blind to their plight and
might well remain so until it was too late. My father needs an army, Shokan
thought, he needs the largest force the Empire can raise, yet that is
impossible. He fought off the bitterness and anger that had been growing since
his visit from Tanaka.
He tried to replace this
bitterness with the feelings of affection he felt for their vassal-merchant.
Tanaka sailed into more danger than winter storms. If Lord Shonto was removed
from command of his army, all of the Shonto House would fall with him. Tanaka,
who controlled the family’s vast trading interests, would be the third
Shonto retainer the Imperial Guard would seek out, after Shokan and Lady
Nishima.
Tanaka was convinced that
the Emperor would invite the young Shonto heir to come to the Capital for the
winter social season and Shokan was certain he was right. He had been expecting
the Imperial summons for days.
Of course he would stall
as long as possible, but that would not be forever—the Emperor was not a
patient man.
At least Lady Nishima was
no longer within the Emperor’s reach. This brought a smile to replace the
anxious look on the young lord’s face. He wondered how the Emperor would
react to that! Nishima gone, and in the company
of the woman the Emperor had himself appointed to be her instructor in the
arts. Although he stood somewhat in awe of his adopted sister’s charm,
Shokan could not imagine how Nishi-sum had tempted the Lady Okara from her
island sanctuary.
Shokan would like to see
the Emperor’s response to that news. The Yamaku Emperor was not patient
nor did he like to appear a fool. The young lord laughed aloud. There were at
least small victories to be enjoyed. Oh, Nishi-sum, how did you manage such a
thing? He laughed again and spurred his horse in a wild gallop along the cliff
top. Below him the sea battered the ancient cliff, endlessly: soft water
against hard stone in an unequal contest.
Four
I aku Tadamoto tried to
sit calmly, without betraying J any sign of the fear he felt. It was a
difficult exercise. The Emperor was known to fly into rages, but in
Tada-moto’s experience the sovereign could be at his deadliest when he
was silent—trying to contain his infamous temper. The Emperor stood,
apparently examining a figure in a three-panel painting of the battle of Kyo.
He held his sword of office in its scabbard before him in both hands and
Tadamoto could see the Emperor’s right hand flexing like an involuntary
seizure on the sword’s grip.
Jaku Tadamoto’s
sense of tranquillity was further eroded by the knowledge that the object of
the Emperor’s rage was his own brother, Katta. He was not certain what
caused him more apprehension: the thought that the Emperor’s legendary
distrust would now be focused on him because of his brother’s latest
betrayal, or whether he feared for Katta. Certainly Katta had gone off to the
north, turning his back on Tadamoto, but even so, Katta was still his brother.
The Emperor turned
suddenly and glared down at the kneeling guardsman.
“So, Shonto’s
daughter is in league with my former Guard Commander, damn his arrogance!”
He gazed back at the figure in the painting again as though it calmed him. The
figure, Tadamoto could not help but notice, was impaled upon a lance.
Very quietly, Tadamoto
ventured to speak. “It is difficult to say, Sire, it is just as possible
that their meeting was merely coincidence.”
“I am not a
believer in coincidence, not when your brother is concerned.” The Emperor
paced back to his dais, paused to consider, then kicked a silk-covered pil-
low across the audience
chamber. “And it was the Lady Okara? You are certain?”
Tadamoto looked at the
floor directly in front of him. “It would appear so, Sire. Her staff
report that she is ill and cannot receive visitors, the same explanation we are
given at the Shonto House. The description I have received would seem to leave
little doubt.”
The Emperor dropped back
to his cushions and stared at the mats as intently as did Tadamoto. “And
you still do not believe he has secretly joined the Shonto?”
Tadamoto shook his head
slowly. “It would be most uncharacteristic, Sire. My brother is
ambitious, I will not deny it, but he believes that Shonto’s famed
loyalty is a sham. He thinks the great lord is loyal only to his own ambitions,
all other alliances merely serve his purpose. I think Katta-sum’s
distrust of Lord Shonto is unwavering.”
The Emperor shook his
head. “He is your brother, Colonel, it is natural that you trust his
motives more than others might.‘’ He looked up at the young officer
in front of him. ”You, however, must decide where your loyalties lie. You
cannot serve two masters, Tadamoto-sum, be very clear on that.‘’
Tadamoto bowed his head
to the mat and returned slowly to his kneeling position. “My brother and
I have had a parting of ways, Sire. Katta went north on the great canal, while
I remained… I am my Emperor’s ser-* vant. It is my hope that my
opinions regarding my brother are not dictated by family loyalties but come
only from careful thought and concern for duty to my Emperor. If this is not
the case, Sire, please dismiss me from my position and allow me to serve in
some other way.‘’ He bowed again.
The Emperor stroked his
chin, and though his eyes were fixed on the young Jaku, his focus was
elsewhere. When he spoke again, his voice was quieter, softer. “No,
Tadamoto-sum, I trust you. I am well aware that your brother’s actions
cause you great pain and that you still hope there is an explanation that will
indicate his continued loyalty to the throne. I hold the same hope, for Katta
is dear to me.” He paused. “But I cannot let my affection blind me
entirely. If your brother does not soon act in a manner that proves our hopes
are justified…”
The Emperor let the
threat hang in the air. He began examining his scabbard.
After a moment he turned
back to the young man who knelt before him. “Is there more to this
report, Colonel, or is that all the bad news for the day?”
Tadamoto hesitated,
offering a silent prayer to Bota-hara. “There is one other thing,
Sire.” He tried to work some moisture into a dry mouth. “It seems
that Lady Nishima and Lady Okara have one other companion.”
“Oh.”
Tadamoto almost
whispered. “It is possible they are accompanied by the Lady Kitsura
Omawara, Sire.”
The Emperor did not take
his eyes from his sword.
“That will be all,
Colonel.”
“Yes,
Emperor.” Jaku Tadamoto touched his head to the floor and, without
rising, backed from the room as quickly as concern for the Emperor’s
dignity would allow.
Akantsu II sat for a long
time, staring at his sword of office. Insults such as this were not paid to
Emperors. No doubt Lord Omawara believed his name and failing health would
protect him. The Emperor pulled his sword halfway from its scabbard and then
rammed it home savagely. Oh, there was nothing the Emperor could do
openly—Omawara was correct in that assumption. But that would not protect
the old man. Nor would it protect the rest of his House.
The Emperor thought
suddenly of the Lady Kitsura,* and her legendary beauty seemed an affront to
him now. Such arrogance! The Emperor tightened his grip on the sword. The old
families would never accept the Yamaku. This proved it beyond all doubt. There
could be no other course of action if he was to preserve the Yamaku ascendancy.
Once the Shonto were gone, the old families would realize their mistake…
their many mistakes.
He turned and set his
sword in its stand with exaggerated care, controlling his shaking hands with an
act of will. He took a long deep breath and let it out slowly. The insult would
not receive the slightest recognition, of course. In fact, he would send a
letter inquiring after Lord Omawara’s health that very day. He would also
ask if Lady Kitsura’s journey went well. A solicitous letter. Let the
dying old man know what he had wrought upon
his fannry. But the
Emperor’s mood was not so easily broken. Even the thought of what could
be done to the Omawara brought him no comfort.
The Emperor took another
long breath. He clapped his hands softly and a servant appeared.
“Send for
Osha-sum,” he said, “her Emperor desires her presence.”
Destroying her
lover’s letters crossed Osha’s mind when she received the summons
to attend the Emperor. It will not matter, she thought. If he knows, the
letters will not make a difference. Selecting robes to wear into the royal
presence, an activity that could take many women several days, was
comparatively easy. Calming her spirit, however, was not possible.
If the Emperor knew about
her meetings with Tadamoto-sum, it would not matter that the Son of Heaven had
lost interest in her… had not called for her in weeks. He would quickly forget
that he had cast her aside without a word. That anyone would presume to pay her
court would drive him to a fury, of that she was certain.
And they had been so
careful! She sat down as a wave of fear weakened her limbs. What of
Tadamoto-sum? Had the Emperor… ? She did not want to think of it. Hanging
her head in her hands for a second, she tried to control herself.
No doubt this is not what
I fear. It is more likely merely a good-bye—your presence in the
But would she be called
into the presence of the Emperor for such a message? No, she thought, that is
not likely. Perhaps, then, the Emperor would truly give her a gift! Perhaps he
would allow her to continue to dance with the Imperial Sonsa troupe!
She thought warmly of
Tadamoto. He had been so certain that he could sway the Emperor to allow her to
stay in the Capital. She smiled as she rose and examined her appearance in a
bronze mirror. But as she left her apart-
ments to walk to the
Emperor’s audience hall, her confidence seemed to waver a little with
each step.
By the time Osha arrived
at the guarded double doors, she was shaking and pale. Only her years of Sonsa
training forced her knees to support her.
Osha barely noticed the
two Imperial Guards who opened the doors. She knelt in the doorway, casting her
gaze down, even when she had returned to a kneeling position. She sat thus, in
the grip of more terror than she had ever known.
“Please, Osha-sum,
enter,” came the familiar voice. “Be at your ease.”
She closed her eyes and
bowed again. What could she read in that voice? He did not hide his anger well,
but she had seen it done… had seen him toy with someone until they
believed they were safe. Then he had exploded in one of his fits of anger. Osha
rose and moved forward on her knees until she was a respectful distance from
the dais. Folding her hands carefully in her lap, she tried to force herself
into a calm but still did not meet his eyes.
“Your dancing goes
well?”
“The Emperor is
kind to inquire. My dancing goes most well.”
“I am glad to hear
this, though Colonel Jaku Tadamoto has said as much.”
She closed her eyes and
fought tears. Even without looking, she knew that the Emperor sat with his
sword across his knees. An urge to prostrate herself and beg for forgiveness
began to pull at the edges of her rising fears.
“I value the young
Jaku brother’s judgment,” he said as though to someone else.
“It pleases me that your dancing goes well. It is a demanding path that
you pursue, I understand why you have so little time for mere social occasions.
Demands are something an Emperor understands only too well. Though the demands
made upon an Emperor do not give us the time we would wish to pursue the things
that are close to our hearts. I do not think this is so with the Sonsa?”
Osha could hear the
pounding of blood in her ears—a steady rhythm of fear.
“Please excuse
me,” she said with difficulty, “I am not sure what the Emperor
means.”
r
“Is-rt not dancing
that is closest to a Sonsa’s heart?”
“Ah.” Osha
smiled as if he had said something clever.
“I understand this
passion that controls you, Osha-sum. I am sometimes jealous, but an Emperor
must never give in to such things.” He paused. “You must dance and
I must spend my days listening to ministers and counselors, though it is not
pursuing what is closest to my heart. Do you become jealous when the Empire
takes so much of my time?‘’
“I… the
Empire, Sire, cannot be compared to dance. Dance is but a trivial thing when
set beside affairs of state.”
“So many would say,
though I am not sure I would agree. Let us say that we both are governed by
things of importance. It does not matter.” She knew he stared at her, and
she tried to remain calm. “It warms my heart to see you, Osha-sum. You
have grown even more beautiful these last months.”
“I am honored that
you would say so, Sire.”
“We must learn to
live with the demands of our lives, Osha-sum, and take pleasure in the moments
that are truly our own.”
His outstretched hand
appeared before her.
Her heart sank entirely
now. He did not know about Tadamoto! That was not why she had been summoned. He
desired her! After ignoring her entirely and subjecting her to the greatest
humiliation, he wanted her!
She closed her eyes and
fought back tears. The Emperor wanted her again. Was she not pleased? She
thought of Tadamoto and realized that she was completely terrified of arousing
the Emperor’s suspicions. She dared not refuse.
“Are these tears,
Osha-sum?” the Emperor asked. “Is there something wrong?”
Shaking her head, she
tried to smile. “Tears do not always indicate sadness, Sire.”
With effort she reached
out her hand and the Emperor grasped it. She had forgotten how strong he was.
As she moved forward the Emperor pulled her, almost roughly, onto the dais so
that her*knee struck the frame, but he did not seem to notice.
A kiss that would have seemed
passionate before felt coarse to her now. His hands touched her without con-
cern for her pleasure,
failing to arouse as they once had. The Emperor fumbled at her sash, for it was
not a Lover’s Knot and easily undone. She had to untie it for him, helping
unwind the yards of brocade.
Pushing her down into the
deep silk cushions, the Emperor opened her robes. There were no words of love,
no whispers close to her ear. Osha felt nothing but revulsion. With all her
heart she wanted to run. Until that moment she had not known what it was she
felt for Tadamoto-sum. The Emperor lowered his weight onto her, his face close
to hers, his breath coming in harsh gasps.
Five
There were few people as
skilled at waiting as Brother Sotura. He could truthfully say that he had only
known impatience twice, perhaps three times, in his life, and on each of those
occasions he had mastered this emotion almost immediately. The chamber in which
he practiced waiting contained a small shrine to Botahara on one wall and an
austere, but very skillful arrangement of cedar boughs and autumn slip maple on
a small stand against another. These two things in themselves would have
provided the necessary focus for many days of meditation, even if Brother
Sotura didn’t have other things to consider. And he could barely remember
a time when he did not have other
things demanding
his attention.
He was more than
concerned that Lord Shonto had not allowed this second meeting with Brother
Shuyun to take place in the
Lord Shonto was known to
be a very convincing man and Sotura feared the lord’s influence on his
former student. Shuyun was too important to Botahist interests to go the way of
Shonto’s former Spiritual Advisor. The Brotherhood could not afford
another renegade. He smiled at the term he’d chosen. Perhaps
“renegade” was too strong, but Brother Satake had certainly pursued
a course of independence. And independence was not something the Brotherhood either
encouraged or admired.
Private discussion with
Brother Shuyun was what the
chi quan Master required,
and he was not convinced that it would be possible inside the Governor’s
Palace. Sotura turned his gaze to the paper-thin walls. Lord Shonto was certainly
not above having the conversations of his Spiritual Advisor listened to; of
that he was certain. Of course Sotura did not plan to make a request of Shuyun
that the young monk could not fulfill in good conscience, so that was not the
reason he was concerned with being overheard. It was what Shonto might learn of
the Botahist Order that concerned Sotura. Knowledge of the schisms within the
Brotherhood could prove most useful to some parties in the Empire.
So the conversation with
Shuyun must be private, that was certain. The young monk had seen the evidence
of armies in the desert with his own eyes, and that was a crucial factor.
Sotura had to have Shuyun’s support in what he was about to do, although
Shuyun could be spared the details and reasons. The Initiate would undoubtedly
be distressed to know that his information would be used to destroy the
credibility of a senior member of their faith.
Brother Sotura turned his
gaze back to the statue of Botahara in its shrine with its arrangement of
leaves and branches. He felt a second of confusion as though the statue gazed
back at him and the look was not entirely benign. Sotura shook himself out of
this state immediately.
Footsteps could be heard
approaching down one of the labryinth of halls that wove through the fabric of
the palace. Shuyun. The chi quan Master recognized
the sound of the footsteps as easily as he would the boy’s signature or
his style of chi quan. The older man smiled until the shoji was pushed aside
and then the smile was replaced by the unreadable countenance of a Botahist
Master.
Shuyun bowed low to the
Senior Brother as he entered the room. There were few people he respected more,
and though the Botahist Brothers neither showed nor felt much emotion, Shuyun
felt something close to affection for his former instructor.
“My lord’s
House is honored by your presence, Brother Sotura.”
“As I am honored by
Lord Shonto’s consideration.”
The two monks knelt a few
feet apart on thin cushions set on the straw-matted floor. There was a short
silence while Shuyun, as the junior monk, waited for Brother Sotura to speak.
His patience seemed every bit as developed as his former teacher’s.
“I have many things
to discuss with you, Brother Shuyun, but I have spent so much time indoors of
late that I wonder—is it possible for us to speak outside without
inconveniencing your lord should he have need of your counsel?”
Shuyun thought for a
second. “I will send a message to Kamu-sum saying that we are to be found
on the Sunrise Viewing Terrace. The terrace will be most pleasant at this time
of day. Will that suit your needs, Brother?”
“Perfectly,
Shuyun-sum. I thank you for your consideration.”
A servant was sent
running with the message and the two Botahist Monks set out for the terrace. As
they walked, the conversation stayed within the strict bounds of polite
discourse between teacher and student. Sotura asked questions and Shuyun
responded with short answers; they even laughed at a joke. To anyone listening,
there would have been no hint of tension in their discourse.
The Sunrise Viewing
Terrace was an excellent choice, for it was well situated to make the most of
the sun while still offering some protection from the wind. The cold north wind
typical of the season had relented that morning to be replaced by a sea wind
that suggested spring more than the true season. The conversation, however, had
a certain chill in it.
Lady Kitsura was followed
by a maid and by the daughter of one of Seh’s more senior military
men— Kitsura could not remember the man’s name or rank. His
daughter was playing at the role of lady-in-waiting and though Lady Kitsura had
been annoyed by this farce to begin with she admitted to herself now that the
young girl had charmed her. There was something about the girl’s
naivete“ that the woman from the Imperial Capital found very attractive,
perhaps especially so during this time when everything seemed so complex, when
there were so many suspected lies. The fact that the young
woman admired Kitsura
almost to the point of worship might have had some effect as well.
Now it seemed that the
young woman was beside herself with excitement at the prospect of meeting Lady
Nishima Fanisan Shonto. Much to her surprise, Kitsura found herself telling her
companions that Lady Nishima was only human, after all. The tone of mild
annoyance that accompanied these words was a bit of a surprise to the
sophisticated lady from the Capital.
Lady Kitsura walked as
quickly as decorum would allow. She did not want to seem to be rushing, after
all, but in her mind she ran. Her cousin, Lady Nishima, must be told the most
recent news immediately.
The three women came to a
doorway leading outside. Kitsura had insisted they venture out to appreciate
this fine day and though this suggestion had met with some small resistance her
companions had not wanted to disagree. The truth was that the route outside
would save them several minutes. Stepping out into the bright sunlight
Kitsura’s two companions broke into smiles. Not only did the sun shine,
but the day was almost warm. A gentle sea wind tugged at their elaborate robes
and attempted to improve upon the studied arrangement of their hair.
Kitsura had to shepherd
her companions along or they would have stopped to play the Cloud Game, looking
for forms in the sky, perhaps hoping that the famous lady from the Capital
would compose a poem—excited, though somewhat apprehensive, that she
might expect them to do the same.
For her part, the great
lady from the Capital felt a slight tugging of regret that she could not stop
and play the Cloud Game or just walk in the sun and discuss nothing of
importance. It was more than that though; it was a regret that, in some
inexplicable way, these pleasures were no longer accessible to her. And this
made her sad.
Bearing news to
Nishima-sum was far too important to delay with such selfish concerns, so, to
the disappointment of the two young women of Seh, Kitsura marshaled them along
the covered portico.
All three of the women
showed great surprise at finding two men deep in conversation on a terrace. If
they had not been Brothers of the True Faith, the women
would have been deeply
embarrassed. How would such a situation be looked upon? Three young women
meeting men alone outside on a winter day? Most unseemly!
It was rumored that the
ladies of the Capital did such things, but the women from Seh had certainly
seen no evidence that either the Lady Nishima or the Lady Kit-sura acted in
such a manner. They hadn’t actually believed the rumors anyway, they told
each other, trying to cover their disappointment.
The monks gave their
short double bow and the ladies bowed in return, except Lady Kitsura who
favored the Brothers with an elegant, though modest, nod of her beautiful head.
The young lady of Seh
found herself committing this gesture to memory and stopped herself as she
began to imitate it.
A few polite inquiries
were made before Lady Kitsura suggested that they continue on their errand,
assuring the Brothers that their destination had not been the Sunrise Viewing
Terrace and though they were very kind to offer, there was no need for the
honored Brothers to leave. The ladies must be on their way.
And so they left, though
the officer’s daughter could not help but notice that Lady Kitsura looked
back over her shoulder as she left and caught the young monk’s eye in a
manner that could only be described as flirtatious. The young woman looked
away, trying not to notice. But she had noticed and she was more than a little
disconcerted. She found it a bit difficult to catch her breath for a few
seconds. Walking more quickly now, she hoped the blush on her cheeks would be
attributed to the wind.
The apartments of Lady
Nishima were not as elegant as those she was used to, but she laughingly told
Kitsura that they were a great improvement over their cabins on the river
barge. In truth, they were quite pleasant surroundings, though both Kitsura and
Lady Nishima found all the rooms in the Governor’s Palace somewhat colder
than they were accustomed to. When her visitors arrived, Lady Nishima was
practising her harp so Kitsura and her two follower* were treated to an ancient
melody which wafted through the thin screens as though it echoed out of the
past. The officer’s daughter seemed close to tears, though whether this
was due to the effect of the music or
to finding herself in a
social situation she had long dreamed of, Kitsura could not tell.
Informed that she had
guests, Nishima put aside her instrument and rearranged her robe so that the
pattern was arrayed to its best effect. The young women from Seh seemed almost
to glow, for here they were in the company of two of the most celebrated women
of their generation. Their friends would be envious beyond anyone’s power
to describe!
It was with some
disappointment that they found themselves drinking cha, alone, while the ladies
from the Imperial Capital retired to the balcony. They could just make out the
two peers sitting on the wide railing engaged in a conversation that seemed
much too serious for women who, it was said, were courted by every young man of
worthy family in the entire Capital—including the sons of the Emperor!
How could one be anything but constantly gay when one’s life was
perfection itself?
“We can hardly
barge into an audience with the Imperial Governor, Kitsu-sum, we must think of
something else,” Lady Nishima was saying. She let her gaze wander out
over the tiled roofs of the city.
“Considering what
is at risk, cousin, I fear you may be paying too much heed to propriety. We
will barge in on the Imperial Governor by accident,” Kitsura explained.
“I’m not
utterly confident that this type of intrigue is your greatest area of skill,
cousin. We must have some reason. I do not want my father to believe I am
trying to see the Imperial Guardsmen. That would be unacceptable.”
Kitsura turned away so
her frustration would not be seen. Not to seem rude, she leaned over and made a
show of checking her companions. The two women were trying not to appear too
disappointed as they drank their cha and carried on a stilted conversation.
“I fear my lady-in-waiting is quite disappointed not to have been invited into
our company.
Nishima shrugged.
“It is the life of those who wait. Did she think it was otherwise?”
“Perhaps. You know
all those terrible romances young girls read, the ones where the
Princess’ true friend is her youngest, least well-born,
lady-in-waiting.”
“Ah, like my Lady
Kento,” Nishima offered.
“Exactly!”
Kitsura laughed. “Of course you would conform to the conventions of the
romance, cousin, it is why you are so adored.” Kitsura laughed again and
squeezed her cousin’s hand.
Nishima, however, did not
catch her cousin’s mood. She remained pensive, withdrawn. Her gaze kept
straying over Kitsura’s shoulder, and finally the young woman turned to
see what it was that had caught the artist’s eye. The view was lovely,
there was no doubt—tile roofs of celestial blue, plumes of smoke lofting
up from among the buildings, and beyond this, all of Seh stretching her
green-blue hills off to the west. Beautiful, indeed, but Kitsura was looking
for some unusual composition or play of light that stood out among all of the
day-to-day beauty, something unique enough to keep demanding Nishima’s
attention. Kitsura was about to ask when she caught sight of the two monks
still engaged in their conversation on the Sunrise Viewing Terrace. She turned
back to Nishima who looked away, a faint blush blossoming on her neck and cheek.
“We should not
disappoint them, Kitsu-sum, your young ladies-in-waiting. After all, when
winter has worn on they may indeed become our truest friends.” Lady
Nishima tried to force a smile. ‘ ’I will play my harp for them and
you will charm them over plum wine with a scandalous tale from the
Capital.“
“Which scandalous
tale do you suggest?” Kitsura clapped her hands suddenly with joy.
“How foolish I am! It is all too obvious! Tonight, over dinner, when Lord
Shonto makes his customary offer to take me as a concubine, or maid, I shall
tell him that I will prove I am worthy of consideration as a wife if for no
other reason than my musical skills. You, of course, will have to accompany me.
We will claim a need to rehearse, which will give our Governor several
opportunities to comment on the questionable skills of musicians who, of all
things, need to practice.
“Tomorrow we will
arrive at the audience hall with our instruments. What gentleman could refuse
two young ladies in such circumstances? Of course they will be honored that we
have come to play. And Jaku Katta, I guarantee, will swoon.” Kitsura
broke into a smile,
enormously pleased with herself.
“Well?” she said when she received no response.
“It is not entirely
impossible, though it will put you and me, not to mention my uncle, in a
somewhat embarrassing situation.”
‘
’Embarrassment may have to be suffered to defeat the barbarian hordes,
cousin.“
Nishima laughed this
time. “For the Empire of Wa I will dare to suffer it, then,”
Nishima said and then she thought for a second. “Perhaps there is a less
obvious method of accomplishing the same end.”
“Nonsense. My plan
will work perfectly well. Come, cousin, if you play your harp for my young
companions, I will overlook your suggestion that intrigue is not one of my many
skills. No, no, come along.”
One’s ear for the
truth, Shuyun knew, was not infallible, and after all, he was only a senior Initiate.
The monk rubbed his head as though it had been mysteriously bruised.
It had been an innocent
question, almost polite conversation, really. There was a widespread rumor in
Seh that the Udumbara had blossomed, fulfilling a prophecy of the Perfect Master—the
flowering trees of Monarta would not blossom again until a Teacher walked among
men. Sotura had shrugged, saying it was a rumor that surfaced every decade. And
though the senior Brother had been careful in his choice of words,
Shuyun’s sense for truth had wakened immediately—he lies, it whispered.
But even a senior Brother
did not have an infallible ear for truth, so Shuyun tried to push this incident
aside though it resisted this treatment strongly.
Then there had been
Brother Sotura’s request for a written account of Shuyun’s journey
into the desert—and this, too, had seemed strange. Not the request, which
was hardly out of the ordinary, but the senior monk’s tone—he felt
some guilt over this. Shuyun found the meeting with Sotura-sum most disconcerting.
A certain sadness had
come over him as he walked. Sotura-sum had always been the man Shuyun admired
most, the Brother he sought to emulate—Sotura of the butterfly-punch. And now he found himself doubting his
former mentor—was,
in fact, considering speaking to Lord Shonto about this meeting. This was also
disturbing, Shuyun realized, as though a subtle shifting of his loyalties had
taken place without him realizing. Had Brother Satake undergone this same
change? It made Shuyun feel a pang of apprehension. Would he find himself
following the path of his predecessor? Satake, it was said, had gone so far as
to request his final ceremonies be carried out by the family he
served—not by the Botanist Brothers! Such a thing was unheard of. I must
keep my awareness of what transpires in my soul, Shuyun told himself.
He lies. The words came back to him like a whisper. Perhaps
he should speak with Lord Shonto? The monk pushed this idea from his mind. But
what was it about Shonto that made Shuyun consider going to him rather than to
a senior of his own Order? He realized he did not know—not yet anyway.
The young monk mounted a
set of wide stone stairs that led up from the gates. Slowing his pace only
slightly, he admired the flying horse sculptures that flanked the first landing
and then he was at the enormous main doors to the Palace. The Palace Guard
bowed as he passed— solid men of Seh who would never think to question
the Imperial Governor’s Spiritual Advisor.
Shuyun’s
destination was his own apartment and his writing desk. The account Brother
Sotura had requested was required almost immediately as the older monk planned
to include it in documents he was sending to Brother Hutto in Yankura. But
having written of his journey into the wastelands in detail for Lord Shonto,
Shuyun felt this would take little time.
Several turns into the
maze that was the Imperial Governor’s Palace, Shuyun entered a narrow
hallway that substantially shortened the route to his rooms. At a door that led
into another corridor he stopped abruptly. Voices from the other side confirmed
what his chi sense had already told him—Lady Kitsura and two others had
just arrived at the same door. He opened it for them, stepping aside to allow
the women clear passage through the narrow opening.
“Ah, Brother,”
Kitsura said, “our karma keeps bringing us into your delightful company.
Obviously this must
be good karma.“ She
smiled at her maid and lady-in-waiting who nodded agreement.
“My teachers told
me always to turn a deaf ear to flattery, Lady Kitsura, but they did not warn
me of its true power. I am, therefore, flattered.” He bowed.
Kitsura motioned to her
companions, who passed through the door ahead of her, and then she followed,
tripping as she did so and falling lightly against Shuyun who reached out to
steady her. She recovered almost immediately and before Shuyun could apologize
she had passed on, her hand lingering on his own until the last second.
The monk stood holding
the door open for no one and then realized how foolish he must look and moved
on, missing the corridor to his rooms and stopping, for a second, lost. Shuyun
had never had a woman so close to him, had never touched a woman who was not
being treated for illness, and part of his shock was caused by his own
reaction.
Flattery as a temptation,
he realized, was hardly worthy of consideration compared to the softness of a
woman’s body. With great effort, he pushed the memory from his mind, but
the thing that kept echoing back was the knowledge that this fall had not been
an accident. There was no doubt of this.
Shuyun found this
realization as disturbing as his meeting with his former teacher.
Six
The sculpture garden in
the Imperial Governor’s Palace had not been created by an artist of great
note, but it hardly mattered. The raw material was so superior in nature that
it had almost worked itself.
Shuyun crossed the lotus
pattern terrace at the garden’s edge and then paused to admire the late
afternoon light that slanted low into the garden. It created shadows that gave
texture to even the most featureless surfaces. Already Shuyun could feel the
stones releasing their warmth to the cooling air. The sea wind fell to a
breath, then gusted, then fell again in a pattern that no man could determine.
It would not be long before the clear northern night began to tug at the edge
of the eastern sky.
Shuyun came to the garden
to meditate on the sculptures and to purge himself of certain feelings.
Stopping before the Mountain Dragon, he let his eye run over the fluted
sandstone. He felt a certain awe at nature’s work, thinking about the
several lifetimes that the elements had scoured and carved this stone. Working
patiently, waiting for the day when an artist would find it.
The artist, a
lady-in-waiting of a retired Mori Empress, had set the three stones together in
a fashion that, when seen from the north, suggested an animal poised to strike;
when seen from the south, however, it appeared to be sleeping. The low light
made the effect far more dramatic than at any other time of day and Shuyun
found he was able to bask in the artist’s skill as though seeing it for
the first time.
The voice of the
waterfall drew him and he wound down the narrow path and across the foot stones
toward the sound. Shuyun had been in the garden many times and knew the
illusion of the cataract twisting down a mountainside was nearly perfect. The
stone was cracked
and sculpted in scale to
an enormous cliff face and the effect was enhanced by carefully stunted trees,
many the work of thirty years and more, let into ledges and cracks.
Shuyun stepped through
the final copse before the waterfall and there he found the Lady Okara, paper
stretched onto a drawing board on her lap, a brush held idly in one hand. She
started as the monk appeared.
“Please excuse me,
Lady Okara, I did not realize you were here. Please, I did not mean to
interrupt your work.” The painter was dressed in the plainest cotton
robes and Shuyun was certain she must be deeply embarrassed to be seen so. He
bowed quickly and turned to
go.
“Brother Shuyun, do
not apologize. I am hardly working at all. In truth, I have been sitting here
weaving memories for some time.” She smiled her warm smile. “Please
join me, the light is changing color by the second. Have you seen?”
“Pardon me, Lady
Okara—have I seen?”
“Ah, you
haven’t! Come, sit down, if you have the time. This will be worth the
short wait.”
Shuyun found a second
sitting stone at Lady Okara’s side and took his place dutifully. Lady
Okara was not someone he knew well, but he liked her immeasurably. He often
imagined that the ease he felt in her company was the way he would have felt
with his own mother had he known her.
The evening sun lit the
face of the miniature cliff, throwing every crevice into clear relief, the
shadows stretching as the sun fell. The spray from the falls caught the light
and a rainbow appeared.
“Watch the deep
rose begin to change now,” Lady Okara said.
Shuyun stretched his time
sense in an attempt to see what the artist’s eye would see. The waterfall
slowed, each drop of spray catching the sun in a different way, with a
different color. Indeed the rock was faintly rose hued; he had not realized
this before.
“Rose to deep
purple, but watch how many shades it passes through, Brother. It is a daily
miracle, I should think.”
“I had never seen
this before, though I come here often.”
Wind rustled the needles
of the small pines and the light played among the greens and cast oddly
elongated shadows.
“For many, the
skills of brush and pigment are more easily learned than the skill of seeing,
truly seeing. I came to Seh largely for this. Oh, not to see this garden, as
lovely as it is, but to learn to see again.”
“Lady Okara,”
Shuyun said, nodding toward her half-finished painting, “excuse me for
saying so, but I find it difficult to believe that you have forgotten how to
see.”
“Ah, Brother
Shuyun, it is kind of you to say so, but a good painter, an artist, does not
see only with the eye. A skilled journeyman could learn to capture this scene,
light and all. That, I have not lost. What an artist must seek and try to
capture is the part of this setting that occurs within. What does this beauty
evoke in my heart? In my spirit? A painter asks that question. The true skill,
the skill that separates an artist from a journeyman, is the ability to find
and express that—the part of this scene that exists within.” She
fell silent, as though she had begun to search within even as they spoke.
“You see, Brother,
until Nishi-sum came to my home, I did not even know that I had lost that
skill. Until I encountered her lovely, open spirit, I had thought the skill
intact. But it was gone. I had lost it by forming habits of seeing and habits
of feeling, as well. It is easily done. One can form habits in one’s
heart as easily as in one’s day-to-day existence. Cha at dawn, a walk
alone at sunset, meditation on the full moon… nostalgia, loss,
bitterness, comfort. All of these habits shield us from the other parts of
life. The journey to a new place, encountering people, considering new ideas,
different landscapes, risks, excitement, joy… disappointment…
grief.
“From the great
palate that life offers I had chosen my colors—good colors, certainly,
but few in number—and I had lived with them for many, many years. My
spirit withered slowly in its habits. When Nishima-sum came to my house, I
could see what this had done to my art.
“It is an odd
choice to make, to dedicate one’s life to a single pursuit, but if one
has made that choice it would be terrible folly to limit what one can
accomplish simply because of habit.” She gestured with her brush.
“Watch
this rainbow fade.
Isn’t that wonderful? As though it had never been.“
She reached down and for
several seconds held the tip of her brush in the running water. “So I
have come to Seh, hoping to find a way to open my heart and my spirit to the
world again—hoping to revive my art. I do not know if this is possible: I
am not the age of Lady Nish-ima, after all. But if there is a way, I must try
to find it.”
They fell silent again,
watching the last light illuminate the miniature mountainside. Listening to the
sound of the water as it fell into the pool and then ran among the stepping
stones.
Lady Okara rose suddenly.
“Please, Brother, you have come here for your own purpose. I grow cold
easily and must go inside. But please, I insist. I can make my way indoors
without an escort.”
Despite her words, Shuyun
rose and handed her across the stepping stones before giving way to her
protests and allowing her to continue on her own, disappearing down the path,
her plain robes in contrast to her great natural dignity.
Shuyun returned to the
falls and seated himself where Lady Okara had been. It was almost dark now, the
first stars appeared. He mulled over the painter’s words. The touch of
Lady Kitsura came back to him and hovered at the edge of Lady Okara’s
words as though speaking to him in some other language. He thought of Lady
Nishima and how he dreamed of her in the desert, dreamed that he was in her
embrace as the Perfect Master had been in the embrace of his bride on the cliff
sculpture in Denji Gorge.
All of these spoke to him
in their own way.
Words came back to him. It is an odd choice to make, to dedicate one’s
life to a single pursuit, but if one has made that choice it would be terrible
folly to limit what one can accomplish simply because of habit.
The illusion of the
mountain waterfall was hidden in darkness now, but the voice of the cataract
still spoke, reminding him that Lady Okara had opened her spirit to this
wonder.
She explores the nature
of the illusion, Shuyun told himself, that is her purpose. Whereas it is my
purpose
to deny the illusion: yet
what is the nature of this thing I deny? Lady Okara opens her spirit to the
world, while I close mine. Who can say who will learn more in this process?
Lord Botahara did not attain Enlightenment from denial but from
exploration—as Lady Okara has said—both within and without.
This thought unsettled
him and all of the voices in his head added to his confusion. He began a
breathing exercise, chanting quietly, then sank himself into contemplation,
driving out all the voices and focusing all of his mind on the words of his
teachers.
It was the habit of a
lifetime.
Seven
The servant had drowned
in the canal the morning before and not been discovered for almost a day. The
small sampan he’d borrowed was later found floating upside-down among the
flotsam in a small eddy beneath a seldom used bridge. No one was sure how the
accident had occurred, but it was well known that the boy couldn’t swim.
General Jaku Katta, the
servant’s master, was surprised by the effect this death had upon him.
The servant boy, one Inaga, had not held a special position in his
master’s house—a personal servant—a good one, yes, but no
better than one would expect in the house of so powerful a man. And yet the
death was felt throughout the household.
Jaku sat alone in his
cabin on the Imperial Barge and considered his reaction to the loss. The river
flowed quietly by, lapping at the barge, a reminder of every poem that had ever
been written with a river as an image of life. The calls and shouts of the
passing rivermen broke the calm and this seemed a great offense to the
general’s state of mourning. Of course he was not officially in
mourning—one did not mourn servants—but in his soul Jaku Katta
mourned and this unsettled him, for he was a soldier and not unused to death.
Inaga had been young,
that alone explained some of Jaku’s reaction, but this was more than the
common response to the death of a child. Inaga had possessed qualities that
were rare and, though Jaku hadn’t known this, they were qualities he
valued highly.
Attempting to alter his
gray mood, the guardsman dipped a brush in ink and poised the tip over the
report he was supposed to be writing, but no words flowed. He realized he had
lost focus entirely when ink dripped onto
the rice paper, spoiling
it completely. Rinsing the brush, he set it on its rest to dry and gave up the
pretense of work altogether.
Though he told himself he
had no time for melancholy, Jaku could not force his thoughts elsewhere. Inaga
had qualities that Jaku had seen too infrequently. It was not common to find
someone who was entirely loyal and there was no doubt in Jaku’s mind that
the boy had been. There had never been any doubt, not from the very first day
Inaga had come to service. That was another point about Inaga—he
concealed nothing—was somehow incapable of hiding anything and it seemed
everyone knew that instinctively.
Katta touched the paper
on which he had been writing to a lamp, letting it burn, slowly turning it to
avoid the flame. He waited until he dared hold it no longer and then dropped it
onto his inkstone and let it burn itself out.
It was not the boy’s
death, Jaku realized, it was something more. The intrigue of the Imperial
Palace and in the Empire was something he had always found exhilarating, like
the kick boxing ring or a duel—one was truly tested—and failing the
test meant more than losing a game of gü. Failing could mean loss of
everything. But somehow the death of the servant had affected Jaku’s love
of the game. It had been such a senseless
death, in aid of nothing.
Suddenly the game of
court intrigue seemed as senseless as… Jaku was not sure what. And it was
this game that had brought him here—to Seh where the Emperor plotted
against the Shonto House.
Does the Emperor intend
this as a lesson or is it his intention that I fall with Lord Shonto? Jaku
asked himself again. Certainly the Son of Heaven knew that Shonto would not
accept Jaku as an ally—and Jaku was not about to join forces with a man
who was about to fall—not just fall from favor.
The last flame from the
burning paper flickered and disappeared, leaving a pile of smoking ashes on the
ink-stone. The report would have been meaningless anyway, Jaku thought, just
another arrangement of words on paper in a bureaucracy weighted down with words
on paper.
In a few hours he would
meet Lord Shonto. He could expect no honesty there either, and certainly no
loyalty. Jaku touched his fingertips together as though he would meditate.
There were so many lies now that even Jaku was beginning to lose his way among
them.
He had spent hours
searching among all the past lies, assuring himself that he knew his path so
well that Shonto could never cause him to stumble. He thought of Lady Nishima,
from whom he had not received word since his arrival in Rhojo-ma. She walked
the path of lies also, though he felt somehow that she found herself there by
accident, not by choice.
There was no one he could
think of now whom he could rely on to be honest at all times. He thought of
Tadamoto-sum and the usual anger he felt was replaced by a deep sadness.
A riverman called out to
another and they both laughed. Jaku rose fluidly from his cushion and began to
pace the cabin, six paces, side to side. A tap sounded on the screen and Jaku
gave permission to enter.
“Your audience with
Lord Shonto, General,” a servant whispered.
Jaku nodded. He
mustn’t keep the Imperial Governor waiting. No. Every act of the farce
must be carried out, without exception. An audience with a governor who would
soon be a ghost seemed particularly appropriate to such a play. And Jaku had no
doubt that a ghost was what Shonto would soon be. There would be no rest for
the lord, nor for his retainers, nor for his son. Jaku was certain of that.
And now the architect of
Shonto’s downfall had arrived to participate in the lord’s fate.
The guardsman shook his head. It had been a beautiful stroke, Jaku had to admit.
He had not thought the Emperor capable of such a pure act. He wondered if the
Son of Heaven thought Jaku should feel honored to be in such esteemed company.
An audience with a corpse. He must dress for the occasion.
His most finely made
light duty armor, the suit with the Choka hawk worked into the black lacings
along the shoulder covering. A purple border with tiny silver hawks. Jaku
thought it quite possible that there had been no finer armor made in his
generation. Certainly, Shonto
had his garden, but Jaku
was not a man without means as this work of the armorer’s art would
attest. And Shonto would recognize the work of an artist—Jaku was
counting on that.
The Commander of the
Imperial Guard took more time than usual with his preparations—almost as
though he made ready for a duel. Shonto was undoubtedly an adversary deserving
of such treatment. Perhaps it was this thought that made Jaku choose his Mitsushito from among the several swords he traveled with. He
opened the rosewood case with great respect and examined the weapon most
conscientiously before lacing it into his sash. It was very old, almost an
artifact, yet the name of its maker alone would unnerve most opponents. Jaku,
of course, was too much of a pragmatist to rely on another’s reputation—the
sword was a beautiful weapon, not an ornament.
So like a journey to a
duel did this feel that Jaku had an urge to look over at his Second as he took
his place in the sampan. He even felt that strange sense of unreality;
“floating on the surface of illusion,” his teachers had called it.
The boatmen pushed off
and began to scull rhythmically. Denji Gorge, Jaku thought. Shonto had found a
way out of Denji Gorge. Bribery was the only possibility. Jaku felt himself
begin to float higher and resisted with an act of will. To have men so well placed
in Hajiwara’s army spoke of long preparation. Unreality tugged at him
again. Just how long, Jaku wondered, had Shonto known that he would be sent to
Seh?
Jaku rubbed the palms of
his hands on the padded armrest. What did Shonto know? Whose game was being
played here? Perhaps it would not be an audience with a ghost but the ghost
that traveled to the audience. Jaku looked down at his hands as though
reassuring himself of their substance.
Even if Shonto was not
aware of his situation, certainly he was aware of Jaku’s part in the
debacle in
the attempt at Denji
Gorge. That would be more worthy of him.
The Imperial Guard
Commander realized that the irony of the Emperor’s plan was quite
complete. No doubt the Son of Heaven had divined Jaku’s plans for Lady
Nish-ima, or perhaps it was truer to say that the art of divination had not
been required… Tadamoto had seen to that. What was it the Emperor feared?
That Jaku Katta would join forces with the Shonto. And now the Son of Heaven
had sent Jaku into Shonto’s palace knowing full well that the Imperial
Governor would never join forces with the man who had arranged for him to be
trapped in Denji Gorge.
Jaku realized that, for
the first time in many years, he had very few options. He had become a traveler
on a path without branches, a path that narrowed with each step. So it was that
he played out each act of the farce as though it had meaning. What choice was
there? He had even done exemplary work ridding the
“He is in disfavor
or he has been sent north to oversee your fall, Lord Shonto. If he is in
disfavor, our attempts to convince the Emperor of the true threat will not be
successful. If General Jaku has been sent north to be sure there are no
mistakes made and that my Governor is truly brought down, then there is a slim
chance that he could be made to see the true danger… a very slim
chance.” General Hojo bowed.
Shonto nodded. He shifted
his armrest unconsciously, considering what Hojo said. It was not that the
general’s words had not been said before, but Shonto believed that ideas,
even bad ideas, in some mysterious way generated other ideas and one of those
might be the truth or the beginning of wisdom. His former Spiritual Advisor had
a saying that he used often: search
for the truth inside a lie. So he searched, not that Hojo had lied, of course,
but it was the same principle.
They sat in a plain room:
General Hojo; Lord Koma-wara; Shonto’s Steward, Kamu; Lord Taiki; and
Brother Shuyun.
The wall paintings drew
the governor’s attention for a
moment—on one side
of the hall a scene of the great war with the barbarians in which his own
ancestor had played a significant part—on the other a scene among the
plum trees in spring in which Genjo, the great poet of Seh, chanted to a rapt
audience. Shonto turned back to his advisors.
“We will proceed as
we have discussed,” Shonto said, finally. “Perhaps the guardsman
will tell us more than he means to. Lord Komawara, you are prepared for your
part?”
Komawara nodded, half a
bow. His hair had still not grown back from his travels as an itinerant
Botahist monk, and he welcomed the dressing on his head wound and wore it
larger than necessary in an attempt to cover as much of his scalp as possible.
His efforts to pretend this did not shame him were sometimes difficult to
watch.
“Then we can do no
more.”
A guard opened the screen
a crack, as though on cue, and a hand signal was given to Kamu.
“He is at our
gate,” the steward reported, and all present composed themselves to wait.
Jaku arrived with two of
his black-clad Imperial Guards who stationed themselves, with Shonto’s
own guard, outside the entrance to the room. He knelt on a cushion that had
been set for him and bowed deeply.
Shonto nodded and then
smiled. “Does the chaku bush fare well, General Jaku?”
Jaku nodded. “I am
convinced that my gardener never tended his own children so well. The chaku
fares well and is without question the centerpiece of my garden. I remain in
the Governor’s debt for such a gift.‘’
“There is no debt
between friends, or so Hakata said and I believe he spoke the truth.
“It is my honor to
introduce you to my guests.” Introductions were made and Shonto watched
carefully the guardsman’s reactions but even when introduced to Shu-yun
he gave no sign of what he might think or feel. Well played, Katta, Shonto
thought, gracious even to the man who defeated you in the kick boxing ring.
“May we offer you
refreshment, Katta-sum?”
Before the guardsman
could answer, they were interrupted by screens sliding open to Shonto’s
right and then the rustle of silk and female voices. All eyes turned to
find Lady Kitsura and
Lady Nishima, followed by their ladies-in-waiting and servants who carried a harp
and a flute.
The women bowed to Shonto
and his guests. “Our apologies, Uncle,” Nishima colored as she
spoke, “It was not our intention to interrupt. Kitsura had promised a
concert… Please excuse us.” She turned to go.
“Nishima-sum,
please do not apologize.” He smiled to reassure her. Certainly he would
never think to embarrass his daughter and Lady Kitsura by sending them away.
“I’m sure music would be welcomed by our guests. Especially music
provided by players of such note. Please, join us.” Shonto waved to the
servants.
The ladies bowed and
cushions were set for them before the dais. They were less formally dressed
than the occasion demanded, as they were in the presence of guests, but even so
their robes were of fine materials and matched to the layers of inner robes
with the greatest care. Nishima’s kimono was a pattern of snow-laden plum
blossoms on a field of blue and Kitsura wore a robe of deep red bearing a
flight of autumn cranes.
Although Nishima’s
hair was worn in a traditional arrangement, Kitsura’s was most
informal—worn in long cascades that flowed down her back. The
ladies-in-waiting took a moment to arrange Kitsura’s tresses for her hair
all but reached the floor when she stood. It was not common for women to wear
their hair this way except in the privacy of their own rooms or with members of
their families or occasionally with trusted family friends. The effect this had
on the gentlemen present was visible.
“You have met
General Jaku, I believe?” Shonto asked. “Lady Kitsura Omawara, and
my daughter, Lady Nishima.” Servants arrived with wine and tables. The
ladies’ instruments were set nearby.
“Did your efforts
on the canal go well, General Jaku?” Nishima asked. Shonto admired how
quickly her poise returned.
“It is kind of you
to ask, Lady Nishima. I believe the
A typically modest
warrior, Shonto thought.
“That is welcome
news indeed.” Nishima said, her smile a bit forced. She turned
immediately to Komawara
who had been slowly
sinking into himself since the women arrived. “And Lord Komawara, I
understand that you also have been making the Empire safe from brigands?”
“A small
altercation in the hills, Lady Nishima. Of little consequence.” Shonto
noted that Lord Komawara only met his daughter’s eye for the briefest
second.
“You are far too
modest, Lord Komawara.” She turned to Jaku. “Lord Komawara’s
men were twice outnumbered, and yet they did not hesitate. At some loss, and
with many wounded, including our brave lord, they made the Jai Lung Hills safe
for passage again.” She rewarded Komawara with a smile mat seemed to
speak great admiration.
“Nishima-sum,”
Kitsura said, “shall we play and then allow Lord Shonto and his guests to
return to their conversation?”
Nishima agreed and they
took up their instruments. The melody they had chosen for the occasion was not
in the modern style that they usually preferred but was of an ancient form
known as “Poem Song.” Autumn on the Mountain of the Pure Spirit was a melody that conjured up the
sounds of the world and was thought to be one of the most evocative songs ever
written. The flute led the harp through the first movement which captured the
mood of the leaves beginning to fall.
It was not impolite to
watch musicians as they played, which meant that the gathered gentlemen could
regard the two women in a manner that would otherwise have been unacceptable.
In the warm lamplight Kitsura and Nishima appeared to be two figures from the
wall painting come back to a time where things were more real and mundane. With
her eyes closed and her face covered in a blush from winding the flute, Kitsura
seemed even more the ideal of feminine beauty. Shonto turned his gaze away with
difficulty and found that both Jaku Katta and Lord Komawara appeared
enraptured. At the same time Shu-yun sat with his eyes closed as though he
meditated— whether it was upon the music or something else Shonto could
not know.
The melody followed the
falling leaves down to a small waterfall that became a stream winding down the
mountainside among the pines. The sound of temple bells
echoed in the strings of
the harp as the stream passed one of the many fanes among the mountain groves.
It was not a long piece,
and when it was over everyone sat in silence for several moments. As though on
cue, Kitsura and Lady Nishima rose and their servants collected up their
instruments.
“Please excuse our
interruption,” Kitsura almost whispered. And before the men could
protest, the women had retreated the way they had come.
The room seemed as empty
as a bell after it has been rung. The men sat quietly, each lost in his own
thoughts and the feelings the music and the presence of the women had stirred.
Shonto finally broke the silence.
“All official
business should have such interruptions. It provides the proper perspective
from which to proceed.” He looked at each member of the group in turn,
holding each of their gazes for just an instant, and then he nodded. The
audience began.
“General Jaku, may I
begin by expressing the thanks of the government of Seh for what you have so
recently accomplished on the
“Do you plan to
stay long in Seh, General? We could plan some fine hunting and other
entertainments, which your officers may also enjoy.”
Jaku paused before
answering. “I have completed my work on the canal sooner than
anticipated, Lord Shonto. As I have no orders as of yet, I had hoped to offer
some small service in your military efforts. It would be an honor to serve with
such a renowned general.”
“This is better
news than I had expected, General. It would be an honor to have your
counsel.” Shonto smiled broadly. “If this is indeed your intention,
Katta-sum, then I would happily share what little I have learned of our
situation here.”
Jaku said nothing but
composed himself to listen.
“Only this morning
I have finished a long report to our Emperor detailing the situation we have
found in Seh. Although this is a report for the eyes of our ruler I feel that,
as you command the Emperor’s Guard, I may speak to you with complete
confidence.
“As you no doubt
are aware, there is a disagreement
among the lords of Seh
regarding the barbarians and their intentions and also about their numbers. On
both sides of this debate stand men with many years of experience and proven
wisdom. As you might imagine, this made deciding between the two arguments
difficult. I have always believed that the direct approach is best whenever
possible. We decided to send men into the desert to find out what we could.
“The only people of
the Empire who can travel north of the border of Seh are the healing Brothers,
so Brother Shuyun, accompanied by Lord Komawara disguised as a Botahist
Brother, went into the desert.” Shonto turned to Komawara.
“Perhaps, Lord Komawara, you should tell this tale.”
The young lord nodded
and, as agreed, told an abridged version of his journey into the desert, saying
nothing of the Kalam, or the cult of the Dragon and its shrine. Shonto watched
the Imperial Guard Commander’s face throughout, but Jaku betrayed
nothing. When Komawara finished, he bowed to Lord Shonto.
“Please,
General,” Shonto said, “I’m sure both Shuyun-sum and Lord
Komawara would answer any questions you might have.‘’
“I must have time
to consider this information further, Lord Shonto. Please, continue, it is a
most intriguing tale.”
Shonto took a long drink
of his wine as though the talk of the desert had caused him thirst. “As
you see, General, I am much more concerned with the situation in the north than
I was when I set out on the
It was a minute reaction,
but Shonto was sure Jaku hesitated as though surprised.
“I have not heard
of it, though dragon worship is not uncommon even within our Empire,
Sire.”
“Huh.” Shonto
looked thoughtful for a moment. “Perhaps that explains it.” He was
silent for a moment. “I believe that we are about to encounter a threat
the likes of which we have not seen since the day of Emperor Jirri. And this
will not be a threat that confines itself to Seh, for though the men of Seh are
brave and skilled in
the arts of war, they are
few in number as the plague destroyed most of a generation here.
“The situation is
complicated by other factors. It is my belief that barbarian raids on Seh fit
into someone’s design, someone within our Empire. Their purpose I leave
to your imagination. For this reason the true threat will not be understood
until it is perhaps too late.”
Shonto stopped and looked
at Jaku expectantly.
“Lord Shonto, I am
not sure what you suggest, but certainly no one within the Empire would be
foolish enough to betray us to the barbarian. Why would anyone do such a
thing?”
“I was hoping,
General, that you might tell me.”
Jaku drew himself up to
his full sitting height. “Lord Shonto,” his voice showed signs of
an effort toward control, “you come close to suggesting that I am party
to a treason.”
Careful, General, the
lord thought, you speak to the lord of the Shonto. I will accuse whom I please.
He nodded to Kamu who signaled an unseen attendant. A screen slid open and two
of the Hajiwara men, now in Komawara livery, entered carrying a black,
ironbound trunk on a pole. They set this on the mat before the dais and at a
nod from Komawara they opened the lid and spilled the contents onto the floor
before the Emperor’s Guard Commander. A cascade of gold spread like a
landslide across the floor and came to rest, glittering in the lamplight. An
Emperor’s ransom in gold coins!
The two Komawara guards
retreated, and as they did so a third man entered. The Kalam, dressed in his
barbarian clothing, came and sat between Lord Komawara and Shuyun.
When Jaku raised his eyes
from the fortune that had been spread before him, his face seemed utterly
changed. Perhaps it was the light reflected from the coins, but his skin had
grown pale and appeared to be drawn taught over rigid muscles. The sight of the
barbarian caused him to stop as he began to speak.
Lord Shonto caught the
Tiger’s eye again. Now you wonder what I truly know, Shonto thought. You
even wonder if I know your part in our beloved Emperor’s plot. “By
the middle of the summer,” Shonto said, his voice hard, “the Empire
of Wa will have been overrun
by an army the size of
which has not been seen in a hundred years. Everything we strive toward will be
destroyed utterly. Anything that gives meaning to the life of General Jaku
Katta will have been rendered meaningless… Everything you
value—family, your command, lovers, estates—will all become the
prerogative of a Khan who will sit upon the throne of our Empire. And he will
distribute what is left of your life among his lieutenants and
chieftains.“ Shonto stopped to let his words have their effect.
“Akantsu,”
Shonto said, using no title or honorific, “does not understand what he
has done. In his mad attempt to bring down the Shonto House, he will bring down
his Empire and blacken the name of Yamaku for all of history.
“I am prepared to
mount a force to take you into the desert, General Jaku, so you may see with
your own eyes the things that Lord Komawara and Brother Shuyun have seen. I
will spare no effort to convince you that the barbarian threat is real, for if
we do not gain Imperial support before spring we cannot stand against the force
that will come out of the desert. Without your influence at court, General
Jaku, the Empire of Wa will fall.”
Jaku reached out and took
up a handful of coins, but he did this without sign of desire or awe, as though
it was a fist full of sand he held. He let the coins run through his fingers,
ringing as they fell back into the pile, the sound echoing in the silent room.
Picking up a single coin,
Jaku turned it over, examining it as though the meaning of gold had just become
clear to him, and its meaning did not bring him comfort.
He turned his gaze on the
Governor’s Spiritual Advisor. “Brother Shuyun, on the soul of
Botahara, do you swear that this story of what was seen in the desert is
true?”
Komawara almost rose from
his cushion. “You cannot ask him to commit a blasphemy! It is against
his…”
Shuyun reached out and
grasped the young lord’s arm and he stopped in mid-sentence.
“I cannot speak as
you ask, General Jaku, but may my own soul be bound eternally to the wheel if
what Lord Komawara has said is not truth. There is little doubt in my mind that
the picture Lord Shonto has painted will
come to be if the Empire
does not rise to the defense of Seh. The army we saw in the desert was as real
as the coins you see before you and the warriors more numerous.“
Jaku gave a nodding bow
to the monk and looked back to the coin in his hand, turning it slowly over and
over. “I cannot guarantee that the Son of Heaven will heed my words, Lord
Shonto. In certain endeavors our Emperor does not listen to the sound of
reason. I will, however, do what I can. Certainly the Emperor will believe that
this is only a ploy to gain control of a large force and that I have fallen
victim to your cunning. Or the fact that I am convinced by your words may
suggest treachery more than it will suggest an accurate military
assessment.” He placed the coin carefully back in the pile. “A way
that we could strengthen our case would be to convince a certain lord in Seh of
the danger to the Empire.” He hesitated. “But I am concerned that
revealing his name might bring about his own demise, and that would certainly
put assistance from the Son of Heaven out of reach forever.”
Shonto shifted his
armrest again. “If I were to invite this lord to the palace and display
the contents of this trunk to him, do you think you could assist us in
convincing him of the true danger to Seh?”
Jaku nodded. “I
believe I could help make the argument convincing. Again I stress that if I
reveal his name, revenge must not be sought against him. This could damage our
cause beyond any hope of repair.”
“General
Jaku,” Shonto said, “the Empire has been brought into great danger
through the rivalry of its Houses. If we are to save Wa, all such pettiness
must be put aside.” He turned to his Steward. “Kamu-sum, invite
Lord Kintari and his two oldest sons to come and hear the Ladies of the Capital
play.” He turned back to Jaku and raised an eyebrow. The Black Tiger
nodded.
Each rhythmic sweep of
the oarsmen sent the fine craft gliding along the silent canal. The speed of
his boat often brought Jaku great pleasure; when he discovered an empty stretch
of water he would exhort his boatmen to greater and greater speed for the pure
joy of it. This
evening, however, he
seemed unaware of his crew’s efforts.
Jaku Katta had absolutely
no doubt that the Supreme Master of the Botahist Order could look him in the
eye and lie as easily as he chanted the name of Botahara. He was equally
convinced that Brother Shuyun was as incapable of this as his former servant had
been.
Despite all that he felt
about the Botahist Brotherhood and its meddling, he knew that this boy-monk had
somehow remained pure, untouched by the hypocrisy of his Order. How else could
one explain the feat that Jaku had witnessed in the kick boxing ring? The boy
had deflected a blow without actual physical contact! Jaku had felt it.
Even though Jaku had long
worn the humiliation of that defeat and the years of anger that it had caused,
he knew that Initiate Brother Shuyun was not another Botahist hypocrite…
What the boy was Jaku could not be certain, but his suspicion caused him both
awe and fear. Shuyun, he sometimes believed, was a child touched by Botahara
himself.
Jaku considered what he
had heard in his audience with the governor. The barbarians were no longer
pawns in the Emperor’s plot. The tribes had plans of their own, it
seemed—were under no one’s control except perhaps this Golden Khan.
Should he tell Shonto what he knew about this one? Perhaps. He would see.
Jaku looked out at the
thoroughfare that edged the canal. Like most of the streets of Rhojo-ma, it was
almost without traffic. By the Gods, if he joined Shonto he would come to war
with the Emperor. Akantsu would never be convinced that his barbarian chieftain
had escaped his control. Never, never, never.
Jaku rubbed his temple.
To join Shonto was probably a decision to commit suicide, there was no doubt of
that. Yet only Shonto could save the Empire. That was also beyond doubt. And if
the Empire was saved? What then?
Jaku thought of the Lady
Nishima, sitting before her harp. Was it possible that there was another
solution? What if he truly became worthy of Shonto’s daughter? If Shonto
won the coming war, the Yamaku would fall. Who would Shonto put on the throne?
Perhaps, perhaps,
perhaps… Perhaps Shonto could escape the Emperor’s trap. Shonto,
Jaku was beginning
to believe, was capable
of anything. He thought of the trunk of gold and this brought him back to the
question he had considered earlier. How long had Shonto known?
The canal slipped by and
before Jaku realized it he had arrived at the Emperor’s Barge. Absorbed
in thought, the Commander of the Imperial Guard sat in his sampan. His boatmen
waited without sign of impatience.
The path has grown too
narrow, Jaku thought, I have no choices left. If Wa falls to a barbarian
chieftain, it will be as Shonto says—the Jaku will lose everything. He
shook his head. When there are no choices, one should not be frozen in
indecision. The Empire must be defended. One cannot play gü without a
gü board.
Jaku almost bounded onto
the deck of the barge. Bowing guards fell back in surprise. Their commander
laughed at their reaction. He mounted the steps to the upper deck as he tackled
the question of how to raise an army. He considered any number of lies he could
tell the Emperor, all of them far more plausible than the truth. But some part
of him balked at this course, and he found this reaction somewhat strange as
though it belonged to someone else and appeared in his personality entirely by
accident.
Eight
Osha knelt before a low
table and, in the soft light of a lamp, went through the ritual of choosing
between two perfumes. As each bottle was unstopped, she would take great care
not to breathe while a dab was placed on her forearm. This would be allowed to
evaporate appropriately before the delicate fragrance was inhaled. Although the
entire ritual was enacted with eyes closed in apparent concentration, in truth,
it was a sham. Osha could not truly focus her attention on the scents and she
let her arms fall to her sides with a sigh—an act of resignation or
despair.
Before she had opened the
perfume, Osha had sent all her maids away so that they would not distract her,
but the truth was she wanted to be alone to tie her sash. She looked at the
gold brocade but could not bring herself to take it up.
The women had left with
some reluctance, running a last comb through her long hair, rearranging the hem
of a third under-kimono so it would be properly displayed. Although Osha
was very careful not to reveal her feelings to her servants, it still made her
sad that they were so unaware of her situation. Osha shook her head sadly. They
were excited to see the Emperor’s renewed interest in their
mistress, believing that this would make her happy.
Finally settling on a scent
of ground conch shell, musk, and summer tulip, the Sonsa dancer carefully
washed the other scent from her arm before dabbing tiny droplets behind her
ears and on her wrists. Osha was circumspect in her use of perfume, unlike many
of the women in the court. As a Sonsa dancer she believed that beauty resided
in movement—all else was unimportant.
The ritual completed,
Osha took the long brocade sash
that she had chosen to
offset the pale green of her robes and laid it across her lap. Until this
moment she had done so well, but suddenly her spirit sank like a stone through
water. Taking deep breaths she mastered this moment of weakness. Sonsa dancers
were trained to such control. Slowly winding the yards of fabric around her
waist, Osha imagined that she bound her emotions inside with each turn.
A shoji slid aside
somewhere down the hall and several sets of footsteps could be heard through
the rice paper screens. The voices of Osha’s maids were quiet but, all
the same, projected a note of urgency. Osha stopped the winding of her sash and
cocked her beautiful head to listen. It was not urgency that she heard, it was protest and the footsteps were those of a man or men.
Immediately the dancer
imagined the worst. It was an enraged Emperor coming to confront her with her
infidelity. The shoji to her chamber banged open and Osha started as though
struck. Tadamoto stood in the opening, tall among the protesting servants.
Collecting her wits,
Osha waved the servants out and Tadamoto entered, dropping to his knees a few
feet before her. The resolve he had shown forcing his way to her rooms
disappeared and he slumped, staring down at the floor. He raised his eyes to
hers as though he would speak, but no words came and his gaze returned to the
floor.
Nor could Osha find
words for the turmoil that Tadamoto’s arrival had sparked. They sat in
silence for several minutes before Osha managed to form a few words.
“Tadamoto-sum,”
she whispered, “you must not, you… you place us in the gravest
danger.”
Tadamoto shook his
head. The pain he felt was brushed in broad strokes across the features of his
scholar’s face. Yet he did not speak.
“Tado-sum,”
Osha whispered again, “I could not tell you.” She reached out to
take his fine-boned hands, but he pulled them away and left her, half reaching
out to him. She covered her face then and silent tears glistened on delicate
fingers. “I thought he was finished with me. It was my dream that, in
time, he would… not care about us.” She pushed small fists against
her eyes. “We have been so loyal!”
Tadamoto reached out as
though he would comfort her but stopped.
“I wanted to tell
you, Tadamoto-sum, but there are no words to describe the confusion in my
heart.”
“How?”
Tadamoto said at last. “How could you let this happen?”
Osha emerged from behind
her hands now, tears still shining in her eyes. “Tado-sum,” she
said so quietly he almost did not hear. “What did you imagine? Did you
imagine that I could make a choice? That we have a choice?”
The young officer said
nothing and she reached out to take his hands again, and again he pulled away.
“You could have
chosen to refuse,” he said, his voice colder than he intended; it was
almost a hiss.
When Osha answered, her
voice sounded calm, with a touch of distance in it. “And what would have
happened then?” When he did not answer she continued. “Could a
member of the Jaku family visit me secretly in a monastery in Chou or
She reached out and took
his hands now and he did not resist. “What other choice is there?”
She tugged his hands gently, but still he would not meet her eyes. “Speak
to me.”
“Osha, Osha-sum.
You cannot… You cannot.” He was unable to finish.
“Our only choice is
to never see each other again. Tado-sum my love, I cannot make that choice. Can
you?” When he did not speak, she went on. “He will tire of me soon.
There is no doubt of that. As soon as he has recovered from this slight by the
Omawara girl, he will have no more need of me. If you want to truly help, find
a girl of high birth who is ambitious for her family and a great beauty as
well. I am nothing to him, truly.” She paused. “And he is even less
to me. Tado-sum?”
He looked up at her now.
“I know this is
terrible, but… Please, I would not do this thing if it were not for
us.”
Osha pressed herself into
his arms and he responded, pulling her close against him. He could feel the
struggle as she tried not to sob. Life was so unfair to her, this tiny girl
trapped by talent and beauty, and yes, by ambition, too. Tadamoto buried his
face in her hair. The delicate scent of her perfume was the greatest blow of
all.
When he had gone, Osha
sat staring at the lamp on her perfume table, watching the flame sway and dance
to the will of imperceptible currents within the room. Taking the brocade in
her hands she finished winding it and tied the Lover’s Knot with barely a
second’s hesitation.
Later, in the chambers of
the Emperor, Osha tried to focus on an image of Tadamoto. The Emperor was lost
in his passion and held her tightly to him as he moved. To her horror, Osha
felt her breath begin to come in short gasps. She heard a moan of pleasure, and
the voice that uttered it was her own!
No, she thought, Jenna, Jenna, please… let me be. But the voice cried out again,
uncaring in its own pleasure.
“No, Jenna,”
Osha whispered under her breath. “Oh, no. Oh…” But the
protest was lost in a cry of passion that heeded no voice but its own.
Nine
Narrowing
High above Screaming Monkey Gorge
The footpath jags up
Into the Sacred Mountains
When one walks among clouds The way
becomes as insubstantial As a strand of moonlight
“Verses From a Pilgrimage”
Initiate Brother Shinsha
Shuyun came easily to the
Fifth Closure and altered his pattern. He had been practicing this same
exercise now for several weeks though he had yet to achieve the results he
desired. Jaku had tried to strike him thus: Shuyun moved through the complex
pattern of punches and deflections as though the Black Tiger had returned to
fight their bout again. Shuyun closed his eyes and concentrated on his memory,
trying to find the same reaction in himself, trying to achieve the identical
state.
Again he felt close, but
yet it eluded him. Without hesitation he began the Fifth Closure and continued,
practicing the broadening of his focus that would eventually include his entire
musculature, the flow and precision of his movements, breath, and his
meditative state. Far off, a rapping entered his realm of consciousness. A
pause and then it came again. Three punctures of his meditative state that
echoed endlessly through his altered time sense.
He interrupted his
exercise and stood calmly for a moment, adjusting his sense of time. The
tapping came again, though they seemed short quiet raps now.
“Please
enter.”
The shoji slid open to
reveal a Shonto guard kneeling in the opening.
“Corporal?”
Shuyun crossed toward the open screen so that any interchange would be as quiet
as possible. The Governor’s Palace had too many ears by far.
“Excuse this
interruption, Brother but you left instructions for this situation and Kamu-sum
confirmed them.”
Shuyun waved this aside.
“Please, Corporal, do not apologize.”
The guard gave a nodding
bow. “On the
Shuyun nodded.
“A young woman is
at our gate claiming to be this woman, though she is not dressed in the robes
of her Order. She has requested a meeting with you, Brother Shuyun. Kamu-sum
confirmed that you had left orders to interrupt you were this young woman to
come again. She is waiting in the Spring Audience Hall. I hope we have acted
correctly, Brother.”
Shuyun hid his surprise.
“You have, thank you, Corporal. Please inform Sister Tesseko that I will
join her in moments.‘’
There was not enough time
to bathe, so Shuyun settled for washing in cold water and changing his robes.
Acolyte Tesseko… He remembered her well—young, tall, the bearer of
unsettling news. He had often wondered what had become of her charge, Sister
Morima. Had she survived her crisis of the spirit? There was more than concern
for the nun’s spiritual well-being at issue here; there was self-interest
also and Shuyun knew it.
He finished dressing and
left his chambers, passing down the halls quickly though somehow without
seeming to hurry. The Spring Audience Hall was a small, simple room with a low
dais, painted screens depicting spring in the mountains, and a simple shrine to
Botahara set into a tiny alcove in the wall. The shrine was no doubt what had
led the guard, or perhaps Kamu, to choose this hall for their
meeting—that and the fact that the room was so seldom used.
Guards knelt on either
side of the double wooden doors to the chamber. They bowed as Shuyun
approached, and
with a quiet knock of
warning they pushed open the doors.
Sister Tesseko looked up
as Shuyun entered and her face seemed to register terrible grief. If not for a
lifetime of training, the strength and immediacy of the woman’s pain
would have drawn all of his attention, but as a follower of Botahara he was
more affected by the fact that she sat with her back to the Shrine of the Perfect Master.
Shuyun stopped and gave
the short double bow of the Botahist trained. “Acolyte Tesseko, your
visit honors me, as it does the House of my Lord.” He knelt a polite
distance away.
The nun bowed. “I
am no longer called Sister Tesseko, Brother. I am Shimeko, now.” She
bowed again. “I thank you for your kind words, though I realize that, in
truth, I have broken all convention and exhibit the worst possible manners
coming here unannounced.”
“Shimeko-sum, I am
honored that you would trust me enough to come without sending word, as I asked
you to do when we traveled together on the Grand Canal. Please, be at your
ease.” Shuyun paused to gauge her reaction, but she did not meet his
eyes. “May I ask, how fares our Sister, Morima-sum?”
The young woman shrugged.
“She has shown some improvement, Brother, though not as much as the
Sisters had hoped.” She shrugged again.
There was a silence then,
and Shuyun had an opportunity to study Shimeko while she stared down at the
grass mats. She was dressed in the plainest cotton robes, like the wife of a
poor merchant, and she covered her head with a rough woolen shawl. Her face was
careworn and Shuyun thought she looked older than she had when they last met.
There were other signs of great strain, for she was thin and her skin was
mottled and lifeless as though her diet had been very poor for some time.
Shuyun was concerned.
“Are you well,
Sister?” he asked quietly.
She seemed to consider
this for a second, a sad smile almost coming to her lips. “I am no longer
a Sister, Brother Shuyun. I… I find
I must keep reminding myself of this.” She fell silent again, then looked
up and held his eyes for an instant. “The Way,” she said, re-
turning her gaze to the
floor, “is difficult. I-I had not the strength.”
Shuyun nodded slowly.
“Ahh,” he said almost under his breath. “Is there some way
that I may serve you, Shimeko-sum? Please do not hesitate to ask.”
The conversation was
punctuated by a long silence then. “Brother… Brother Shuyun, I have
come to beg that I may be allowed to take service with you.” She put her
hand to her mouth as though she would stop it from causing her more
embarrassment.
Shuyun put the tips of
his fingers together as in meditation. “Shimeko-sum, what you ask is not
possible, I am sorry. This is not my decision to make. And certainly it would
not be proper for a young woman to serve me. It is out of the question.”
Shuyun watched her as he spoke but could not be sure of her reaction, for her
face was partly hidden by her shawl. “Shimeko-sum? Why do you ask
this?”
She shrugged, tugging
with one hand at a strand of grass from the floor mat. “I believe,
Brother Shuyun, that you are a pure spirit, untainted by the… present
state of the Botahist Orders.”
“You believe the
Sisterhood is tainted, Shimeko-sum?”
She stopped playing with
the strand of straw, covering it with her palm as though this would somehow
repair the damage. Her voice dropped to a near whisper. “I believe both
of our Orders are corrupt, Brother Shuyun. Excuse me for saying so.”
“I see. Is this
belief related to Sister Morima’s crisis, Shimeko-sum?”
Lifting her hands she
found that magic had not occurred. The straw remained as it had been. She
nodded. “Yes, Brother. That and other things.”
“I do not wish to
pry, Shimeko-sum, but, in truth, I wonder what has occurred that caused you to
turn your back on Botahara.”
She shrugged.
“I…1 have not truly turned my back, Brother.” She seemed to
struggle for words. “I am no longer sure how to serve the Perfect Master.
I feel that those things which I learned from my teachers have been…
tainted, debased in some way. To worship the Perfect Master in such a
way…” She shivered visibly.
“This must be
wrong, Brother,” she said, her voice suddenly gaining clarity. “It
must be.”
“You make strong
statements, Shimeko-sum. Did Sister Morima speak of her concerns specifically?
Again, I hesitate to pry.‘’
“As you know,
Brother, Morima-sum suffered a crisis of the spirit. She is
inced that the scrolls
she saw at the Ceremony of Divine Renewal were not the scrolls of Botahara. I
am not sure what evidence convinced her of this, but Morima-sum is a scholar of
great repute, Brother. I do not doubt her assessment.“ She folded her
hands in her lap now and closed her eyes as if searching her memory.
“Because of Sister
Morima’s crisis, she has spoken to me of things that I should otherwise
never have heard. She did not seem to care, Brother. It is my understanding
that the Sisters have methods of collecting information, even from within your
own Order. They seem to believe that the Sacred Scrolls have disappeared. That
the Brotherhood searches for them secretly.” She opened her eyes and met
Shuyun’s own. “Though Sister Morima believes the scrolls have not
been in their possession for a long time, perhaps hundreds of years.”
“I see,”
Shuyun whispered. “The Scrolls of Botahara are guarded night and day by
the Sacred Guard of Jinjoh Monastery. It is inconceivable that they could be
stolen, Sister.”
“Shimeko, Brother, Shimeko.
The Sisters seem to agree, Brother Shuyun. Some do not believe they were
removed by men. They believe it was divine intervention.”
“Shimeko-sum. This
can hardly be the belief of the Senior Sisters.”
She shrugged. “It
appears to be, Brother, Morima-sum reported this to me as though it were
commonplace. And there is more.” She began to worry the loose straw
again. “No doubt you have heard the rumor that the Udumbara has
blossomed?” The straw broke free of the mat and she began to weave it
through her fingers. “It is not a mere rumor, Brother Shuyun. Sisters
witnessed the blossoming before your Order closed the grounds of Monarta. It is
beyond all doubt, Brother, the Teacher who was spoken of is among us.”
“I have discussed
this rumor with a senior menroer o£? my own Order,” Shuyun said
quietly. “He assures me that this is not the case, Shimeko-sum. Why would
he lie to me? Why would my own Order deny the rumor?‘’
“The Sisters ask
this same question, Brother. It is an issue of grave concern to them. It is
thought that the Teacher is as yet unknown to the Brotherhood, and they cannot
proclaim him. If they admit the Udumbara has blossomed, as the prophecy was
written, and they cannot bring forth the Teacher… As you see, Brother
Shuyun, the activities of the Botahist Orders seem to reflect a self-interest
that I find repugnant. I apologize for the insult that is implied, but I cannot
help but speak the truth, Brother, please excuse me.”
“I value the truth,
Shimeko-sum, but it is not always easy to discern or to accept.” Shuyun
fell into a long silence and was finally brought back to awareness when Shimeko
cleared her throat.
“Please excuse me,
your words have given me much to consider.” He tried to smile. “I
come back to the question of how I may serve you, Shimeko-sum.”
“But it is I who
have come to serve you, Brother Shuyun.” Suddenly she prostrated herself
before him. “I ask this most humbly, Brother.”
“Please,
Shimeko-sum, sit as you were. Do not do this.” He looked around in acute
embarrassment as though afraid someone would come in and see them. “This
is most unseemly. Why are you doing this?”
Shimeko spoke from her
position, prostrate on the mats. “Brother Shuyun, there are some in the
Sisterhood who believe that you may be the Teacher who was spoken of. I wish to
serve you.”
Shuyun rocked back on his
heels. What could possibly make the Sisters believe such a thing?
“Shimeko-sum, I assure you, if I were the Teacher I would not keep such a
thing secret.”
“Awareness is often
preceded by accomplishment, Brother.”
“In truth,
Shimeko-sum, my own faith is not unassailable by questions and doubts.
Shimeko-sum, rise up,” he ordered and the young woman complied. She rose
to a kneeling position, the texture of the straw mat marking an intricate
relief on her forehead.
She obeys her Teacher, Shuyun realized, and this
unsettled him more than her words. You stopped a blow without it touching you. It was like a whisper in his
mind. Brother Sotura was not
even aware that such a thing was possible. Senior Brother Sotura! It cannot be true, he told
himself, my faith is so easily shaken, doubts grow in me like weeds. I cannot
be the Teacher—I may never be a senior Brother if I continue as I am now.
“Brother,”
Shimeko said flatly, bringing him back to the world. “I have nothing, no
coins, no roof, no walls, no skills, no family. If you send me away, I shall
live in the street, and though I have no compunctions about begging, I have no
experience of this life. I will live outside your gates, Brother, until I am
given some task or until I am driven away. I do not know what else I can
do.”
Shuyun sighed. He
believed she would do exactly as she said. Botahara have mercy on her; a lost
one. “Your calligraphy is presentable?”
“I am told it is
sufficient, Brother. I acted as Morima-sum’s secretary often.”
“Would you object
to serving a highborn lady in the same capacity?”
“If she is within
your household, Brother, I would accept gratefully.”
“I serve within her household, Shimeko-sum.” He paused, thinking.
“I can promise nothing, Shimeko-sum, but I will inquire.” He shook
his head. “And please, we can have no more displays of… this kind.
I am not the Teacher, I assure you.”
“If that is your
wish, Brother Shuyun.”
“Come, I will find
a maid who will take you to the kitchens for now. You have not eaten in some
time?”
“Three days only,
Brother.” She tried to favor him with a smile. “I—I thank
you, Brother Shuyun.”
“Yes, but no more
of this. You must promise.”
She started to bow but
turned it into a nod.
Ten
Lord Shonto’s
steward, Kamu, wove his way unsteadily down the hallway. He held a lantern
ahead of him in his only hand and occasionally used his elbow against a post to
regain his balance. Guards bowed smartly as the old man passed. Despite his appearance—gray
hair in a tangle, robes obviously thrown on and belted in the most haphazard
manner—Kamu had once been a famed swordsman and the young men among
Shonto’s guard treated him like a legend who had descended from some
Great Beyond to walk briefly among them.
The old steward careened
down the hallway like a ship with a broken rudder, bow lantern swinging. Four
of Shonto’s Personal Guard watched the doors to their lord’s
chambers—solid doors, not screens. The four bowed as Kamu approached and
hands went to sword hilts.
After speaking the
password, Kamu was forced to set the lantern down to give the accompanying hand
signal. The force with which the lantern made contact with the floor indicated
the steward’s level of annoyance.
The senior guard tapped
on the door and a viewport slid open. Quiet words were exchanged and the night
guard, one of the few allowed into the lord’s chamber while he slept,
slid the port closed.
Kamu left the lantern on
the floor as he waited. The viewport slid aside again and the senior guard
nodded, stepping aside as the door opened.
Passing through the small
entrance hall that acted as a guard room, Kamu entered an inner chamber. A lamp
flickered on a small table, casting a weak light in the almost empty room. Kamu
had barely knelt when Shonto entered the room, looking only slightly less
disheveled than his steward.
The lord nodded in return
to his retainer’s bow but did
not take the second
cushion. Instead he placed his back against one of the deep lacquered posts and
crossed his arms, waiting.
“Excuse
this…”
Shonto held up his hand
and the steward stopped in mid-sentence. “Despite our apparent youth,
Kamu-sum, I believe we are too old for such formalities, under the
circumstances. Please, speak directly.”
Without a hint of a
smile, Kamu began. “The Kintari, Sire… They have fled.”
“Huh.” Shonto
rubbed his chin.
“I have taken the
liberty to awaken and inform your advisors, Sire. I’ve tripled the guard
around the palace.”
Shonto started to speak,
but the night guard appeared in the doorway.
“General Hojo and
Lord Komawara, Sire.”
Shonto gestured to allow
them entrance.
The sounds of doors and
rustling clothing. By their dress, both Hojo and Komawara had also been caught
unaware. They bowed to Kamu and their liege-lord.
Shonto said, “The
Kintari have refused our hospitality, General Hojo.”
Hojo nodded.
“Most unfortunate.
All of them, I suppose?”
“It appears so,
Sire,” Kamu answered. “We will know in a few hours.‘’
“We should take
precautions, but I don’t believe this means the Emperor is about to move
against us,” Shonto pulled his robe closer. “His plan is more
subtle than that.”
Kamu waved his arm in a
sweeping gesture that seemed to take in all of Seh. “I believe, Sire,
that the Kintari are less important than what this incident tells us. They were
warned, there can be no doubt.”
Shonto paced across to
the opposite post, then back again. He looked up at Hojo.
“I agree, Sire.
They must have had knowledge from within the Governor’s Palace. Unless it
was a sudden loss of nerve, and I consider that unlikely. Even the Emperor does
not choose the fainthearted to carry out his treachery.”
“I have also had
word from those who watch our new ally. A messenger came to Jaku’s barge
about the same
time as we received word
of the Kintari. Apparently this caused quite a stir aboard the Guard
Commander’s barge. Jaku is on his way to the palace as we speak.“
Shonto nodded.
“Lord Komawara, if you were Lord Kintari, where would you go?”
Komawara pressed the
bridge of his long, thin nose. “The quickest escape would be down the
river, but once the sea is reached they will find few ships willing to risk the
winter storms: it seems unlikely that they would make such a choice unless
utterly desperate. The
“Ah.” Shonto
gave half a laugh.“”How far ahead of us do we think they
are?“
Kamu and Hojo exchanged
glances. “We are not yet certain, Lord Shonto,” Kamu said.
“Their servants may have been keeping up a pretense for several days,
though no more than three or, perhaps, four.”
“Excuse me,
Sire,” Hojo said quietly, “we should also consider what this may
say about our friend in the Imperial Guard. Jaku was well aware of our
intentions; he received a message just as we did. Could he be the ear in our
midst?”
“Jaku’s
loyalty will always be in question. It is only comforting to remind oneself
that the Emperor must be haunted by the same question.” Shonto stretched
his arms high. “Morning is too near for a return to sleep. Please, join
me for my meal.” Shonto clapped and a servant appeared. He gave quick
orders and then began to pace again, an activity his retainers had seldom seen
him indulge in.
Before servants arrived
with the meal, the night guard again interrupted, whispering to Kamu.
“Brother Shuyun and
General Jaku have both arrived, Sire.”
“Ah,” Shonto
said to those around him. “As in all good tales: mention the spirit by
name and he appears.” Shonto crossed to the small dais upon which his
sword
sat in its stand and took
up a place on the cushion, pulling an armrest closer in a familiar gesture.
Shuyun appeared, his
tonsured scalp and simple manner of dress allowing him to arrive looking as he
always did. Oddly, Jaku, who had the farthest to travel, was impeccable in his
black uniform.
The monk and the general
bowed as their stations required.
“I set out as soon
as the news reached me, Lord Shonto.” Jaku seemed very calm, Shonto
thought, despite the fact that he certainly knew he would be under suspicion—someone
warned the Kintari.
Shonto looked around the
group. “I trust, General Jaku, that you learned of this
independently?”
Jaku nodded. “I do
not, however, know where the Kintari have fled or when they first disappeared.
It would seem, Lord Shonto, that the Kintari must have learned of this from
someone within the Palace or within my guard. I have very tight security among
my own officers, Sire.”
“I do not doubt it,
General. More blows through the walls of this ancient maze than winter winds.
Such things are inevitable in this situation.”
Servants brought a light
meal and tables were arranged for Shonto and his guests. As though no matters
of greater weight had been discussed, polite conversation flowed seamlessly
until the servants had left and Shonto gave his guard orders to secure the
chamber. The discussion went from the best time of year to hunt various game
birds back to the issues at hand without a sentence of transition.
Shonto sipped his cha,
then set the cup back on his table, turning it slowly. “It appears that
the palace is not about to be stormed by forces loyal to our enemies. The
suggestion that the Kintari were warned is no doubt true. Perhaps our hopes
that the Kintari would become allies in our attempt to gain the Emperor’s
support were vain.”
Shuyun gave a half bow
before speaking. “If the Kintari could have been convinced of our
intentions, they may well have become the support we hoped. We will not likely
know this now. We must find support without them. The men of Seh and the Emperor
both need to be convinced of the truth of our discoveries in the desert. It
is a pity that we did not
return with evidence other than words.“
“As Brother Shuyun
says,” Jaku added, “I have been convinced by words and the belief
of the witnesses. Not everyone will think as I do. I have composed my letters
to the Emperor and certain of his counselors. As you are aware, the court
functions according to an elaborate, unwritten system of debt and
payment—the coinage is favor. If one understands the workings of the
court and has given credit to many, one can collect accordingly. In the Palace
they say: it is improper to ask the Great Council of the Empire to add a wing
to your home, but it is quite possible to have the Great Council oifer to build
such a wing.
‘ ’I am not a
great lord nor do I hold high position, but I will call in what credit I may
have given. We shall see.“ Jaku tugged at the corner of his mustache.
”If there is no support forthcoming from the Emperor or the men of Seh—what
will we do?“
Hojo nodded. “It is
the very thing we have debated these past months, General Jaku.”
A gong sounded and
somewhere in the darkness the guard changed. The night guard appeared in the
doorway and signaled Kamu. All was well.
“It has been our
hope to convince others of the true threat, General Jaku,” Shonto began,
“but as you have said—this may not be possible. When the barbarians
cross our border in the spring, the men of Seh will rally to our support…
too late, unfortunately.” The lord rearranged several objects on his
table as he gathered his thoughts. “We will make these final attempts to
gain the support of the men of Seh and the Emperor, but we cannot plan as if
these attempts will succeed. It must also be realized that to gain the support
of the Emperor but not the men of Seh, or the reverse, will not be adequate.
Our needs are great.
“If we have not
gained the support we need, our concern will no longer be the defense of Seh
but the defense of Wa. We will attempt to raise an army as we move south. It
will become a question of how many men of Seh will be willing to follow, for
they will form the heart of our army.”
“Sire!”
Komawara blurted out, “you will abandon
Seh…“
Suddenly aware of the naivete of this statement, Komawara reddened noticeably,
adding to his embarrassment.
Shonto’s tone
remained calm as he answered. “I do not wish to abandon Seh, Lord
Komawara, but to throw a tiny force at a vast barbarian army will accomplish
nothing. If our tactics are prudent and our courage does not falter, we may
slow the barbarian advance long enough to allow an army to be raised in the
south. I am the Governor of Seh, Lord Komawara, and would not consider such a
course if it were not for the grave danger to our entire Empire. If the men of
Seh and the Emperor will not act to secure the borders or to protect the
Empire, then we must act in their place.
“I believe, Lord
Komawara, that the people of Seh will be largely safe from the barbarian threat
due to our retreat. This Khan cannot have an army large enough to hold Seh and pursue
us south to the inner provinces. If Botahara smiles upon us, the barbarian army
will pass through Seh like a wind, pulling only a few leaves from their
branches.”
In the long silence that
followed, no one met the young lord’s eye. “Excuse my
outburst,” Komawara said evenly. “I bring shame to the Komawara
House. Please excuse me.” He shifted his sword in his sash. “There
is one other question that I must ask at risk of again appearing naive. What
will happen if the barbarians wish only to conquer the
Shonto nodded. “It
is as we have often asked, Lord Komawara. This would probably fit the designs
of some. Then Shonto and all who support him will be brought down. We still believe
that if the barbarians only desired Seh they would have taken it in the autumn
when surprise was assured. We all will gamble our lives on this
assumption… be certain you believe it.”
Komawara nodded. “I
will risk my life to save Wa, though I would rather it were Seh I hoped to
save. Still, for me mere can be no choice.”
“Truly, Lord
Komawara,” General Hojo offered, “there can be no choice for any of
us.”
“Kamu-sum,”
Shonto said, “we must begin to gather the craft needed to take us south
and make preparations
to destroy all others.
Leave no boats for the barbarians. Begin an inventory of river boats at
once.“
The steward nodded.
“We must consider
ways to raise an army as we pass south. Who can be won to our side? Once we
cross the border of Seh, the Son of Heaven will try to remove me from command
of the army. Who will be sent to do this? General Jaku, perhaps your knowledge
and contacts at court could answer this?”
Jaku nodded.
“Much to do. We
will make our last attempt to win over the lords of Seh at the Celebration of
the First Moon. Lord Komawara, I will have to prevail upon you to describe your
journey into the barbarian, lands again.”
The cool, first light of
a northern morning glowed through the unshuttered paper screen and cast the
shadow of Jaku Katta’s large hand across the paper. The brush hovered in
the air, as it had often in the last hours. The soft bristles seemed to contain
only ink and no words.
Again he dipped his
brush.
My dear brother:
It is with some difficulty that I write
to you, not only because of the nature of our parting, which I regret deeply,
but I have arrived in Seh to discover things that neither of us had ever
expected. I do not know how to convince you that the words I write are true but
I must find a way, Tadamoto-sum. On the souls of our father and mother I swear
that every word is true. The fate of Wa depends on your ability to recognize
the truth—seldom has so much depended on the heart of one man.
Eleven
It was a small
entertainment arranged for the high-ranking residents of the Governor’s
Palace and for those who frequented Seh’s court—perhaps seventy
people in all.
The evening’s
entertainment was provided by a wrinkled, elderly man who moved with the
stooped carriage of someone who’d spent his life toiling in a rice paddy.
His threadbare robes, sewn in the country style, did nothing to deny this
impression, though in truth this man had once been a respected scholar, holding
appointments at the Hanama court where he was renowned for the quality of his
verse. Long ago he had retired to seclusion in the far north and only the
promise of a concert by the Ladies Nishima and Kitsura had lured him out this
night—that and a suggestion that Lord Shonto might provide him with a
cask of a certain rare wine.
The old man, one Suzuku,
sat on a raised platform built to resemble a balcony and behind this a silk
hanging bore a sunset and far off, a V of geese winging south among crimson
clouds. Skillful arrangements of dried leaves and cedar boughs symbolized the
autumn, just as the flying geese were the common symbol for letters or
messages.
The old man’s voice
had no doubt lost much of its power and timbre to the years, but his great
refinement of speech and the beauty and richness of the language he used more
than made up for it.
He would speak softly,
the meter of the verse as subtle as the rhythms of rain, and then he would
break into a chant, strong cadences driving the images like drumming drove
dance.
Earlier in the evening
Lady Kitsura had played without the accompaniment of her cousin, who was not in
atten-
dance, but if this had
initially been a disappointment it was soon forgotten. Kitsura Omawara could
hold the attention of the most critical audience without assistance. She had
taken her place among those listening, now, and seemed hardly less the center
of attention there. In contrast, the gathered peers of Seh, guard officers,
ladies-in-waiting, and members of the administration seemed like a gathering of
the dull and the gray. It was not just the refinement of her dress and manner
that set Lady Kitsura apart, it was as though life flowed more strongly in her
veins and gave her the ability to find pleasure and delight where it escaped
others. She easily stole the hearts of all men present and gained the grudging
admiration of the women.
Among those in
attendance, General Jaku Katta had the most difficulty concentrating on the
verse. He hoped to speak with a certain lady, and carried a poem in his sleeve
that he thought might melt some of the coolness of her manner. Although he realized
it was absurd, he felt like a suitor scorned to find that Lady Nishima was not
present. He tried to turn his thoughts elsewhere and redoubled his efforts to
focus as Suzuku began a new poem.
Autumn in Tu’s brocade hills Leaves
find a death of such beauty A man’s sad end pales
Poems seek out the unsteady hand
Words dropping from the brush
Like leaves.
Still awake at first light
Eyes red as the sunrise
Letting no leaf escape
Ink falls, drop by drop
Yellow of weeping birch
Crimson of blood-leaf .
I send poems south with passing geese
But who is left to receive them?
So many leaves adrift
On this chill wind
Up here it is better to forget early days
It is enough to ache from damp mornings To ache from memories too Is more than
a man can bear
Outside my open room
A small cloud
Tangles in the ginkyo’s branches
So white against the endless blue.
Searching among a lifetime’s
clutter
I find my worn inkstone
What words will come now? What wisdom
will I speak To frightened trees ?
The evening’s last
poem read, the gathering broke into small, informal groups and plum wine flowed
as smoothly as gossip. Jaku found himself in the company of several of
Seh’s most well-born young ladies.
“It is a
shame,” said the youngest of the women, “that Lady Nishima was not
present also. I had so looked forward to hearing her harp and had hoped she
might trade a poem-sequence with Suzuku-sum.”
Jaku could not have
agreed more, though he said nothing.
“General
Jaku,” said another, “you must have heard Lady Nishima play at
court?” She tried to hold the general’s gaze as he answered and was
disappointed that he looked away so quickly.
“Oh, many times.
Not four days ago I heard Lady Nishima and Lady Kitsura play here in the
palace. They complement each other perfectly, as you might imagine.
‘’ He was immediately embarrassed—a short time in the north
and he was already playing the fool’s game of trying to impress the
provincials.
As he spoke, Jaku’s
eye was drawn by Kitsura as she broke away from a disappointed group of young
men and made her way across the hall. There is no doubt, Jaku thought, the
rumor that she spurned the Emperor had made her even more desirable. Despite
the fact that he had come hoping to meet another, Jaku could not help but feel
excitement at Kitsura’s presence.
Lady Kitsura stopped
briefly to speak to Lord Koma-wara and Jaku shook his head. Komawara, he
remembered, had made a fool of himself in Shonto’s chambers the morning
before. It was bad enough he had not realized that Shonto might be forced to
abandon Seh but to reveal his ignorance so blatantly exhibited the poorest
judgment. Jaku was surprised that Shonto allowed the boy into his councils.
Strange.
Jaku’s attention
was drawn back into the conversation as he was asked to comment on the most
current fashions in the Capital. He was forced to disappoint them, explaining
that Lady Kitsura dressed in a more timeless style and was not a follower of
the latest fad. The conversation then drifted into a discussion of the relative
merits of silks from Oe and Nitashi. Lady Kitsura again caught the
general’s eye. She had finished her conversation with Lord Komawara, and
as Jaku looked up she motioned to him with her fan.
Waiting for an
appropriate break in the conversation, Jaku excused himself, inflicting a
second disappointment upon the young women from Seh. Lady Kitsura had retreated
to a quieter corner and stood fanning herself slowly, though the room was not
overly warm.
The guardsman bowed as he
approached and she nodded from behind a ginkyo leaf shaped fan, jade and silver
combs catching the light as her head bobbed.
“I hope you have
come away inspired by Suzuku-sum’s verse, General. Were his poems not
exquisite?”
“Certainly, Lady
Kitsura, but not less so than your playing. I feel doubly inspired.”
She nodded at his
flattery, and lowered her fan enough that he caught a glimpse of her famous
smile. “I am sorry Nishi-sum could not be present. My poor description
will not do justice to the evening.”
“Lady Nishima is
well, I trust?” Jaku said as matter-of-factly as he could.
“I am certain we
need not be overly concerned, it is kind of you to inquire.”
She did not offer to
convey his concern to the lady herself, as Jaku had hoped she would.
A gong marked the hour of
the heron and the crowd seemed to thin noticeably in response.
“The evening has
flown, I must make my good nights.
If it is not too much to
ask, General,“ she reached a small hand out from behind her fan and he
found a tiny fold of paper in his palm, ”would you read this before
leaving? I would be in your debt.“ Her eyes seemed to plead with him over
the edge of her ginkyo leaf.
“I am your servant,
Lady Kitsura.”
‘’ You are so
kind, General.“ A brief touch of her hand on his wrist and she was gone,
leaving the guardsman to catch his breath.
It was several minutes
before Jaku could find a moment alone. He opened the intricately folded letter
with great anticipation—she had not been able to erase him from her mind
after all! The disastrous meeting on the
He read:
My Dear General Jaku:
I find myself in the awkward position of
having to ask a favor. Is it too much to ask that you meet me this evening ? My
servant will await you until the hour of the owl at the door to the Great Hall.
If this is not possible, please, no explanation is preferred.
Lady Kitsura Omawara
Lady Kitsura! Jaku pushed
hard against the post that hid him. The depth of his disappointment shocked
him. He had so expected to find a poem from Nishima-sum. Lady Kitsura? He could
not imagine what favor the Omawara daughter could need of him. No doubt he
would soon find out. At the very least, he could now easily ask that Kitsura
deliver his own letter. She could hardly refuse.
Jaku said his polite good
nights as soon as he could.
As Kitsura had written, a
servant awaited him at the Great Hall—an older woman whose accent, even
in the few words she uttered, was noticeably from the Imperial Capital. Jaku
knew—it was an accent he’s spent some
time acquiring. The
servant took a route through seldom used halls until they came to a door like
many others.
A soft knock was answered
by a woman’s voice and for a brief second Jaku found himself hoping this
had all been an elaborate ruse arranged by Lady Nishima so that they might meet
secretly.
It was not to be so. The
opened door revealed Lady Kitsura sitting in the light of a single lamp, its
golden light heightening her complexion.
“General, I am
honored that you would come.” She smiled, no fan now to hide her
beautiful face.
“Lady Kitsura, it
is I who am honored.” He knelt upon the second cushion that had been set,
closer to hers than he expected.
“May I pour you
plum wine, General?”
“Thank you, Lady
Kitsura. If I am not being too presumptuous, please call me Katta-sum.”
Kitsura held back her
long sleeve as she poured wine into the small cups. “I would be
honored.” She passed him his wine cup. “Please, call me
Kitsura-sum, whenever the situation allows.”
Jaku gave a half bow.
Polite conversation followed. Discussion of the night’s poetry, the
customs and manners of the people of Seh, and even a little gossip. More than
once they found cause for laughter. Such formalities completed, Jaku broached
the true subject of their meeting, hoping to save the lady embarrassment.
“If you will excuse
my boldness, Lady Kitsura, is there some service I might perform for you? I
would deem it an honor to do so.”
Kitsura took a small sip
of wine. “You are kind to inquire, Katta-sum.” She set her wine cup
back into the small table and turned it as though examining the quality of
porcelain.
“As you are no
doubt aware, I left a most awkward situation in the Capital. Unlike many
families, my own would not argue my decision…” She looked up at
him, her face suddenly troubled. “Yet now I fear the repercussions of
that decision—not for myself, General— but I fear for my family. My
own decision was perhaps too selfish.”
“You acted
according to the dictates of your heart, Kitsura-sum, a woman of integrity
could do nothing less.
Is there some task I
could perform that would relieve some of this apprehension you feel?“
“Truly, you are
kind,” she said warmly, a sense of relief apparent in her tone. “I
am concerned that my family could be in a delicate position. I am not
sure…” Her voice became so small that words ceased to come.
“Perhaps I could
draw upon my friends in the Capital, particularly in the court, to find out if
there is reason for worry, Kitsura-sum. Would this be of service to you?”
“Oh, yes,
Katta-sum, very much so!” She reached out and squeezed his large hand.
“But please, enough risk has been taken for me. Do nothing that would jeopardize
your position. I could not bear it. Wul you promise me this?”
“Lady Kitsura, it
would be an honor to take any risk on your behalf but, truly, what you ask is
no cause for concern, let me assure you.”
“You are kind, but
you must be careful. I would not forgive myself if anything untoward-should
result.”
“Your spirit is
burdened with enough concerns, Kitsura-sum,” he laid his fingers gently
on her arm, “do not add this to what you carry.” He removed his
hand and took a sip of his wine. “Is there anything more I may do?”
She hesitated for a time
before looking up, a slight blush apparent on her beautiful face. “I wish
to send a message to my family, but I fear that it might be intercepted.
I’m certain Lord Shonto would do this, but…”
“Lady Kitsura, say
nothing more. I can send a message to your family in complete secrecy.
Tomorrow, if you wish it.”
“Katta-sum,”
she said, a tiny tremor of emotion in her voice. “I am in your debt for
this kindness. I don’t know how I can repay you.”
“There can be no
debt in such matters. Please do not concern yourself with such things.”
“Katta-sum,”
she took his hand in both of hers now, “there is debt and I will not
forget it. Is there nothing that I might do in return?”
He felt a soft tug on his
hand, so soft he wondered if his imagination toyed with him. And she did not
release his hand.
“If I may ask such
a favor, Kitsura-sum,” Jaku said, with obvious difficulty, “would
you convey a letter to your cousin, Lady Nishima?”
As though all of her
features had frozen, Kitsura paused but then, almost immediately, she
recovered. Sitting up, she reached for her wine cup though she did not drink
from it but only held it with both hands as though she suddenly did not know
what else to do with them. “Certainly… General, though it seems a
small thing indeed.”
‘’It may seem
so, but it is I who am in your debt now.‘’ Jaku produced the letter
from his sleeve, slightly misshapen from the hours of neglect.
Slipping it into her
sleeve Kitsura reached again to pour wine.
“Please,
Kitsura-sum, I have duty awaiting me.”
“Excuse me,
General, I did not mean to detain you.”
With a bow and a promise
to send a trusted guard for her letter, Jaku Katta slipped away as quietly as
the cat he was named for.
Kitsura sat for some time
without moving. Never had she been so thoroughly rebuffed. She had expected him
to fail this test, had wanted him to. And he had asked her to convey a letter
to her cousin!
“Uncouth, common
soldier!” Kitsura whispered.
For a second she felt
anger toward her cousin but then realized how absurd this was. By Botahara, she
thought, Jaku must be truly smitten with Nishi-sum. What a disaster that could
mean.
* * *
Canal’s end,
We have traversed uncertainty
A maid interrupted as
Lady Nishima contemplated the poem’s next line.
“Excuse me, Lady
Nishima, Brother Shuyun inquires of your well-being.‘’
“Ah, how
thoughtful,” Nishima dipped her brush in water. “Please offer him
cha.”
Pushing aside her table
Nishima quickly straightened her robes.
The maid appeared again.
“Brother Shuyun, Lady Nishima. Cha will be served immediately.”
The servant bowed as
Shuyun entered and in turn he bowed, Botahist style, to the daughter of his
liege-lord. Though she knew full well that Shuyun was small of stature, hardly
taller than she was herself, Nishima was always surprised when she saw him. In
her mind his presence was larger.
“Brother Shuyun,
please be at your ease. It is a pleasure to have your company.” Nishima
smiled.
“I came to inquire
after your well-being, Lady Nishima, not to interrupt.” He nodded to her
work table.
“Notes to myself. I
was filling time, Brother, nothing more.”
Shuyun knelt on the
cushion set for him. For a second he met Nishima’s eyes and she wondered,
as she often did, if it was great wisdom or great naiVete“ that dwelt in
those large, dark eyes. She often wondered if it was this ambiguity that
touched her.
“You are well, Lady
Nishima?” Shuyun said in his soft voice. A voice that always seemed to
suggest intimacy to her. “I grew concerned when the poetess did not
attend Suzuku-sum’s reading.”
“I am well. Despite
Suzuku-sum’s reputation, one does not always feel the desire for the
company of many.” In truth she thought Suzuku’s reputation was
somewhat greater than his talent.
Shuyun nodded. Servants
arrived with a cha service and laid out the utensils with some care. Their
mistress was very conscious of detail and they did not like to disappoint her.
“And how fares the
Shonto Spiritual Advisor?” Nishima asked and smiled.
“He fares well
enough, my lady. In my Order we say; well enough to serve His purpose. The Botahist trained do not ask for more than
that.”
Nishima nodded and
checked the heat of the charcoal burner that warmed the cha cauldron.
“Perhaps we should all learn to ask less for ourselves and more for others,
Brother. In my Order we say; I fare well, thank
you—meaning, / am well
enough to enjoy all of the pursuits that I hold dear, whatever they may be.” She kept her eyes cast
down, fussing with the cha preparations.
Shuyun seemed to consider
this for a moment. “Excuse me for saying so, Lady Nishima, but there is a
ded-
ication to duty among
many of your Order that is worthy of recognition and
praise. The Shonto are renowned for this.“
Nishima nodded. “It
is true among fewer than one would hope, Brother, though certainly in reference
to my uncle it cannot be denied.”
With great care she
ladled cha into bowls and offered the first to her guest.
“This bowl must be
for you, Brother,” she said, as etiquette demanded.
“I could not, Lady
Nishima. Please, this bowl must be yours.”
Though this was the
proper response, the sincerity of his words stopped Nishima and she found
herself staring into his eyes again, trying to read what lay behind the words.
The monk looked away and she collected her wits.
“Your presence honors
me. Please, Brother Shuyun.” She held out the bowl and he took it from
her hand with surprising gentleness.
As though there had been
a lapse, a moment of too much familiarity, Shuyun’s tone became formal.
“A matter has recently arisen, Lady Nishima, about which I require
advice.” He sipped his cha, looking away.
“Brother, if it is
possible to repay some of the debt I feel to our Spiritual Advisor, I would not
hesitate to do so. Please, what is this matter?”
Nishima watched him take
a calming breath before speaking. “While I traveled with Lord Shonto on
the
He paused to sip his cha.
“This all seems
most irregular, Shuyun-sum. Please go on.”
“This young woman
has left the Order of the Botahist Sisters—it seems she has suffered a
confusion regarding
her faith. It is my hope
that she will return to the Sisters but until such time needs some way to live.
She is Bo-tahist educated, Lady Nishima, and has been a secretary to a senior
member of that Order. It occurred to me that there might be a place for her in
the Shonto household. Even more specifically, I wondered if you or Lady
Kit-sura, or perhaps Lady Okara might have use for someone of such
talents?“
Nishima stopped to ladle
more cha, obviously considering this.
“It is difficult
for me to say, Shuyun-sum. There is no question that our flight to Seh has left
us with a very small staff, and no secretary. This girl, is she
intelligent?”
“I would say yes,
Lady Nishima.”
“Huh. Is it not
unusual that she would seek you out, Brother? What explanation could there be
for this?”
“Perhaps what she
considered to be an act of generosity—my assistance to her on the
canal—stayed in her memory, Lady Nishima. It seems entirely likely that,
outside of the Botahist Sisters, she knows no one else.”
“The Sisters take
an interest in the events of our Empire, Shuyun-sum, do they not?”
“They do, my
Lady.”
“Is it not possible
that this young woman has been sent to us to that end, Brother? The Shonto are
often the objects of such scrutiny.”
“I believe, in this
case, Lady Nishima, that this girl is truly what she claims.”
Nishima sipped her cha
and regarded Shuyun, who sat looking down, as politeness dictated. “You
have an ear for truth, Brother Shuyun?”
“So my teachers
believed, Lady Nishima. Though it should be remembered that this ability is
never infallible.”
“How
unfortunate.” Nishima swirled her cha leaves as though she would change
the message written there. “I would be pleased to assist a seeker who has
lost her way, if I can. Please have her sent to me and I will see what she
seems suited for.‘’
“I thank you, Lady
Nishima. I do not think she will disappoint you.”
Nishima smiled. There was
an awkward silence. Shu-
yun finished his cha, but
before he could excuse himself Lady Nishima spoke again.
“How do you
recognize truth, Shuyun-sum, what is it that informs you? More cha?” As
she said this, she poured cha into his bowl.
“Well, perha…
certainly. Thank you.” He took up the full vessel and sipped.
“I am unable to
explain, Lady Nishima, I apologize. I simply know.”
“It is a feeling,
then?”
“Perhaps. It cannot
be described but only named.”
“It is most
intriguing, Brother. But do those who are raised to the
Shuyun considered for a
few seconds. “Botahara taught that feelings were illusory, yes. It is
written that our desires trap us in the world of Illusion.”
“Then you are not
troubled by feelings, Brother Shuyun?”
“I am not so
enlightened, Lady Nishima.” He gave a small, almost embarrassed, smile.
“Even the Botahist trained have feelings—one does not allow them to
rule one’s actions, however.”
Before he could protest,
Nishima ladled more cha into his bowl.
“You resist them,
then?”
“I’m not
certain that resist is the proper description, Lady
Nishima.”
“You do not resist
them?”
“Followers of the
Way order their lives according to the principal virtues, not according to their
desires.”
“But Brother, when
a follower of the Way feels desire, or any other emotion, do they resist it?
Did not Botahara teach that resistance was folly? I find this concept
difficult.”
Shuyun set his cup on the
table and placed his palms together, touching his fingers to his chin in
thought. “When one has traveled far enough down the Sevenfold Path, one
does not feel desire, Lady Nishima. Until such time we practice meditation, we
chant, and we learn focus. Certainly duty and desire are not always compatible,
Lady Nishima, but, as you
have said, the Shonto choose duty.“
Nishima nodded slowly.
“Though I often wonder at what cost, Shuyun-sum,‘’ she said
softly.
Shuyun looked away as
though some detail in the room begged his attention and what Nishima said had
not been heard. “I have not seen Lady Okara for several days,”
Shuyun said evenly. “Does she fare well?”
Nishima smiled at the
sudden change of subject. “Well enough to serve art’s purpose,
Brother. I often wish I could say the same.”
“I have heard Lady
Okara speak 9/ your art in the most flattering terms, Lady Nishima,” he
said, his voice losing its edge of formality. “She speaks also of your
artist’s soul. It is my impression that she is somewhat envious.”
“Oh, certainly she
is not!” Nishima felt her face flush with pleasure at Shuyun’s
words—even a fan would not hide this.
“Recently she spoke
of her quest to learn to see again. It seems Lady Okara believes that over the
years she has developed habits of being and feeling that act as a wall to the
world and prevent her from seeing. But she does not seem to mean seeing the
world, she means seeing within. ‘The part of the scene that exists
within,’ were the words she used.
“It is Okara-sum’s
belief that you have the open spirit of the true artist, Lady Nishima, and she
traveled to Seh with you in an attempt to recapture this. Perhaps you are her
teacher, Lady Nishima.”
“Lady Okara is my
teacher, Shuyun-sum, make no mistake. I have been blessed with brilliant
teachers.”
“It is said that a
child learns wisdom from the parent, but the truly wise parent learns joy from
the child. Do not be confused by appearances; a wise teacher learns from the
student, always.”
“And what have the
esteemed Brothers learned from Initiate Brother Shuyun?” Nishima asked
suddenly and watched his reaction closely.
Shuyun shrugged. “I
do not know, Nishima-sum, I do not know.‘’ He opened his hands in a
gesture that seemed to indicate emptiness.
“We know only those things which we allow ourselves to
know, ”
Nishima said.
A troubled smile appeared
on the monk’s face. “That is Botahist teaching, Nishima-sum.”
Nishima gestured with her
hand as though she encompassed her entire life, and her long sleeve swept
gracefully through the air. “I have been blessed with brilliant
teachers.”
“Brother
Satake?”
Nishima nodded. There was
an awkward silence while Lady Nishima prodded the coals in the burner, causing
them to spark to life.
“My Order guards
its teachings with a certain jealousy, Nishima-sum,” Shuyun said at last.
She nodded again, poking
distractedly at the coals. “Give me your hand, Shuyun-sum,” she
said suddenly, and she reached out and took his hand and placed it palm out
against her own. Regulating her breathing with some skill, she pushed. Shuyun
resisted for the merest fraction of a second and then pulled laway slightly.
When he pushed against her own hand there was almost no resistance. Shuyun
could feel the chi flow. Chi in an uninitiated woman—a peer of the Empire
of Wa!
Lady Nishima took his
hand in her own. “As impossible as it may seem, there is much in common
in our experiences, in our lives, Shuyun-sum.”
“Brother Satake
broke his sacred oath,” Shuyun said. He felt his focus wander as he said
this. Even though he had suspected Brother Satake had broken his oath, the
shock of proof was great.
“He lived by his
own oath, Shuyun-sum. His teachers could have learned much from Brother Satake,
but they were mired in their own ways, their own habits.”
Gently Shuyun removed his
hand from her own. “Please… excuse me… I must go.”
Without further ceremony Shuyun rose and walked out like a man in a daze.
For a long time Nishima
sat staring at the door where Shuyun had disappeared. Then she shook her head
as if to clear it. Reaching for her writing table, she prepared her brush with
exaggerated care. She read the lines she had already committed to paper and
then continued.
Canal’s end,
We have traversed uncertainty
To arrive here,
Purity and desire
Tangled
She could find no words
to complete her thought.
Shimeko sat with her eyes
cast down while Lady Nish-ima examined her brushwork in the dim morning light
that filtered through the screens of her chambers. The former Botahist nun sat
without movement as she had been trained to do and nothing in her appearance
betrayed the confusion she felt. Was she truly going from serving a respected
senior Sister to the service of this pampered aristocrat, barely older than she
was herself?
“It is a fine hand,
Shimeko-sum, strong without being plain.” Nishima nodded toward her, half
a bow. Setting the paper aside, she smiled warmly at the young woman who sat
before her. Shimeko sat with her shawl pulled tightly around her face, hiding
her cropped hair.
“You will excuse my
curiosity, Shimeko-sum, I can’t help but wonder why you would seek
service with the Shonto. I do not wish to pry into your reasons for leaving the
Sisterhood, but life in the Shonto House will be very different.”
Shimeko spoke without
raising her head. “Do you wish to hear the truth, my lady?”
“Always,”
Nishima said, the word coming out clipped and controlled.
“I did not come to
your gate to seek service with the Shonto. I came to offer my service to
Brother Shuyun.” She sat looking down, her expression unchanging, her
tone even.
“I see. May I ask
why?”
“I believe Brother
Shuyun is a pure spirit, Lady Nishima, untainted by the machinations of his
Order.”
“Huh. Then you take
service with me against your will?”
“No, my Lady, I
will gladly serve the household that Brother Shuyun serves.”
“I see. Will you be
able to make the adjustments necessary, Shimeko-sum? You do not have to treat
me with
this level of
deference, I am not a senior Sister who demands utter humility from
others.“
“Please excuse
me, Lady Nishima.” She raised her eyes and met Nishima’s for the
briefest second. An attempted smile showed some potential. “If someone
will instruct me, I’m certain I will learn.”
“We could find
you a teacher, Shimeko-sum.” Nishima glanced at the page of brushwork
again. “You are a scholar?”
“I was only an
Acolyte, my Lady. An Acolyte cannot call herself a proper scholar. My
accomplishments were modest compared to the Sisters I served.”
“I see. Could
you go to the Palace Archives and find information for me?”
“If the information
is there and somewhat ordered, I am confident I could, Lady Nishima.”
“Good. This is
what I want to know. On the canal did you see the fane of the vanquished
Brothers? The one called the Lovers?”
“My Lady, it
endangers the spirit to look at such things,” the young woman said,
casting her gaze down again.
“You did not
look, then?”
The former nun
struggled for a moment and then she shrugged, her cheeks coloring a little.
“Well, it is not
necessary to look. I want to know what the scholars have written about the sect
that inhabited that fane. Scholars, mind you, not members of any Botahist
Order. Certainly the Imperial historians could not have allowed such a thing to
pass without comment. Are you able to do this without compromising your
beliefs?”
“My beliefs,
Lady Nishima?” She traced a circle on the floor. “Yes, I think
so.”
“Excellent. I
would like this information as soon as possible, thank you.”
Shimeko sat, her
posture and expression unchanged.
“You may go,
Shimeko,” Nishima said.
“Thank you, my
lady.” She bowed in the Botahist manner and backed toward the door
without rising.
“Shimeko?”
“Yes, my
lady?”
“You know that
servants are seldom addressed as sum?”
The former Sister paused
in her retreat. “Brother Shu-yun calls me Shimeko-sum, my lady,” she
said simply.
Nishima considered this.
“Then I will call you Shimeko-sum also.”
Twelve
Sister Sutso hurried down
what seemed an endless hallway until she found the door she had been looking
for. Pulling her robe closed at the throat, she pushed open the door that led
out into an unlit courtyard. A cold wind swirled about her, pulling wildly at
her robes and whistling among the pillars. An occasional drop of rain was
smeared across her forehead, though due to the wind they did not seem to fall
from the sky. Almost running, the secretary to the Prioress found the door she
was looking for, despite the complete darkness, and pushed into a second hall.
Pulling up the hem of her
robe, she ran up several flights of stairs, surprising a group of Acolytes who
had never seen such undignified behavior in a senior Sister.
Another long hallway,
then a shortcut through the Archives of Divine Inspiration, another hall and
then the great stairway. There, one flight down, went the Prioress, Sister
Saeja, her sedan chair carried by four Acolytes.
Sutso descended the
stairs and only slowed her pace as she came up beside the chair. She controlled
her breathing with great discipline so that it seemed she had not hurried at
all, perhaps had come upon the Prioress by accident.
“Prioress,”
Sutso said, bowing as low as the situation would allow.
The old woman’s
eyes seemed to appear out of the wrinkled folds that were her eyelids. She
nodded and closed her eyes again as though conserving her strength.
“Is there anything
I can do, Prioress?” Sutso asked, pitching her voice in tones the old
woman could still hear.
“There will be no
change of plan,” came a soft whis-
per. “Continue with
our preparations. There is so little time.”
“Do you have
commitments I am unaware of?” Sutso asked.
“No, child,”
the ancient head moved from side to side, “but this is not unexpected.
Since Morima-sum’s time of testing, they have been gathering like the
carrion eaters they have become. I remain this still only to draw their
attention from things of importance.” Her face creased in a smile and her
eyes flickered open, eyes full of humor.
“Why do they call a
council now?”
“They hope to tire
me, child, that is their true purpose.” She smiled again. “Sister
Yasuko’s letter. They have learned that there are events outside of their
narrow world that could adversely effect their dearest ambitions. Seh is on
everyone’s lips suddenly, replacing talk of Monarta.‘’
The chair wobbled
slightly and then the bearers recovered. The Prioress held out a thin hand.
“Give me your hand, child. I do not want to slide down the grand stairway
alone.”
Sutso took the frail hand
in her own. Botahara protect her, she prayed silently. So much is dependent on
this woman, so much.
At last they came to the
bottom of the stairs, to the relief of Sister Sutso, and then to the Chambers
of Council. A gong was rung as the Prioress approached and the large doors
swung open, the Door Wardens carved into their panels seeming to gesture
entrance. A last squeeze of the Prioress’ hand and Sutso stopped short of
the Chambers. The bearers returned almost immediately and the doors were
closed, no one to enter until the Council was over. She stood a moment, staring
at the doors, and then hurried off. There was so much to be done.
Lamps suspended by gold
chains hung from the lacquered beams and flamed impressively, casting shadows
into the deepest corners of the room and the highest reaches of the ceiling.
The floor of polished woods reflected the light like a bronze mirror and the
twelve Senior Sisters who knelt there seemed almost like some
mysterious part of the
structure, positioned in two straight lines as they were.
The Prioress sat, propped
on pillows in her sedan chair, facing her Council. The lines were not drawn
clearly in this arrangement: of the twelve Sisters four, including their
leader, were of the Sister Gatsa faction; five, including the Sister who sat in
Morima’s place, supported the Prioress; and the remaining three were
called, when they were not present, the Wind Chimes—those who swayed this way and that, making sounds
according to the direction of the wind. As one would expect, the Wind Chimes
were both courted and despised.
The Sisters bowed their
heads to the floor and rose, waiting impassively.
“Who called this
Council?” The Prioress asked the ritual question.
Sister Gatsa spoke in her
refined aristocratic voice. “This Council was called by the collective
will of the Twelve, Prioress.”
“Then let the will
of our Lord, Botahara, be done through word and deed.”
Signs to Botahara were
made and silence reigned as each woman present prayed to the Perfect Master for
guidance. A gong sounded softly and the Council began.
“Who will speak for
the Twelve?” the Prioress whispered.
“Sister
Gatsa,” the women answered together.
The Prioress nodded to
Sister Gatsa, conceding the floor.
Sister Gatsa drew herself
up to her considerable sitting height before beginning. “Prioress,
honored Sisters, there is news from the
A silence ensued. The
Prioress sat looking at her Council who, as was proper, did not meet her gaze.
Only Gatsa would dare to do that. It occurred to the Prioress to wonder who in
the Priory in Seh had managed to find a copy of Sister Yasuko’s letter.
Most annoying.
“I have received
information from Seh that would indicate this is true, Sister Gatsa,” the
Prioress said at last.
There was a minute
shifting of position as though in discomfort among some of the council.
“Excuse my
presumption, Prioress, but should not the Council have been informed of
this?‘’
“In time of
war,” the Prioress said so quietly that she forced the others to lean
forward to hear, “the Prioress has authority to act without the Council.
It has always been so.”
Gatsa nodded, her face
not quite masking her pleasure. She had sprung her trap. “In time of war,
Prioress, this is true. But war has not yet come and there is much that should
be done in case a calamity should befall us. There is much that we all should
do.”
“A fine point,
Sister,” the Prioress said. “Shall we put it to a vote?”
Sister Gatsa hesitated
noticeably. She had expected to request this herself. “If the Council so
desires, Prioress.”
The Prioress smiled her
beatific smile, unsettling Senior Sister Gatsa even further. Of course, the
Prioress knew she would lose—she could read her Council that well. But
after the Wind Chimes had gone against their Prioress once, they would be less
willing to do so on each subsequent issue, especially when the true nature of
the situation was made clear to them. Today they would ring to the words of
Prioress Saeja, the old woman was certain of that.
“Let the
proceedings begin,” the Prioress whispered. Yes, let them begin. In three
hours she would have approval of everything she had already begun. Let the
vultures gnaw on that. She smiled again and closed her eyes to wait.
Thirteen
The Great Audience Hall
of the Empire of Wa was the largest chamber in the known world and considered
to be a marvel of both art and engineering. The rows of pillars that lined the
central hall were each carved from a single iroko tree and lacquered to a deep
sheen. Rafters soared in elongated curves up into the tiered roof structures
and light filtered down from on high without an identifiable source. So
polished was the marble floor that it reflected images and light as faithfully
as clear, still water.
At the farthest end of
the hall the dais seemed to float on this unrippled surface. Three steps of the
finest jade led up onto the dais, the blocks joined so seamlessly that the
steps appeared to have been carved of a single, massive block of green-blue
stone. Behind the dais, seven painted panels showed the Great Dragon in flight
among stylized clouds above a landscape of rugged beauty-ancient Cho-Wa of the
Seven Princes. The Princes themselves sat their gray steeds at the foot of the
Mountain of the Pure Spirit about to create the Seven Kingdoms that would one
day become the Empire of Wa.
Below the center panel
sat the Dragon Throne of Wa carved from a single block of flawless green jade.
Upon the Dragon Throne
sat Akantsu II, Emperor of Wa. His voluminous ceremonial robes flowed over the
carved stone, reaching almost to the floor, where a small cushioned stool
protected his feet from contact with the earth. His sword of office stood in a
silver stand to one side, and it was apparent to any who knew him that he
missed its feel and hardly knew what to do with his hands without it.
The Ministers of the Left
and Right sat in their appropriate places, before the dais to either side,
while down
the length of the
Audience Hall the Great Council of State was arrayed: Reminders, Major and
Minor Counselors, and the senior Officials of various ministries. They sat in
rigidly defined rows, dressed in their state robes that created a most pleasing
pattern of color and form, each man a tiny island on the unbroken, liquid
surface.
Behind the senior
officials sat functionaries of high rank, scribes, and bureaucrats, and behind
them stood the ceremonial guards—generally younger sons of favored
peers—dressed in ornate armor.
On the first step of the
dais knelt the Major Chancellor who governed all proceedings, listening
carefully to the whispered comments of the Son of Heaven and proclaiming these
to the Great Council.
At the moment all sat
listening to a senior Counselor who spoke in glowing terms of the recent
efforts to rid the canals and roads of brigands. Several minor decrees, that
had been issued almost after the fact, were singled out as showing great
foresight and the senior Counselor bowed in the direction of the officials
responsible for these—members of his own faction, as everyone present
knew.
While the great statesmen
of the Empire involved themselves in this activity, the man who had convinced
the Emperor to embark on this program sat quietly in the ranks of the minor
functionaries. It would be out of the question that Colonel Jaku Tadamoto would
ever speak on such an occasion or to such an august assembly, yet in his sleeve
rested a summons to the Emperor’s private chambers. He would meet alone
with the Son of Heaven later that same day—something many of the senior
officials present had never done.
The Council carried on,
largely ceremony, for, in truth, real government took place elsewhere, in less
impressive chambers with far fewer involved. Jaku Tadamoto waited patiently,
trying to keep his mind focused on the conversation, not for the content but
for what it told him of the shifting alliances within the council. Even so his
gaze shifted and he found himself contemplating the Dragon Throne, remembering
the history, or perhaps myth of the ancient seat of power. He turned away before
the Emperor might notice his gaze, but the image stayed in Tadamoto’s
mind.
It was said the artist
Fujimi had cleansed his soul through fasting and prayer for seven days before
locking himself in his studio with the untouched stone.
Fujimi’s
apprentices gathered outside the doors while the Master toiled. The sounds of
stone being worked would go far into the night and whenever they stopped the
apprentices could hear the Master chanting in a language none had heard before.
In the early morning of the twelfth day all noise ceased—no sound of
stone being polished, no chanting… stillness. By midday the
apprentices’ concerns were such that they appointed their most senior
member to knock on the door and call out the Master’s name. Three times
this was done, but there was no answer and still no sounds came from within.
They waited.
By sunset it was decided
to break down the doors to the studio. With some effort this was done. The
shattered doors swung open and the setting sun illuminated the throne shining
as though it had its own light within. A dragon flowed around the seat and back
of the throne, a dragon so real, so alive it seemed to have turned to stone in
mid-flight.
The apprentices stood in
awe until the light of sunset faded and then, remembering their purpose, lit
lanterns and began searching the building. The Master could not be found. All
the doors were securely locked from within, yet Fujimi was gone, never to be
heard of again.
Taken to dwell among the
gods, some said. Murdered by the Great Dragon for stealing her soul and
encasing it in stone, said others.
When the final ceremonies
were completed and the Emperor and senior officials had left, Tadamoto rose and
returned to his chambers without retinue or fanfare. In the privacy of his own
rooms he removed a letter from a locked box and held it a moment as though the
thought of opening it caused him pain. With some care he unfolded the paper on
which he had written a deciphered version—the letter in his own hand
noticeably more elegant than his brother’s original.
Moving to a nearby
screen, Tadamoto opened it a crack to catch the gray winter sunlight that a
covering of cloud did its best to obscure.
My dear brother:
It is with some difficulty that I write
to you, not only because of the nature of our parting, which I regret deeply,
but I have arrived in Seh to discover things that neither of us had ever
expected. I do not know how to convince you that what I have learned is true,
but I must find a way. Tadamoto-sum, on the souls of our father and mother I
swear that every word I write is true. The fate of Wa depends on your ability
to recognize the truth—seldom has so
much depended on the heart of one man.
There is no doubt that beyond the border
of Seh a barbarian army of unprecedented size waits to invade in the spring. I
realize that this defies the common wisdom that says the tribes are diminished,
but the common wisdom is false, have no doubt. Seh is not prepared for such an
attack and will fall within days.
The chieftain who has gathered the tribes
and will lead them across our border is a formidable man, familiar with the
situation in Seh and not unaware of the plots within our own court. You
realize, I am sure, that the Emperor will not send troops to support Shonto.
The barbarian chieftain knows this also, I am convinced.
The barbarians will not stop once they
have swallowed Seh. They have a force that will allow them to push into Wa. If
we begin to gather an army now, it is possible that the barbarian advance could
be stopped in
It is difficult to be here in the north
knowing my own part in all of this. If the men of Seh realized what destruction
this feud will bring, I would certainly not be allowed to live. Yet the men of
Seh do not even realize that the enemy sits on their border and such is their
arrogance that they will not listen to Lord Shonto Motoru. You would
think that the Shonto House had not once
made great sacrifice to rescue Seh from the barbarians.
I realize the Emperor will think I have
sided with the Shonto, but a way must be found to convince him. Above all, you
must not lose your place close to the Son of Heaven or there will be no voice
of reason in the entire court.
Tadamoto-sum, it is a task of enormous
weight I charge you with, and I confess I do not know how it can be
accomplished, but the future of our Empire depends on you now. All we can hope
to do in the north is slow the invasion—there are not enough men in all
of Seh to do more.
I remain your Servant, Katta
Tadamoto let the letter
fall to the mat where he knelt. It was so impossible! If what Katta said was
true, and he had trouble convincing himself that it was so, then the Empire was
almost certainly lost. Tadamoto knew Ak-antsu II as well as any man and he did
not believe for a second that the Emperor could be convinced that Katta had
done anything but joined the Shonto. That Fanisan daughter and Katta’s
interference with her… that was the seal on his fate. It was all so
impossible.
Tadamoto reached for the
letter, read a few lines, then let it drop again. He shook his head. Katta, he
thought, knew what words to use, it had always been one of his gifts. Tadamoto
had never heard his brother swear by the memory of their parents, no matter how
desperate, he had never done that. Somehow Katta had known that this was the
one thing he could do that would shake his brother’s certainty. Could he
be telling the truth?
He slumped against the
frame of the opening and looked out into a fine curling mist, letting the cold
air wash across his face. Wasn’t it just like Katta to get himself into
an impossible situation and then expect Tadamoto to get him out of it! Botahara
save him—save us all. He was an impossible man. But was it true? If it
was and he refused to believe, then Tadamoto would bear some responsibility for
the calamity that would ensue— because he could not believe in his own
brother. He
rolled his head against
the cool wood of the frame. Katta, Katta, Katta. Why do you always demand so
much of me? How can I be loyal to you and loyal to my sworn duties?
A gong sounded the
changing of guards. He must make himself ready for his audience with the Emperor.
As Tad-amoto began his preparations, his mind went back to Osha. Osha in the
Emperor’s embrace. Both of their lives were terribly at risk now, Osha
was correct in this. Still the question echoed over and over again: what kind
of man was he that he could continue to advise this Emperor? Advise him, comfort him, knowing that he allowed the woman he loved to act as
a common street harlot with this same man? What kind of man was he?
Tadamoto never wore armor
into the presence of the Emperor, not even his lightest duty armor. He felt it
was a ridiculous affectation and the fact that Katta had done it often had
always bothered him—embarrassed him, perhaps, would be closer to the
truth. Tadamoto wore his black uniform with its dragon insignia and the marks
of his rank but no more. Even this was less ornate than it easily could have
been.
It was the
courtiers’ obsession with signs of rank and favor that drove the young
Jaku wild. What pettiness! Could
functionaries of the third rank wear a gold sash ? Could officials in the
Ministry of Ceremony wear the peaked cap? It was obvious to Tadamoto that the honorable
officials who governed the Empire of Wa were far more concerned with the
hierarchy in the palace and signs of rank than with the governing of the land.
Realizing how angry he
had become, Tadamoto tried to calm himself. It was this situation with Osha and
the Emperor that was affecting him so. He was an advisor to the
Emperor—it was important that he put emotion aside.
As acting Commander of
the Imperial Guard he was whisked through to see the Emperor with less
formality than even the most senior officials. After his morning in the Great
Council, he took some satisfaction from this. He knelt before the entrance to
the Emperor’s chamber and waited to be announced.
Bowing his head to the
mat, Tadamoto waited until the Emperor deigned to acknowledge him.
“Colonel
Jaku,” the Emperor said, “be at your ease.”
Jaku rose to a kneeling
position and moved forward to within a respectful distance of the low dais.
“Thank you,
Sire.”
The Emperor nodded. He
was studying a scroll and seemed barely aware of Tadamoto. “You have
received a letter from your brother, Colonel?”
“I have,
Emperor.”
“But not from Lord
Shonto?”
“No, Sire.”
The Emperor looked up
from his scroll and picked up a letter from a small table. He set this before
the dais, nodded at it, and went back to his reading.
Stretching as far as he
was able, Tadamoto got two fingers on the letter and retrieved it. So, he thought
as he began to read, this is the hand of the famed lord. It was a strong hand
of the older style.
Sire:
As I have recently written, the
transition of governments in Seh is complete and I have been able to devote
myself to the problem of the barbarian raids. This situation has been found
more complex than one could ever have suspected.
As there seemed to be no agreement among
the Lords of Seh regarding the extent of this problem and due to the consistent
rumors that a new Khan had risen to power among the tribal peoples, it seemed
the best course to gather my own information directly. To this end I sent
highly reliable men into the wastes, secretly. After journeying as far as the
desert they came upon a recently abandoned encampment that had contained seventy
thousand warriors. The men sent into the desert were experienced in such
matters and I do not doubt their estimate is true. This army had since
decamped, but one branch of it was observed and consisted of forty thousand
armed men, many on horseback.
It is clear that there will be an
invasion as soon as the spring rains have ended. I believe that
more than Seh is in danger from this
attack. At this time I am sure that in all of Seh there are not twenty thousand
men of fighting age and only half of these are trained in the arts of war. It
is possible that all of Wa could be under threat.
I believe, Sire, that the Empire has not
faced such a threat since the time of Emperor Jirri. If we do not raise an army
by spring, Seh will fall and a barbarian army will come down the path of the
great canal.
I have spoken to General Jaku Katta
concerning this issue and I believe he concurs with my assessment. I cannot
stress enough the peril the Empire is in.
I remain your servant, Shonto Motoru
Tadamoto looked up at his
Emperor who continued to read.
“What is your
response to this, Colonel?” the Emperor asked, still not looking up.
“It is similar to
the letter I received from Katta-sum, Sire, though a less emotional
appeal.” Tadamoto weighted his words carefully. ‘ ’It is
difficult to know from this distance precisely what is occurring at the other
end of the Empire. For that reason I hesitate to dismiss this information
entirely.“
The Emperor looked up
from his scroll. “What would you advise, Colonel?”
“It seems most
prudent that we seek outside corrob-oration of this information. We should send
someone whose loyalty is beyond question to Seh, Sire.”
“I had such people
in Seh, Colonel Jaku.”
“Excuse me,
Sire?”
“They disappeared
at almost the same time your brother arrived in the north. Gone.”
Tadamoto swallowed hard.
“Coincidence seems
to follow your brother, Colonel, it does not fill me with confidence.”
Tadamoto said nothing.
The Emperor stared at him for
some seconds and though
he did not wish to do it, Tadamoto looked away.
“Write to your
brother. Tell him that we will make him the Interim Governor in Seh when Shonto
falls. But if he sides with Shonto… he cannot be saved. Tell Katta-sum
that my anger has passed, he may return once the task is complete. But above
all find out what truly transpires in the north—your brother certainly
will know.‘’ The Emperor set his scroll aside and shifted to face
Tadamoto. ”We will answer Governor Shonto’s request for support. I
will send my son, Prince Wakaro, north to Seh before the spring in company with
a force of Imperial Guards—an honor guard only, but that need not be
stated. We will charge him with assisting Lord Shonto in his task.“
The Emperor played with a
stack of Imperial reports. “It causes me grief to do this, Colonel, my
own son but… he is not fit to rule.” The Emperor shook his head, a
slow gesture. He glanced up at Tadamoto for the briefest second and left the
younger man to wonder if it was truly anguish he had seen written there.
“He is not fit… so few are.” The Emperor’s head sank
down and he stayed like that, face hidden for many minutes. “It is a
difficult role that I play, Tadamoto-sum, sometimes… very
difficult.”
Tadamoto nodded.
“Hakata said that Emperors are always alone, Sire. When difficult decisions
are made, it is sadly true.”
The Emperor nodded.
“Yes,” he almost whispered. “That will be all, Colonel, thank
you.”
Tadamoto bowed and began
to back away, but as he reached the door the Emperor spoke again.
“Tadamoto-sum?‘’
“Sire?”
“Please, have Osha
sent to me. Thank you.”
Jaku nodded and backed
out. Once outside he rose and walked with great calm down the hallway.
Why do I feel nothing?
his thoughts echoed. Why nothing? He seemed to walk suspended in a place where
the emotions did not dwell, a place of pure intellect where all thought was
cold, disinterested. It would have been frightening, if he could have felt
fear.
There is no hope for my
brother—governor indeed. If he returned to the
Capital while Akantsu lived, Katta would die. And Osha… The Emperor was
destroying everything they felt for each other as surely as he would see Katta
dead. And Jaku Tadamoto was his most loyal advisor. He heard himself laugh,
high-pitched, half strangled. He could not feel fear at that either.
Fourteen
The archivist who bore
responsibility for administering the records of the Province of Seh was
surprised to find a young woman requesting access to his domain—a
secretary to the governor’s daughter, no less. He was even more surprised
to find that this young woman, Shimeko-sum, was not only educated but a great
admirer of the order he maintained in Seh’s archives. He had seldom felt
so appreciated and found himself wondering why his own daughters did not have
such inquiring minds.
Shimeko applied herself
to her task with practiced discipline, determined to make a good impression on
her new mistress but also because it was work she was familiar with, and in
such alien surroundings there was some comfort in that. It was fortunate, for
she found little comfort in the history of the Sect of the Eightfold Path.
The story told by the
Imperial Historians was very different from what she had been taught in her own
studies. As objective as she tried to remain, still, she had found it
distressing. And now this well-bred young lady wanted Shimeko to relate all
that she had learned to her. How was she to do that?
Carefully gathering her
scrolls and papers together, Shimeko set out for Lady Nishima’s chambers.
The halls of the
As she made her way
toward Lady Nishima’s apartment, she was aware that people often turned
and watched her pass. She supposed that failed Botahist Sis-
ters seldom took service
with Great Houses though she really did not know and, in truth, it seemed
unimportant to her.
To gain admittance to the
wing that contained Lady Nishima’s rooms Shimeko had to give a password
and a hand sign, which reminded her that she had once memorized a Shonto hand
signal on the
A servant went off to
announce Shimeko to her mistress, and she worked to control her nerves as she
waited.
Lady Nishima was still
haunted by her conversation with Kitsura. Jaku Katta had readily agreed to use
his sources within the Imperial court to find out if Kitsura’s family
were in danger. To Nishima’s surprise he had even agreed to have a letter
delivered secretly to the Omawara family—both acts that the Emperor would
find deeply suspicious if he were to know of them, and there was every chance
that the Emperor would know.
Did this mean that Jaku
had truly fallen out of favor at court? If so, then her uncle’s belief
that Jaku could help secure the support of the Emperor was entirely wrong and
most dangerous.
All of this she found
disturbing news. She touched the folded letter Kitsura had delivered from Jaku
and tried to control her anger. Such presumption! To have made advances to
Kitsura and then to ask her to deliver a letter to Nishima! One expected more,
even of an Imperial Guardsman. She shuddered. How close she had come to making
a fool of herself. How very close.
There was no doubt that
Jaku Katta was an opportunist of the worst order. And now there was a great
possibility that he was no longer in the Emperor’s favor. All that
remained was to hear from Kitsura’s family to see if indeed Jaku had
risked delivering the message. Did he really believe that Kitsura Omawara had
no way of sending letters secretly to her own family?
He expects so little of
us, Nishima thought, not for the first time. With some effort she pushed Jaku
from her thoughts.
It had been three days
since Nishima had asked the former Botahist nun, Shimeko, to research the cult
that
had dwelt in Denji Gorge,
and she had been consumed with curiosity the entire time. Shimeko was on her
way with the results of her efforts even now. Nishima found it difficult to
maintain her tranquillity.
Fortunately, she did not
have to wait long. A servant tapped on her door and announced Shimeko.
“Ah, yes. Please,
bring her to me.”
The young woman was shown
in and knelt, bowing, Nishima noted, in the plain fashion rather than in the
style of her Order.
“Shimeko-sum, I
trust you have been given quarters and some instruction as I requested?”
“I have, Lady
Nishima, thank you.”
“Is it more
difficult than you imagined? Life beyond the priory?”
Shimeko shrugged. “It
is not as different as one would expect, my lady. It is a small world contained
within its own walls, seldom encountering the world beyond. In this way it is
much the same. In other ways,” she shrugged again, “it is not so
similar.”
Nishima nodded.
“How went your search of our archive?”
“It is a small
archive, Lady Nishima, as one would expect of an outer province. References to
the Sect of the Eightfold Path were, therefore, few.” She began to
arrange her documents on the mats in front of her.
“Most of the
written works of the Sect of the Eightfold Path were destroyed during what the
historians refer to as the
“The fanes beside
the
“I confess to a
poor memory for history, Shimeko-sum. Please, continue.”
Shimeko looked back at
her papers. “After the Passing, several different branches of Botahist
teaching developed and these flourished according to the support of different
Houses or even the Emperor. Large grants of land were often made to the temples
and these, it is said, became the source of considerable wealth. This wealth
was coveted by different Houses and by rival branches of Botahist
doctrine—by the Emperor himself in some cases. This led to the Botahist
fascination with the arts of war. They defended their possessions
ruthlessly.”
“At this time
Botahist monks went about armed and some of the temples supported large armies.
They rivaled the Emperor for power and often were able to make demands of the
Great Council of State that the government dared not refuse. But the temples
warred among themselves, and during this period many Botahist sects were
destroyed, including the Sect of the Eightfold Path.”
She looked up.
“This differs from my own teaching, Lady Nishima. I was taught that the
sects were destroyed by overzealous followers of the rival temples and also by
the Emperor.” Having said this, she returned to her papers.
“According to the
histories, the Botahist temples weakened themselves during the
Pausing for a moment, she
pointed to three rolled scrolls. “These histories are written here, Lady
Nishima, if you would care to read them yourself.‘’
“I may look at them
later, Shimeko-sum. I am curious, what did these Brothers believe? What was
their doctrine?”
The former nun looked
back down at her papers.
From what Nishima knew of
the Sisters’ training, this reference to written material was entirely
unnecessary— the Acolyte’s memory should have been close to
flawless. Most curious.
“They believed in
the Seven Paths to enlightenment, Lady Nishima.” She hesitated.
“They believed also that the act of physical love was the Eighth
Path… you call
them Brothers, Lady
Nishima, but it seems there were Sisters also.“
“How very strange.
Do we know the nature of their beliefs, Shimeko-sum?” Nishima said with studied
cas-ualness.
“The scholars do
not agree on this, Lady Nishima. It seems likely that the sect’s doctrine
was akin to the ancient Shodo Hermits’ belief that the path through the
Illusion lay in overcoming the senses. Unlike the Sect of the Eightfold Path,
however, the Shodo Hermits did this through the experience of pain.”
Shimeko took a long, involuntary breath. “It is said they achieved levels
of focus through meditation while undergoing what could only be described as
torture. They would never cry out or show the slightest signs of pain no matter
what was done to them. Indeed, it is believed that the Shodo Masters could turn
the agony into any feeling they desired, and it would be of equal intensity.
The followers of the Eightfold Path may have believed something similar, though
they substituted pleasure for pain.”
Lady Nishima suppressed a
shudder.
“It is all written
here, my lady,” Shimeko said, looking down at her gathered scrolls.
“Yes. You said the
scholars did not agree?”
Shimeko nodded.
“There are other thoughts. One school believes there is evidence that the
sect believed the soul was divided into halves that could only be united
through the act of physical love. Another thought the Sect of the Eightfold
Path believed that denial of the Illusion was futile, one found one’s way
through it like a person groping through fog. They wrote that the followers
believed one must experience the falseness of the Illusion to see beyond it and
desire is the essence of Illusion. There are other scholars with other
thoughts, but these represent the main schools of belief, Lady Nishima.”
“I see.” Lady
Nishima sat, lost in thought and then she met her secretary’s gaze.
“And what were you taught in the priory, Shimeko-sum?”
Shimeko looked down.
“Only that the Eightfold Path was a heresy, my lady. Acolytes needed to
know nothing more than that.”
Nishima nodded. No doubt
this was true.
“Will that be all,
Lady Nishima?” Shimeko asked flatly.
Nishima smiled. “I
thank you for your efforts, Shimeko-sum.” She straightened a fold in her
robe. “There is something else… Before I left the Capital, it came
to my attention that a senior Sister of your Order… your former Order,
had taken an interest in one of my maids. Before this was known, the Sister had
managed to learn some few things about myself and my House. Why would they have
this interest in me, Shimeko-sum?”
Shimeko opened her hands.
“You are Shonto, Lady Nishima.”
“That would be
all?”
“I do not know,
Lady Nishima, but it is certainly enough.”
“You know nothing
of the Sisterhood’s effort to spy on the Shonto?”
Shimeko sat in silence
for several seconds. “I know, my lady, that senior Sister Morima, with
whom I traveled to Seh, had come to observe your Spiritual Advisor.”
“Brother
Shuyun.” Nishima said unnecessarily.
“Yes, my
lady.”
“Why?”
Shimeko sat staring at
the floor for some time. “Within the Sisterhood it is the belief of
some,” she said in a whisper, “that Brother Shuyun is the Teacher
who was spoken of. The Udumbara has blossomed in Monarta. I know it is said to
be a rumor but it is not. Sisters have seen it.”
“I see,”
Nishima said, surprised by the flatness of her voice. She looked at the young
woman who sat before her, staring at the floor, almost huddled into herself,
unable even to look up. She is in the grip of some terrible inner battle,
Nishima realized. “Do you believe Shuyun is the Teacher,
Shimeko-sum?”
The woman seemed to draw
into herself even more. “Brother Shuyun says he is not, Lady
Nishima.” She shrugged, tried to speak, then her shoulders moved again
like a weak convulsion. “Perhaps… perhaps he is not. I do not
know.”
The two women sat for
some time, the distance between them a vast gulf of experience, belief, and
desire.
“That will be all,
Shimeko-sum,” Nishima said at last, “I thank you.”
Fifteen
Snow fell on the night of
the Celebration of the First Moon—the substance of clouds floating to
earth, layering Seh with white, like the Plum Blossom Winds of spring. Snows
were neither frequent nor extreme in the
The people of Seh
gathered in the villages and the Manor Houses of their liege-lords where the
rites and festivities took place. By far the most elaborate, if not the
largest, gathering was held in the center courtyard of the Imperial
Governor’s Palace. Many of the peers of the
The governor watched the
celebrations from the top of the covered stairs that led from the Great Hall
down into the courtyard. Shifting about occasionally in his unfamiliar state
robes, Lord Shonto sat in the place of honor and managed to appear captivated
by the scene. Below him on the stairs sat the Ladies Nishima and Kitsura,
senior officials of the Council of Seh, several lords of high rank, and various
guests of note, Lady Okara among them. Those who did not sit with Lord Shonto
in comparative comfort, stood under parasols in throngs about the courtyard.
Above them, strings of lanterns cast a pleasing light on the long silk robes
and illuminated the slowly falling snow.
Dressed in costumes of
fox and bear and owl, children performed a dance to the music of flute and
drum. It was a more complex dance than one would have expected of their age,
very stylized and rigid in its movements, yet
it was not marred by a
single misstep. The performers approached their roles with the utmost gravity,
apparently unaware that this was certainly the least serious part of the
ceremony.
Earlier in the evening
Botahist monks had performed ancient rites in observance of the First Moon and
to ensure a bountiful and harmonious year—burning incense to the four
winds and chanting the prayer for spring rains. Once that had been done,
however, the celebration took on a more festive air. Many-colored silk banners
stirred in response to the occasional breath of wind as did the fine robes of
the men and women present. Perfume mingled with the scent of burning oils and
the pungent odor of charcoal, stirring themselves together as though the
courtyard were a giant perfumer’s bowl.
The children’s
dance ended and Lord Shonto, in his official capacity, congratulated the
performers as though they were the finest Sonsa in all of Wa. Gifts were
distributed, and the dancers bowed their thanks in great style.
Servants hurried about
with cauldrons of steaming rice wine, for no one could be without rice wine for
the first glimpse of the moon. Anxious eyes kept looking skyward, hoping that
one of the breaks that appeared occasionally in the clouds would position
itself propitiously, but their attention could not remain there.
A sudden burst of flame
signaled the entrance of the dragon, as one of Seh’s finest dancers
appeared in the elaborate costume. Lady Okara had taken a hand in the design
and her efforts, coupled with the skills of the dancer, created a stunning
effect. Long of tail, the blue-scaled monster slithered most convincingly from
shadow to shadow to the delight of man, woman, and child. After several
attempts the dragon captured the moon, a silvered disk illuminated by lantern
light. Attendants snuffed many of the lights then, casting the courtyard into
partial shadow.
Far off, a conch sounded
a long, lonely note muted by the falling snow. The dragon slithered on,
gloating over its prize. Again the note, closer this time. The dragon pricked
up its ears but then went back to its exploration of the courtyard, darting
suddenly at a group of children who fled, screaming.
A long, sustained note came from over a nearby wall.
The dragon stopped in its tracks, turning dramatically. Fire licked from a
strategically placed pot as though it were the breath of the dragon.
Backlit under a great
arch, Yoshinaga, the Seventh Prince, appeared, leading his gray war horse. The
dragon began to thrash its tail and sway back and forth.
Leaving his mount behind,
the second dancer drew his sword and entered the courtyard.
Wooden drums beat out an
ominous time. The climax of the battle took place as Yoshinaga, wrapped in the
dragon’s tail, drove his sword into the dragon’s soft breast. The
dragon fell upon him and with his last strength the Prince tossed the disk of
the moon out into the darkness.
Everyone turned now, for
if all had been timed correctly the crescent moon should rise over the wall in
that instant. A soft glow in the cloud began to grow and then, through a small
tear, the moon appeared to sighs of relief and raised cups of rice wine. Eyes
returned to earth in time to see the spirit of Yoshinaga, now clad in a flowing
white robe, mount his gray steed and ride off into the night. The dragon was
gone.
The performance at an
end, the gathering began to move inside except for those few who remained on
vigil hoping to sight a falling star—said to be Yoshinaga riding across
the heavens—a sign of good fortune for those who witnessed it.
The celebration broke
into many groups and spread through three halls. Music and dance and poetry and
endless talk were the evening’s fare and there was no one to complain of
too rich a diet.
Lady Nishima planned all
her activities so that she might avoid contact with General Jaku Katta, and so
practiced at this skill was she that the General was beginning to realize that,
as a tactician, the lady showed more subtlety than he had ever aspired to.
Once, when he had been close to speaking to her, Nishima had drawn
him into a discussion
with several of Seh’s least interesting conversationalists and then
abandoned him there, without the skills to make a polite escape as she had
done.
With her practiced eye,
Lady Nishima noticed that a number of prominent lords had disappeared, as had
most of Lord Shonto’s senior advisors. She turned toward the
governor’s dais and found her father slipping out through an open screen
followed by personal guards and Initiate Brother Shuyun. She offered a silent
prayer to Botahara.
There were perhaps a
dozen and a half men gathered in the room, dressed in their finest robes and
seated on silk cushions. Shonto sat before them on a low dais and to his right
and left knelt the Major Chancellor, Lord Gitoyo, and the aging Lord Akima,
Minister of War. Kamu, General Hojo, and Brother Shuyun, as the lord’s
senior advisors, sat nearby, while General Jaku and Lord Komawara were barely
farther away.
Facing the dais were the
lords of Seh’s most important Houses, each sitting with the kinsmen and
senior members of their staff. Prominent among them was the Lord of the Toshaki
House accompanied by his eldest son and Toshaki Shinga, general of Seh’s
standing garrison. Shonto knew of Lord Toshaki by reputation only and was
surprised by the man’s apparent youth. Toshaki had seen at least seventy
First Moon Festivals in his time, yet he seemed like a man whose gray hair and
beard had turned long before their time. Lord Toshaki was aware of his status
in Seh, and though there was no greater distance between him and the others, he
sat apart all the same. If Shonto was any judge of such things, Lord Toshaki
would allow his kinsman, Toshaki Shinga, to speak for him.
Of the province’s
other major Houses, Lord Taiki Ki-yorama came accompanied only by his senior
officer and he bowed lower than required to Shuyun and Kamu in recognition of
their service to his son who had come near to losing his life in the palace
garden.
Lord Ranan was another
matter. The Ranan House had been the right hand of the Hanama Emperors in Seh
for two hundred years and had enriched themselves accord-
ingly. To say they were
resented in the north would be an understatement of considerable proportion.
Nonetheless, they were wealthy and still held power in the province, if not the
favor of the Emperor that had nominally passed to the Toshaki.
It was this group that
Shonto needed to win to his cause if he were to raise an army. Lord Taiki was
already preparing his forces, but the rivalry between the Toshaki and the Ranan
did not bode well for an alliance.
Shonto nodded to Kamu who
turned and bowed to the gathered lords and officials.
“Lord Shonto
Motoru, Imperial Governor of the
All present bowed as
their rank required and returned to the sitting position.
Shonto nodded in response
and sat quietly for a moment, surveying the gathering. “The Shonto House
is honored by your presence, Lords of Seh. The ancestor for whom I was named
rode into battle with your grand-sires and great grandsires.” Shonto
reached back and took a sword from its stand. “This is the sword my
grandfather presented to the Emperor Jirri—legends now—yet this
sword rode into battle in an Emperor’s hands, and Seh retained its
borders.” He paused and looked around the group again.
“My Emperor has
charged me to end the barbarian raids across the border into Seh and to this
end I have focused my efforts. It became apparent that we needed to inform
ourselves of the situation in the wastelands. To accomplish this we chose the
most direct course—we sent men into the desert to look with their own
eyes.”
A small shifting of men
in the room, eyes meeting for an instant, then all attention returned to
Shonto.
“What we have
learned will be related to you and no doubt you will find it as disturbing as I
have. We enter a time of great decisions where our actions will affect the
course of the history of our Empire. Let it be said by future generations that
at this time we were filled with the wisdom of Hakata and the spirit of Emperor
Jirri.
“We must speak
openly, my lords, for the guarded spirit and the hidden intentions will bring
us down as surely as a barbarian sword. I would know your thoughts,
Lords of Seh, if you will
honor me with them.“ Shonto fell silent for a moment, but before he could
proceed a cousin of the Ranan Lord bowed to Shonto and spoke.
“In this spirit,
Lord Governor, I would ask of rumors that whisper throughout Seh.” He was
an older man, obviously chosen for his habits of speech, for he sounded like an
old scholar though he looked as hardy as an old peasant. “The people ask;
where are the Kintari? And it is said there is a barbarian in your
service.”
They were bold questions
put in a manner more direct than should have been used with an Imperial Governor,
not to mention a lord of such note, yet Shonto could see the approval of the
men of Seh.
“Lord Ranan,”
Shonto’s voice was low, “I should like to ask the same question of
the Kintari…” He laid his sword across his knees. “As to the
barbarian, we shall speak of him now, if you will consent to hear of the
journey into the desert?”
The lords nodded and
Shonto continued.
“As it is difficult
for men of Seh to travel in the barbarian lands, it was with some risk that we
did so. The only men of our Empire who can travel into the desert with any hope
of living should they encounter tribesmen are the healing Brothers. For this
reason my Advisor, Brother Shuyun, traveled across our border. He was
accompanied by Lord Komawara, also dressed as a Bota-hist monk.
Turning to Komawara,
Shonto nodded and the lord bowed. His wound no longer required binding and all
of it but a small purple mark on his temple was hidden by newly grown hair.
“Brother Shuyun and
I traveled into the steppe at the time of the Field Burning Festival,”
Komawara began, his voice stilted but strong. “Although we saw increasing
signs of barbarian patrols the farther into the wastes we traveled, we met no
tribesmen for many days. At the spring of the Brothers we found signs that barbarian
tribesmen used it as a camp, though they were not there at the time. One can
only surmise where they might have been.
“We traveled
farther into the steppe, indeed we approached the edge of the desert itself. As
we did so, we were trapped in a draw by a band of tribesmen but, due
to the skills of Brother
Shuyun, we were able to overcome these brigands. We questioned
one—Brother Shuyun speaks their tongue—and found that they were of
a tribe that hid from the Khan, refusing to join the chieftain’s armies.
“As we were
convinced these men did not raid across our border, it was agreed that one of
their number would guide us in return for the lives of the others.”
Again the lords exchanged
glances but said nothing.
‘ ’This is
the tribesman you have heard rumors of, Lord Ranan. Our understanding of the
tribes’ customs was imperfect and we did not realize that this one
barbarian had traded his life and honor for the lives of his kinsmen. That is
why he is with us still. He is honor bound to serve Brother Shuyun and cannot
be released from that now.“
“Barbarian
honor?” General Toshaki smirked. “A spy in your midst seems more
likely, Lord Komawara.”
“I have placed my
life in this barbarian’s hands on more than one occasion, General. I am
still alive. He is more than honor bound, as the barbarians understand it. He
is truly frightened by the chieftain called the Golden Khan, believing this man
will bring destruction down upon the tribes and their way of life.”
“He shows wisdom in
this, at least,” General Toshaki said to half-smiles from the other
lords.
Komawara continued his
tale, saying nothing of the dragon shrine or the gold coins. The lords of Seh
listened with apparent politeness until Komawara described the encampment of
the army they had found in the desert.
“Excuse me, Lord
Shonto, Lord Komawara,” Akima interrupted. “But it is difficult to
imagine a barbarian army that has more men than the total population of
barbarians has ever been. How can you explain this?”
“As I am unaware of
the last Imperial census of the barbarian tribes,” Komawara said acidly,
“I cannot answer you, Lord Akima. When were these figures
compiled?”
“My lords,”
Kamu interrupted, “before we begin to discuss what is and is not
possible, it may be best to hear what Lord Komawara and Brother Shuyun have
seen with their own eyes.”
Both Akima and Komawara
gave half bows toward the dais.
“We left the
encampment following the trail of the force that made its way toward our
border. We were a day catching them. From a rise we were able to see a
barbarian force of no less than forty thousand men. It was clear
daylight—there could have been no mistake. This army, turned east, it is
believed to winter with the tribes of the steppe. Having seen this, we returned
to Seh as quickly as our mounts would travel.” Komawara bowed to Lord
Shonto and the gathered lords and then sat rigidly silent.
“I thank you, Lord
Komawara. I honor you and Brother Shuyun for this journey undertaken in our
time of need.” Shonto turned to the gathered lords. “As you see,
the situation is one that requires decisive action. Now is the time for
questions and discussion, my lords.”
No one spoke. Shonto
wondered who would be chosen as the voice of this group and watched the silent
selection with interest. Finally, General Toshaki Shinga bowed to his governor.
So, Shonto thought, the Toshaki will lead here.
“This is a delicate
situation, Governor Shonto. We have been asked to speak our thoughts, but I for
one do not wish to offend anyone present by arguing their beliefs… or
calling their judgment into question.”
“General Toshaki,
in Shonto councils we speak our minds openly—to do otherwise could bring
us to the greatest disaster. I have asked you all to share your years of
experience and wisdom. If this requires that you disagree with me or any of my
staff, so be it. Please, speak as you would in your own council.”
Toshaki bowed. “The
estimate of the size of this barbarian army seems beyond possibility, though I
would hesitate to question what Lord Komawara and Brother Shuyun have seen with
their own eyes,” he added quickly. “Is it possible the barbarians
war among themselves?”
Shonto turned to Shuyun
who gave his double bow.
His voice was a surprise
in this company, soft and quiet as though he felt no need to force his opinions
on anyone. “It is the opinion of the tribesman Lord Koma-
wara has spoken of that
the Khan has every intention of invading Seh in the spring. The tribes that
oppose him are small in number, Lord Toshaki, and scattered. They are no threat
to this Khan. I can conceive of no other reason to gather an army of such size
except to war upon our Empire.“
“Excuse me, Brother,
if I have difficulty believing one can hear truth from a barbarian,”
General Toshaki said evenly.
Shuyun’s face did
not change, though the hue of Ko-mawara’s skin seemed to darken.
The kinsman of Lord Ranan
bowed now and Kamu acknowledged him.
“Sire,” the
younger man said with a note of respect, “there is yet another question
that we would ask.” Reaching into his sleeve, he removed a small leather
pouch which he opened with some care. Retrieving something from its interior,
he passed it to a Ranan officer who in turn moved forward to give this to Kamu.
The Shonto steward placed
the small object on the dais before Lord Shonto who barely looked down.
“Yes, Lord
Ranan?” Shonto said. Many eyes strained to catch a glimpse of what lay
glinting on the dais.
“Coins such as this
were taken from a raiding barbarian in my lord’s western fief. You will
see a strange dragon form on its face. What do these signify, my lord wonders?
To our knowledge there has never been gold found among the barbarians before.”
Shonto reached out and
pushed the coin with the tip of his sword. “Let the others see
this,” Shonto said quietly and Kamu retrieved the coin, handing it to
Lord Akima.
“What you see,
Lords of Seh, is a talisman of the cult that is linked to this Khan who has
risen among the tribes.”
“You have seen
these coins before, Lord Shonto?”
Shonto nodded.
“Other raiders have carried them.”
“There seems to be
a great depth to your knowledge, Lord Shonto,” the senior Ranan lord
said. His voice was deep and rich and carried weight among the voices heard so
far. “Do the barbarians mine gold, then? Or shall we
assume it has been stolen
from some source we are not aware of? Some lord’s secret treasure?“
Shonto contemplated this
for some seconds. “The gold comes from Yankura, Lord Ranan, that is all
we know. How it makes its way into the desert is unclear. What purpose it
serves is also a mystery.”
One could almost hear the
snow falling in the courtyard. The senior Ranan Lord looked at his palm as
though he would read his next words there. A lamp sputtered, a drop of
condensation finding the flame.
“Do you suggest
that someone in our Empire pays some form of tribute to the barbarians, Lord
Governor?” the Ranan Lord said, his voice suddenly quiet.
“It is a likely
explanation,” Shonto answered calmly, as though what he said was not an
accusation of high treason. Whom the accusation was aimed at no one needed to
ask.
Ranan nodded. The coin
had reached General Toshaki now.
“The purpose of
this cult,” General Toshaki said, “is it known?”
“It seems to give
legitimacy to the Khan, General.”
“How is it that we
have learned this, Lord Shonto?” Toshaki asked.
Shonto nodded to
Komawara.
Komawara bowed rigidly.
“The Kalam, the tribesman who serves Shuyun-sum, he has spoken of the
dragon cult. Also, when we traveled in the desert, we saw the shrine of the
dragon.”
General Toshaki looked at
the senior member of his House who gave the smallest gesture with his hand.
“Lord
Komawara,” the general said, taking his cue. “There is another
rumor that has been whispered in Seh.” The edges of his mouth curled in
the slightest smile. “It is said that you saw the remains of a dragon on
your recent journey. Can such a thing be true?”
Hojo interrupted,
ignoring the general and looking directly at his Toshaki master. “Rumors,
Sire, are often smoke without flame.” And he smiled also.
The senior Toshaki lord
held Hojo’s gaze for a few seconds, then he visibly dismissed him,
turning to Komawara. “Lord Komawara, on the honor of your family,
do you believe you saw
the remains of a dragon in the desert?“
Komawara hesitated,
darting a glance at Shonto. “I saw the skeleton of a large beast, Lord
Toshaki.”
“A large beast,
Lord Komawara?” he asked, as though addressing a child. “What
nature of beast?”
“A beast that
resembled the dragon embossed on the coin, Lord Toshaki.” Komawara kept
his voice even.
General Toshaki shook his
head, looking down as though he hid a smile. Then he spoke suddenly. “One
dragon, Lord Komawara, or forty thousand?”
Stifled laughter was
heard around the room.
“One beast, Lord
Toshaki. One only.” Komawara said too quietly.
Toshaki nodded toward the
young lord, almost a mock bow.
The senior Toshaki lord
gestured his kinsman to silence.
“This situation we
have heard described is of consequence to the entire Empire. General Jaku, does
the Son of Heaven prepare an army as we speak?”
“That is our hope,
Lord Toshaki, though we do not yet know,” Jaku said fixing the older man
with his cold gaze.
“Ahh,” the
lord said, looking away. “Lord Shonto, this is a grave matter. I wish to
take council with my kinsmen and advisors.” He bowed to Lord Shonto.
Lord Taiki spoke without
warning. “Lord Toshaki, Lords of Seh. I tell you in all truthfulness that
if we do not begin to prepare an army now, we make a decision to surrender Seh
to our ancient enemy. It is not the epitaph I would choose for my tomb.”
There was a short
silence.
“My lord wishes to
consult his advisors, also, Lord Shonto,” the junior Ranan lord spoke
into the silence.
The council was at an
end. With great dignity Shonto nodded to those around him, rose and left,
carrying his own sword.
Shortly after the Lords
of Seh had gone, Shonto returned to speak to his staff. Jaku and Lord Akima
were not present. Komawara, Lord Taiki, and the Major Chan-
cellor, Gitoyo, were the
only outsiders. Shonto seated himself on the dais and regarded the men around
him. “Blind are the
sighted and deaf the hearing… only those who look within will find truth.
”
Shuyun made a sign to
Botahara at this quotation.
Shonto shook his head
slowly. “General Hojo?”
“It would appear
that the Lords of Seh believe you are to be the victim of a hired barbarian
army, an army paid in gold by our revered Emperor. No doubt the lords of Seh
believe that you try to raise an army in your defense. They cannot believe the
Emperor would endanger part of his Empire to bring down the Shonto. There will
be no support coming from these men. Lord Toshaki, I think, will do nothing
that has not been ordered by the Emperor. And Lord Ranan, though he hates the
Yamaku, will take no unnecessary risks to thwart their Imperial ambitions. The
minor houses, even if they could be convinced, would make little
difference.”
Shonto nodded. He
gestured to the others and each man in turn nodded agreement. Shonto clapped
his hands loudly.
“And the
Emperor’s support? Truthfully?”
“It is entirely
dependent on Jaku Katta. But in all honesty, I think it is unlikely. After
Denji Gorge, it seems the Emperor has reason to distrust his Guard
Commander—it takes very little to earn the Emperor’s distrust. The
rumors that Jaku has fallen from favor may have truth in them. Katta-sum may
not even be sure of his own situation.”
Shonto looked at Kamu.
“I agree, Sire. We
may hope for the Emperor’s support, but we should begin to take the
actions we would take if it were not forthcoming. We dare not wait.”
Shonto sat contemplating
this like a man considering a move at gü—and like a gü Master
he showed no sign of being affected by his situation. It gave his retainers
hope.
“Lord
Komawara,” Shonto said warmly, “you could do nothing but tell the
truth. It could not be helped. I regret this deeply, but tomorrow we meet to
plan our retreat from Seh.” He pulled the sword that was the
Emperor’s gift partly from its scabbard. “Kamu-sum, start-
ing now we will have no
one but those present in councils unless I order otherwise. We give up this
pretense—the government of Seh seems to be made up of informers. No
guards but our own around our chambers.“ Shonto slid the blade in and out
of its scabbard.
“We have one other
move that we can make in this game before retreat and cover. Kamu-sum, prepare
a tract that says the Government of the
The Major Chancellor,
Lord Gitoyo, bobbed quickly. “Sire, Lord Governor… the Emperor
demands his taxes. We dare not delay longer. There is certainly not enough gold
to raise an army.”
“Huh.” Shonto
examined the flawless metal blade. “We must not keep the Emperor waiting
for his taxes. That would be unthinkable.‘’ He smiled at those
around him. ”Entirely unthinkable.“
Komawara gave a deep bow.
“There is one other action we could consider, Lord Shonto.”
Shonto nodded.
“The springs
closest to our border in the steppe—they could be poisoned as winter
ends.”
Komawara returned to the
festivities, though his heart wanted to be gone. An urge to race a horse with a
great heart across the hills took hold of him, as though he could leave what he
felt behind. His own
countrymen, northerners, were surrendering Seh to the barbarians! When the Khan swept across the
border with his army, then these men would be ready to
fight—when the only sensible course of action would be to retreat as Lord
Shonto planned. They would all die so it could be said that they did not
abandon Seh, despite the odds. The bravery of fools…
Pulling his thoughts away
from this problem, he searched the gathering for a glimpse of Lady Nishima. She
had spoken to him earlier and he had alternately felt delight and despair ever
since. Her robe of rich blue with its pattern of snow falling on the Mountain
of the Pure Spirit was nowhere to be seen. Despair.
Lord Toshaki’s
eldest son, Toshaki Yoshihira, sur-
rounded by a group of
laughing kinsmen, rose from a low table. He spotted Komawara as he gained his
feet and stopped. Breaking into a grin, he made a sudden extravagant bow and
then rose, his face flushed from drink.
“Lord
Komawara,” he enunciated with the care of a man who had drunk his limit,
“it is my hope that in future first Moon Festivals that Prince Yoshinaga
slaying the dragon will be replaced by Lord Komawara meeting the dragon.”
Toshaki’s cousins
showed some concern at this insult and their laughter was subdued. Komawara had
a reputation as a swordsman that was respected.
“Perhaps it could
be replaced by Lord Toshaki discovering foolhardiness in a wine cup,”
Komawara said evenly.
Suddenly Shuyun and Lord
Gitoyo’s son were beside him. “There are more important fights than
this, Lord Komawara,” Captain Gitoyo said quietly.
“Listen to your
friend, Lord Komawara,” Toshaki slurred. “You must save your
courage for the barbarian hordes.”
Komawara felt restraining
hands on either of his arms. “I would not have the blood of a fool on my
sword,” Gitoyo whispered. “Come away from this. You of all people
do not need to prove bravery.‘’
Komawara gave way to the
pressure on his arm and began to turn away.
Toshaki bent over the
nearby table and retrieved a lacquered chopstick. He brandished this like a
sword and stepped into the guard position. “Lord Komawara, you need a
proper weapon to slay dragons and barbarian hordes. I would be honored if you
would take mine.”
Komawara broke free of
his companions and spun back toward the Toshaki lord but, impossibly, Shuyun
stood facing Toshaki, his back blocking Komawara.
“My lord,”
Shuyun said quietly, “that is a dangerous weapon to wield in the
governor’s hall.”
Toshaki stood with his
chopstick before him like a sword, suddenly looking unsure of himself. Botahist
monks did not confront peers.
The implement disappeared
from Toshaki’s hand as the
monk’s arm became a
blur of motion. Toshaki stepped back into his kinsman.
“Such a weapon
should never be drawn in polite company. ‘’
Again Shuyun moved with a
speed that was impossible to follow. There was a crack of wood hitting wood,
not loud but strangely piercing. Shuyun bowed low before Toshaki who stared
down at the chopstick Shuyun had driven into the table.
“May your journey
bring you wisdom, Sire,” Shuyun almost whispered.
Toshaki stood staring at
Shuyun for several seconds, his face contorted and unreadable. Then, realizing
that his supporters retreated, he turned away and disappeared among the crowd.
Shuyun stood watching the
young lord’s retreat, then he faced his companions.
Komawara’s gaze was
fixed on the point where Lord Toshaki had disappeared. He looked at Shuyun
suddenly and he shook his head. “You should not, Brother,” he
whispered. “Such things are beneath you.”
With a nod to Gitoyo, he
turned and went off in the opposite direction Toshaki had taken. The people
present became a blur of colored silk and the sounds a low roar in which
nothing could be distinguished. Komawara trembled with anger.
/ have become the object of ridicule among my own
countrymen, the
lord thought. And despite all
that I have done, my province will be put to the sword and the torch.
He stumbled out beyond
the row of pillars toward the doors. And there he saw Lady Nishima in serious
conversation with General Jaku Katta, of the Imperial Guard. She faced toward
Komawara as she spoke, but she did not see him, that was clear.
He stood for a moment
looking at this scene and then passed through the great doors into the
courtyard. Like Yoshinaga, he disappeared into the night.
It had not been easy for
Lady Nishima to slip away; she was, after all, the governor’s daughter,
but she was becoming experienced in such matters. The sounds of music and
conversation from the hall were barely muted by the pillar she stood behind yet
it would be difficult to
leave the hall entirely
without passing out into a cold night.
She tapped a closed fan
into the palm of her hand in what looked like impatience but was really a
disguise for anxiety. After she had successfully avoided Jaku Katta all
evening, he had sent her a poem that he knew she could not ignore.
She had struggled to read
in the poor light:
Season of cold hearts
No warmth from the white robe,
Snow upon the shinta leaves.
Who knows how deep the frost shall reach?
There is something you must hear
Nishima’s heart
raced. Some part of her hoped that Jaku would prove to be honorable and this
hope unsettled her. Surely it was the worst foolishness. Look how he had acted
so recently with Kitsu-sum! She was about to return to the gathering when a
dark form appeared down the row of columns. Though it required some effort,
Nishima waited with what she hoped would be an appearance of calm.
Jaku walked toward her,
his strong, graceful form appearing and disappearing as he went from light into
shadow into light again. Finally he stepped into the same shadow that Nishima
occupied. Gray eyes almost seemed to glow in the pale light. Jaku bowed deeply.
Nishima nodded.
“General…” She was about to pursue a polite course of
conversation but caught herself. “What is this matter you have written
of, General Jaku?”
If Jaku felt this was an
insult, he did not show it.
“It is something
that should be spoken of in more private surroundings,” Jaku said, his
voice low.
“Perhaps it should
be spoken of in the presence of my uncle,” Nishima said curtly.
“This is
information for your ears, Lady Nishima. It is to show that my intentions are
honorable, though I fear that they will be misunderstood as they have been in
the past.”
“You wrong me,
General—I was not aware that your intentions had been
misunderstood.” Nishima waved her
fan open. “What is
this information you speak of? The night grows cold, General Jaku.”
Jaku nodded, looking over
his shoulder quickly. “I am concerned, Nishima-sum,” he met her
eyes for a second, but when she did not react to him dropping her title he went
on quickly. “I fear the Emperor will not respond to my plea for troops:
the intrigues of the court are beyond imagining and difficult to untangle, even
while living in the palace. The webs spun in the Emperor’s court are such
that I risked much to have written as I did, for myself and my family.”
“Do you suggest,
General, that the Emperor will not respond to your letters as you hope?”
Jaku hesitated. “It
is a possibility, Lady Nishima.”
“Huh.” She
waited.
After it was apparent she
would say no more, Jaku went on. “The Emperor’s support is
desperately needed, I know, but if it cannot be obtained, Lady Nishima, I will
not return quietly to the Capital.” Again he searched her eyes. “I
will warn my family and remain in Seh to do what I can. Though it is said by
some that Jaku Katta takes only the course of greatest opportunity, I will
fight beside the Shonto though I will gain the enmity of the Son of
Heaven.”
Nishima looked away. A
man stepped out from behind a pillar not far off, hesitated, and then passed
through the doors leading to the courtyard.
“Tell me,
Katta-sum,” Nishima almost whispered, “will the Emperor send troops
to us? Is there no hope?”
She watched the guardsman
as he considered her question.
“I am not without
influence at court, Nishima-sum, but others may hold sway—while I am
here. It is… it is possible that my voice will not carry, it pains me to
say.”
Nishima nodded sadly as
she looked down at the floor. “And this mad design to bring down my
father, you took no part in it?”
“Once I had learned
of it,” Jaku stepped closer and lowered his voice, “I took some
time to speak, it is true. My loyalties were tested… until I spoke to you
at the Celebration of the Emperor’s Ascension. My shame that I did not
speak sooner.”
Nishima’s fan
stopped in the middle of its sweep. A warm hand touched her cheek and she
pulled away. Looking up she met Jaku’s gray eyes, as impenetrable as
cloud. Turning away she walked back into the bright hall.
Sixteen
N
ishima unfolded the letter
for the second time and read the single poem.
Season of cold hearts
No warmth from this white robe,
Snow upon the shinta leaves.
Who knows how deep the frost shall reach?
There is something you must hear.
Nishima’s thoughts
whirled as though the Nagana blew through her mind, swirling everything into a
tangle. Jaku had lied to her. She was more sure of this than she was of her own
name, and far more sure than she was of her feelings. Although she would not
have evidence until letters arrived from Kitsura’s family, there was no
doubt. Jaku Katta was no longer in favor at court. It was all a pose. She
wondered again if her father truly relied on the guardsman to gain the
Emperor’s support—for in reality, Jaku’s efforts would almost
certainly insure the Emperor’s refusal.
And Jaku had been
involved in the plot to bring down her House. No doubt he hoped to raise the
other Great Houses against the Emperor who had brought down the Shonto, or
perhaps it would just be a quiet murder in the Imperial Apartments, and then
place Nishima Fanisan Shonto on the Dragon Throne… destroying her life in
every way.
And yet, and yet. Nishima
had pulled away at Jaku’s touch… not because this brought her no
pleasure. A single touch of his hand caused her body to betray her entirely.
She found herself wanting to believe him, or worse yet, knowing what Jaku was
and not caring. No,
she could never allow him
close to her again. He was worse than an opportunist, he was without honor. To
bring down those she loved and pose as her savior! She pulled his letter from
her sleeve and tore it deliberately into shreds. Childish but satisfying.
A bell sounded far off,
muffled by the few inches of snow that covered Rhojo-ma. It was almost morning
and she had not slept, still wore formal robes under the lined over-robe she
had donned against the cold. She plunged a poker into the charcoal burner and
rearranged the coals to let the air flow through. A wave of warmth reached out
and Nishima pulled the fine silks of her robes close, pushing her hands into
the sleeves.
Nishima lay down on the
cushions and closed her eyes, but sleep was not near. She examined the room she
had been given. A pleasant place, almost bare but for her writing table, a
small stand bearing an arrangement of winter flora, and a three-section painted
screen displaying scenes of a spring party under the plum blossoms. A thick rug
made by the tribes was set squarely in the middle of the straw-matted floor and
on this her cushions were arranged. Three lamps washed the room in warm light,
reflecting off the lacquered beams and posts.
A simple place, without
the clutter some people preferred. When very young Nishima’s true father
had once taken her to the home of the Shonto vassal-merchant, Tanaka. A
lifetime of trading had burdened him with the most unbelievable collection of
furnishings. Cabinets and trunks, chests with drawers, and, most surprising to
her, Tanaka owned chairs. She had never sat in a chair
before. Nishima had a clear memory of climbing up into one of these elaborate
oddities to perch, swinging her feet, pretending she was a princess. The idea
of being a princess had not seemed frightening then.
Nishima closed her eyes
again. Her thoughts became lost in other images; Jaku Katta’s animal
eyes, a dark wooden box of tiny drawers each containing a child’s
treasure, the view from Lady Okara’s terrace, the sound of spring rain on
tile, the touch of a man’s hand on her breast. Nothing that could be
remembered when she awoke to early morning light.
She was coldl The charcoal had long since given up its heat. She
sat up awkwardly, not allowing her hands
out into the frigid air.
A servant peered in through a crack in the screens.
“There is a warm
bath waiting, Lady Nishima.”
“May Botahara chant
your name,” Nishima said and her servant bowed.
She felt like ice as she
slipped into the steaming water and expected to bob to the surface as she had
once seen a block of ice do as it slipped from the shore into the moving river.
I will never be warm
again, she thought, or at least not until spring.
Nishima came back to the
question that she had asked herself most of the night: should she tell her
father about Jaku’s situation at court? And if so, how would she present
this information so that it would not seem she doubted his abilities. It was a
delicate situation. Her uncle indulged her terribly, she knew, but his
knowledge of the intrigues of the Empire was vast and his ability to gather and
sift information was legendary. Nishima wondered at her own temerity venturing
to advise the gü Master.
He has so much to
consider, she told herself, and Jaku has an interest in me that I have been
able to use to my father’s advantage. I wish only to help. I am only
another source of information and what I have to say he can weigh as he does
every other report he receives. Presented as information only I’m sure he
will not take offense.
By the time feeling had
began to come back into her body, Nishima had decided to wait a few more days
and hope that Kitsura would receive a message from her family. It was slim
evidence, but it would strengthen her argument at least somewhat. She could
also fall back on a ploy of her youth: go see her father and test his mood
before proceeding.
Shuyun waited with his
usual ease. It was early morning, just barely light, but it often seemed to the
monk that Lord Shonto slept as little as the Botanist-trained. He had been
summoned to his Lord’s chambers by a half-awake servant—the First
Moon Festival of the previous night had taken its toll on the palace staff.
Despite the calm that he
displayed, Shuyun was anxious to complete his meeting with his liege-lord so
that
he would be free to
attend to another matter: Lord Ko-mawara had not been seen since the incident
with the young Toshaki lord the night before.
A guard entered the room
and bowed to Shuyun. Lord Shonto would speak with him.
The Imperial Governor of
the
To Shonto’s left a
second table stood, a lacquered chop-stick embedded vertically in the top.
“I begin to wonder
if this is an odd dislike of tables, Brother Shuyun,” Shonto said as he
worked at his fruit. The lord turned his head to regard his Spiritual Advisor
and raised an eyebrow before returning to his task.
Shuyun gave a half bow.
“I was concerned that Lord Komawara would injure or perhaps kill the son
of a man you would hope for an ally, Lord Shonto.”
“Huh.” Shonto
nodded. “Lord Komawara should not need to be restrained in such
circumstances. Toshaki was very insulting?”
“According to my
understanding of the ways of Seh he could hardly have offered more offense,
Sire.”
Shonto finished peeling
and began to break the fruit into pieces. “It is not likely that
Yoshihira would have behaved so if he had thought his father was planning to
come to us.” He popped a piece into his mouth and chewed with some
concentration, eyes closed. “It is hard to know which of the two was more
foolish.” He opened his eyes and smiled. “Ah, well, youth will find
foolishness in the house of wisdom. Perhaps, in the future, it might be
possible to find some less conspicuous way to deal with such a
situation?”
Shuyun bowed. “I
apologize for acting in this manner.”
Shonto waved his hand.
“I regret not witnessing it more than I am concerned for the effects on
young Toshaki’s reputation.”
“I could
demonstrate this as we speak, Sire, if you wish.”
Shonto held up his hands.
“We will let the furnishings live in peace for while, Shuyun-sum, I thank
you.”
The monk nodded.
“Lord Komawara has
not been seen this morning, I understand?” Shonto began eating a second
piece of fruit.
“I was told the
same thing, Sire.”
Shonto did not answer
immediately. “I will have him found if he does not appear by midday. We
need his knowledge of the desert. As Lord Komawara suggested, I will send
parties into the wastes to poison the nearest springs. This is an arrow that
will have to be aimed perfectly. We must send out men before the Khan’s
army moves but not too soon or the springs will run themselves clean before the
barbarian army comes to use them.
“Tactics of delay,”
Shonto said popping another section of fruit into his mouth. “Not to be
mistaken for tactics of desperation.”
Seventeen
Lord Komawara Samyamu
turned his horse off the road into a narrow path through snow-covered trees.
The day was gray, windless, cast over with snowclouds that stretched from
horizon to horizon with monotonous uniformity.
So still was the day that
the horse’s breath appeared in the cold air and floated there as unmoving
as the clouds overhead. Cries of birds and the creaking of trees penetrated by
frost were muted by the snow so that they seemed to come from far off. It was
early morning: the first day of First Moon.
Hunched down over his
saddle, Komawara was glad he had not been so foolish as to ride out without
dressing for the season. He had slipped out of Rhojo-ma in the darkness,
eluding his own guards who still would not forgive themselves for becoming
separated from their lord in the Jai Lung Hills. They would not be pleased.
Breaking out of the cover
of the trees, Komawara pulled his mount up. His destination: the crest of a low
hill north of Seh’s Capital which afforded a view of the city and
surrounding countryside.
In the middle of a lake
skimmed with ice and snow, Rhojo-ma clung to its island—a complex
geometry of white walls and sloping roofs stacked into a structure of
labyrinthine beauty. Tears appeared in the covering of white where the snow
could not retain its hold, and here tile of celestial blue showed through. The
single bridge to the shore spanned the distance in a series of delicate arches,
too fine, it almost seemed, to win a struggle against gravity.
Beyond the city, the
countryside of Seh rolled away to the south where it disappeared into the
clouds. Komawara’s vantage was not high enough to give him the view
he would have preferred,
but even so the land was beautiful under its cover of snow. Stands of trees
huddled along ridges and hilltops, forming patches of gray in a landscape of
white. In a distant draw he could see the signs of a village, feathers of smoke
pulled up toward the cloud.
Komawara dismounted and
dropped his reins to the ground. Walking further up the crest, he stopped and
steadied himself against the bole of a tree. The wound in his side made itself
felt at this motion, but he ignored it.
So soon, so soon…
it will all be ruins, the lord thought. My home, my people. And I will be
retreating down the Grand Canal, trying to defend other provinces and the
throne of a traitor and criminal.
The sun tried to break
through a weakness in the cloud, throwing part of the countryside into sudden
relief as shadows appeared. A few snowflakes drifted down from the branches
above, and Komawara was reminded of the robe Nishima had worn at the
celebration—snow falling on the Mountain of the Pure Spirit. But more
than that he remembered her tall, perfect form as she stood in the shadow of a
column whispering to Jaku Katta. There was no doubt, she had looked directly at
Komawara and did not even realize who he was. I am not worthy of her notice, he
thought bitterly. Her attentions to me indicate good manners, nothing more.
He looked down at his
snow-covered boots. In Seh they were the proper thing to wear: unadorned and
well worn. They seemed shabby to him now, the footwear of a country lord.
“It is what I
am,” he said aloud. “I can be nothing else.” He looked out
across the familiar vista. “A country lord—and not even that, for
soon I will lose everything.” He hit the tree twice with the heel of his
gloved hand as though testing for soundness, and the sound echoed through the
still woods.
His encounter with
Toshaki Yoshihira the previous evening came back to him. It would have been
somewhat satisfying, he realized, to take a sword to that one. It would be the
last thing Komawara would lose—his ability with a sword. Perhaps all he
could hope for now was an opportunity to prove his worth in battle. It might
not
impress a lady from the
Capital, but it was within his grasp.
Komawara began to search
under the snow with his feet. He would make a fire and sit a while before
returning to Rhojo-ma. He could not bear to give up Seh just yet. J
Eighteen
The snow that had fallen
during the First Moon Festival was only a memory by the time Second Moon
appeared. Winds had blown in from the sea, bringing comparative warmth and what
seemed like endless rain. The frigid cold had been replaced by a pervasive
dampness, and though the nights were hardly warm they had not the same raw edge
evidenced a few weeks before.
Spring came early to Wa,
even in the north. By Third Moon the rains would moderate and by Forth Moon the
Plum Blossom Winds would sweep in like a sigh.
Nishima sat alone in her
rooms, trying to concentrate on the poetry of Lady Nikko. Though she turned the
scroll and her eyes passed from one character to the next, it seemed they did
not penetrate beyond her eyes.
There had been no
response from Lady Kitsura’s family, and this weighed on her more with
each day that passed. Unable to proceed as she had planned, Nishima found the
decision to put off discussing her suspicions about Jaku Katta with her father
was turning into a decision not to discuss her suspicions at all. She had been
so certain the night she had talked to Jaku, but that certainty seemed to be
fading with each day that passed. What would she tell her father, that she had
suddenly developed truth sense? If a letter came from Kitsura’s family,
indicating that Jaku had sent Kitsura’s message, perhaps this would
strengthen her resolve.
But what if Jaku had not
had the letter delivered as he promised? It was most confusing. Of course there
was always the chance that the letter had been intercepted. If that were the
case, and the letter had fallen into the hands of the Emperor, then Jaku would
certainly be out of favor now, whether he had been previously or not.
I will wait, she told
herself, Satake-sum invariably said that impatience would be my undoing
and though I often thought he teased me, I begin to believe he did not
say this entirely in jest. I will wait.
But she did not wait
well and was aware of it. “Tranquillity of purpose is as for from my
nature as Enlightenment is to the toads,” she said to herself.
Nishima began to reread the poem she had just
finished, for not a word of it had registered. The lamp wick needed trimming,
but she didn’t want to disturb the servants… nor be disturbed by
them. The rain fell with such force that it seemed like gravel clattering
ceaselessly on the tile roof, but rather than find this constant rain oppressive
she welcomed it—as though it somehow insulated her from the outside
world. It was a comfort.
A tap on the screen
that led to her room was hardly welcomed, yet Lady Nishima made some effort to
speak in a pleasant tone. “Please, enter.”
The face of a maid
appeared in the opening. “Brother Shuyun returns a book of poetry, Lady
Nishima. Do you wish to speak with him?”
“Oh,
indeed,” Nishima’s tone was suddenly no longer forced. “Please,
invite him in.”
Shuyun entered a
moment later, the grace of his Bo-tahist-trained movements delighting her as
much as any dancer’s. There was not the slightest self-consciousness in
his motions, yet she knew there was total awareness. He knelt on an offered
cushion and gave the Botanist double bow.
“Brother
Shuyun,” Nishima favored him with her most disarming smile, “I hope
you have found the works I have given you enlightening or at least
diverting.”
Shuyun nodded.
“The poetry of Lady Nikko is enlightening for me, certainly. My education
has consisted
largely of Botahist texts, Lady Nishima. Lady Nikko’s poetry tells me
much of the world I now live in.”
Nishima gestured to
the scroll she had been trying to read. “She wrote so much and all of it
equally illuminating, I’m sure.”
They fell into a
second’s awkward silence.
He has not come to
return scrolls, Nishima thought, and that realization shattered her natural
command of
social situations.
Looking up at his ancient, childlike eyes, she searched for an answer to her
confusion, for a reaction to what she felt. But when he met her eyes, Nishima
looked away, afraid of what her own gaze would reveal.
“Shuyun-sum,
I…” She swallowed involuntarily. “I did not understand what I
did when Satake-sum taught me. I was only a girl… It was not my intention
to give offense to the Botahist Order. When Satake-sum told me they were secret
teachings, I thought they were secret between Satake-sum and me.” She
paused. “I can apologize, Brother, but it is not possible to forget what
I have learned.”
“Lady Nishima, my
reaction was not shock at what you had done. I pass no judgment on your
actions. It was Brother Satake’s oath breaking that affected me so
strongly. I am the one to apologize if it seemed that I blamed you.”
Nishima glanced up again
but his eyes appeared as always—filled with impenetrable calm. She tried
to smile. “Satake-sum was a man of great curiosity, Shuyun-sum. To find
out what a woman could learn… though I began at too advanced an age to
ever achieve the mastery that you display, Brother.”
Another awkward moment.
The rain continued, like a frame around the silence in the room.
“Curiosity,
Satake-sum told me, was not encouraged within your Order,” Nishima said
tentatively, as though afraid she breached a sensitive subject.
But Shuyun only nodded.
Nishima pulled her robe
closer. Gathering her nerve, she pressed on. “I understand, Shuyun-sum,
that there have been differing Botahist teachings in the past? Those who dwelt
in the fane on the Lake of the Seven Masters, for instance.”
“It is so, though
the one true Way still guides us, while the others have disappeared.”
“I wonder—did
the sect that dwelt in Denji Gorge not believe they followed the teachings of
the Perfect Master? Were their beliefs not interpretations of the words of
Botahara?”
Shuyun shrugged.
“Their beliefs were heretical, Lady Nishima.”
“Ahh,”
Nishima looked down at her hands. “It seems difficult to judge their
beliefs when no one is sure what those beliefs were.”
Shuyun took a long breath
and let it out slowly. “Others have judged the doctrine of the Eightfold
Path, Lady Nishima. It does not need to be done every generation.”
Nishima nodded though it
hardly seemed like a nod of agreement. “Do you ever wonder, Brother? Are
you entirely sure of your path? I question my own—often.”
Shuyun touched his
fingertips together as though he would meditate. “My teachers warned that
the world beyond the monastery would test my faith, Lady Nishima.” He
paused, deep in thought. Then, softly, “I did not realize how hard this testing
would be.‘’
Nishima nodded but did
not answer immediately. The rain on the tile seemed to respond to the sadness
she felt in the room. Perhaps all ways were difficult.
A tap on the shoji
interrupted Nishima’s thoughts. A kneeling maid opened the screen a
hand’s breadth. “Lady Kitsura calls, my Lady.”
Nishima hid her annoyance
with enormous care, well aware of how sensitive a Botahist Initiate was to tone
of voice.
“How kind of her to
call. Please, ask Lady Kitsura to join us.”
Nishima smiled as her
cousin entered, but Kitsura’s air of excitement quickly gave way to
embarrassment. She was dressed in an unpatterned silk robe in a shade of peach
that was matched with only a single under-kimono. Her sash was a silk scarf
quickly knotted and her hair was worn long. It was clear she had not expected
to find male company in Nishima’s apartments.
“Excuse me, cousin,
Brother Shuyun. I did not realize you were here, Brother. I apologize.”
“Kitsura-sum,”
Nishima smiled, “please do not apologize. Our discussion of the spirit
will only be more interesting with your participation. Please sit with
us.” She gestured to other pillows and Kitsura took her place though she
did not seem at all sure this was the proper thing for her to do.
“Brother Shuyun and
I had just been discussing the development of Botahist doctrine.” Nishima
looked over
at her cousin and
realized that with so few robes the shape of Kitsura’s breast was hardly
hidden. Glancing at Shuyun, she wondered if he noticed this himself. If desire
was the nature of Illusion, how was he so unaffected by it? Nishima looked back
at her cousin. Men were usually all but overcome with desire when in
Kitsura’s presence—Nishima had seen it many times. She was aware of
being somewhat jealous of her cousin’s effect on the men of the Empire.
“Ah, Lady
Nikko,” Kitsura said, bending over to retrieve the scroll. As she did so
her poorly belted robes opened, and Nishima was sure she had seen
Shuyun’s eyes drawn in that direction for an instant.
Shuyun bowed suddenly,
“Lady Nishima, Lady Kitsura, please excuse me. I have other duties that
call me.” He bowed again, responding politely to the women’s
expressions of regret. The screen closed gently behind him.
Nishima smiled at her
cousin, a rather sheepish smile. “Plum wine?” she asked.
“Now that I have
ruined your evening,” Kitsura said, “coming to your rooms dressed
like a street woman.” She pulled her robes closed at the neck.
Nishima laughed.
“You did have a most surprised look on your face when you saw Brother
Shuyun.” She laughed again.
“Well, I was hardly
expecting you to be entertaining a gentleman. Your maid admitted me so readily.
Had she said that Brother Shuyun was here, I would never have come
in—dressed like this. Really, you should speak with that girl.”
“Kitsu-sum, you
would be beautiful dressed as a street sweeper.”
“Well…”
Kitsura looked embarrassed, “that hardly means one is allowed to appear
socially, half-dressed!”
Nishima laughed again.
She seemed rather pleased with Kitsura’s discomfiture.
“But I have not
told you! I have just received letters from my family. Jaku Katta did have the
message delivered!” Kitsura’s eyes shone with excitement. “It
is information your father must have. Certainly the handsome Guard Commander is
no longer in favor at court. He would never have dared send a message to my
family
otherwise—especially
as he did not know what my letter contained. There can be no doubt.“
Nishima nodded her head.
“No doubt at all,” she said quietly. “You are quite right.”
Nineteen
Word reached the acting
Commander of the Imperial Guard within minutes of the discovery. Jaku Tad-amoto
hurried down a hall and turned into the grand corridor that connected the
palace proper with the Palace of Administration. Like much of the Island Palace
this had been built on a scale barely approachable by mere humans—broad
and high-ceilinged with a polished stone floor that shone in the soft winter
light.
In the distance he could
see a party of officials moving at a pace inappropriate to their station.
Peaked red caps denoted at least two Senior Ministers and the robes of the
others indicated officials of high rank. In the midst of this group a sedan
chair was being hurried along, but it appeared to have no occupant. Tadamoto
increased his pace. An Emperor too impatient to ride as his station required
was never a good sign.
Tadamoto attached himself
to the rear of this silent party and matched its pace without a word. The
Minister of the Left, puffing to keep up, gave him a barely perceptible nod.
The silence of the party hung in the air, poised like a sharp blade.
Guards and officials and
courtiers knelt with their foreheads to the floor as the Emperor passed. The
Palace would be alive with rumors within minutes—try to control the flow
of gossip when the Emperor behaved like this!
They entered the Palace
of Administration and turned into another hall. The shuffle of feet on stone,
the breathing of the rushing officials, robes of silk and brocade sweeping
along the floor, conversations dying abruptly as the Emperor came into view.
Another hall, smaller
now, some confusion about a door, and then a large room in the core of the
ministry.
Tense, chalky faces
turned toward the entering party and then foreheads were pressed to the floor.
A small, iron-bound chest stood in the center of the room and, with the bowing
officials surrounding it, Tadamoto had the fleeting impression that it was an
object of veneration. He pushed past the sedan chair bearers and nodded to
guards to close the doors.
The Emperor paused,
holding his sword in both hands. “This is the chest?”
Nods from several
quarters. Stepping forward, the Emperor lifted the lid of the chest with the
tip of his scabbard so that it slid off“ and fell to the floor with an
ominous clatter. He leaned forward to look in and stepped back as though the
contents offended him. Glancing over his shoulder, the Son of Heaven saw
Tadamoto and nodded.
“Colonel,”
the Emperor waved his sword at the chest.
Tadamoto stepped past the
frightened officials, staying a respectful distance from the Emperor. He
rounded the chest and peered in, closed his eyes for a second, then reached
down and removed a small brocade bag—the single object the chest
contained. Untying the cord with trembling fingers Tadamoto emptied the
contents into his palm. A dozen gold coins, square, with round holes in their
centers.
The Emperor spun around
looking at the gathered officials, most of whom stepped back in obvious fright.
“And there was
nothing taken from this chest? It came exactly thus from Seh?”
Heads bobbed.
“Exactly as you see it,” a senior official offered, “though
with seals unbroken.” He was an old man whose voice quavered terribly.
“The theft must have taken place on the canal, though the Imperial
Governor’s own troops were the guards.”
The Emperor tapped the
edge of the chest with his sword, raised the scabbard suddenly as if he would
strike the edge, then stopped himself. “Find them,” the Emperor
said to no one and, turning, scattered the officials before him.
Tadamoto stood for a
moment, looking down into the empty chest. His gaze drifted back to the coins.
He pushed one with his finger to uncover another—it bore the mark of a
strange dragon.
“Colonel,”
the Minister of the Left said, his voice jarring in the silent room,
“these guards were best found quickly.”
Tadamoto thrust the bag
and coins into the old man’s hands and stormed out. In the hall beyond he
broke into an undignified trot. There was no doubt in his mind that there had
been no theft. The chest and its contents were a message from Shonto—a
declaration of war. Tadamoto had not received confirmation yet, but it was
rumored that Shonto had published a tract offering gold for the service of
armed men.
Civil war was all but
inevitable. And what of this barbarian army? If Jaku told the truth, it would
be more than civil war; it would be the war that ended the Empire. He went from
a trot to a run.
The Great Audience Hall
of the Empire was lit by only a half dozen lamps, spaced around its great
perimeter, and the small light they provided appeared to be drawn into the
hall’s vast darkness. It gave the chamber an eerie feel and distorted
one’s sense of the space and distance. Tadamoto stood just inside a door
to one side of the dais, waiting for his eyes to adjust. He could hear the
sound of footsteps. They seemed to come toward him, then stop, then retreat
again. Someone muttered—words he could not understand.
Staring into the gloom,
Tadamoto was finally able to make out the silhouette of a man moving before the
dais. He was unsure of what to do. After waiting in the dark for some minutes
longer Tadamoto knelt down where he stood and waited until the footsteps
approached and then stopped again.
“Emperor?” he
said quietly.
The unmistakable sound of
a sword being drawn from its scabbard.
“Sire? I have come
with my report as you wished. It is Colonel Jaku.”
‘
’Tadamoto-sum?‘’
“Yes, Sire. Please
excuse my intrusion.”
“You are
alone?” The voice came out of the dark.
“Yes, Sire.”
“Get up,” the
Emperor commanded.
Jaku bowed to the
darkness and rose to his feet.
“Come along,”
the voice said.
Tadamoto walked toward
the sound. The Emperor’s form materialized in the poor light. Tadamoto
could see him returning his sword to its scabbard.
“Walk with us,
Colonel.” At this the Emperor turned and started down the hall, his pace
deliberate if not hurried. Halfway down the length of the great chamber the
Emperor broke the silence.
“The Shonto guards
are not to be found?”
“This is so,
Emperor. It seems very likely that Shonto’s most senior retainers have
slipped away also, though appearances are being kept up faithfully at their
residences. I have failed…”
“The gods take
them!” the Emperor interrupted. “I did not truly believe they could
be found. They did not steal Seh’s taxes—their lord did.”
Tadamoto nodded. They
came abreast of a lamp and he could see the Emperor’s face, strangely
distorted by the half light. The eyes hidden in dark holes and the forehead
standing out like a deformity. The young guardsman looked away.
This man touches the woman I love.
“I had hoped to
avoid civil war,” the Emperor said softly. ‘ ’I had so hoped
to avoid it.
“Of course, Shonto
will drive the Empire into this war. I should have realized.” His voice
was sad as though he spoke of an errant child.
She spends her nights in his arms.
“We will have to
raise an army now. If Shonto tries to split the Empire and establish himself in
Seh, we will be forced to go north to fight. If the lord chooses to come south,
we will let him come to us. Either way the Empire will pay a great
price.‘’
They strode on until they
came to the massive entrance doors where the Emperor changed course abruptly
and started back toward the dais.
/ have let this occur, frozen into inaction.
“Are preparations
complete for sending the Prince north?”
Tadamoto fought the rage
that swelled inside him. “They have been complete for some days,
Sire,” he said tightly.
“Then he shall drag
his feet no longer. Send him off even if you must use force.”
Tadamoto nodded again.
“And the Omawara.
We watch them with great care?”
“Both by day and by
night, Emperor.”
“Do not let them
slip away, Colonel. I will have plans for them yet.”
They walked in silence to
the foot of the Dragon Throne and then turned back. Half the length of the hall
passed beneath their feet with nothing but the sounds of their footsteps and
the hiss of the Emperor’s brocade robe along the stone. Occasionally the
jeweled scabbard the Son of Heaven carried would catch the dim light, and it
seemed he almost brandished it as though at an enemy.
“Sire…
?” Jaku struggled to collect his thoughts.
“Speak your mind,
Colonel,” the Emperor said with some impatience.
“Excuse me for
saying so, Sire, but perhaps we play this game too openly.” He took a
deep breath. “If we locate Shonto’s retainers and they are taken by
Imperial Guards, no matter how carefully disguised, the Empire will soon know.
We risk dividing the Great Houses.” Tadamoto glanced at the Emperor, but
it was impossible to read his face in the low light. “There are other
courses. We could announce that we raise an army to send north— the
situation in Seh is not critical, but it is not what we originally thought. Of
course, we will keep this army here under our control until we see what Shonto
does. It will be a message for Shonto’s allies.”
Tadamoto could see the
Emperor nodding. “But what of this gold we have received from
Shonto?” The Emperor turned toward him in the dark. “You understand
its significance, Tadamoto-sum?”
“I do, Sire.”
They walked a few paces more. “We could send a message to Shonto saying
we are confused by this. Certainly the Imperial Treasury should contribute to
the efforts against the barbarians, but this action of Shonto’s staff is
foolish in the extreme. Could not the Governor look into this matter and tell
us his province’s needs?”
The Emperor considered
this. “Ah, Tadamoto, this is wisdom. Why do my other counselors not
advise me so?” The Emperor slapped his palm with his scabbard. “We
will do as you suggest,
though Shonto’s retainers should be found if it is at all possible.
I’m certain Tanaka could provide a wealth of information, and not just
about his lord.“
They had walked the
hall’s length and returned now to the foot of the throne.
“What of your brother?
Has he written in return to your letter?”
“It may yet be too
soon, Sire.”
“Ah.” the
Emperor paced across the foot of the dais and then stopped.
“Begin to raise the
army. My son will leave for the north immediately… to assist Shonto until
our entire force can be made ready.” The Emperor mounted the steps and
disappeared into the total darkness surrounding the Dragon Throne. Tadamoto
heard him settle into the cushions.
“Prepare a letter
for our governor,” said the voice in the darkness. “Tell him that
we are confused by the action of his staff. Say we prepare an army as quickly
as we can. Let him wonder what we plan, let him lie awake and wonder.
“Colonel,”
there was real warmth in the Emperor’s voice now, “I shall reward
you for this, reward you richly. Tell us your desire, Tadamoto-sum.”
Tadamoto knelt and bowed,
his spirit sinking as he did so. “To serve my Emperor,” he forced
himself to say, “that is my desire.”
This man…
“You are a man of
honor, Tadamoto-sum, but I’m sure something can be found that will be
worthy of you. We shall see.”
Tadamoto sat on the
lowest step of the dais, brooding in the darkness. The Emperor had gone,
leaving the young officer in a turmoil.
Osha, Osha, he thought. He had not seen the
dancer for several days, had been unable to face her, though he could not say
why. It was one thing for him to be avoiding Osha, but now he began to believe
that she was avoiding him as well.
We have come to this, he
thought, two people who felt and thought as one.
Damn him! May all evil
take his soul!
Tadamoto stood and walked
along the step a few paces, then sat again. If nothing else, an army would be
raised. If Katta had written anything near to the truth, then Tadamoto would
feel he had done what he could. The Empire would not be entirely unprepared.
And if Katta joined the Shonto in an attempt to overthrow the Yamaku… ?
Tadamoto put his face in his hands.
“Osha-sum,”
he whispered, and the sound disappeared into the dark hall without an echo.
Twenty
The Imperial
Governor’s Palace was a riot of preparations and though most of the
people involved, beyond Shonto’s own staff, thought the governor was mad,
they were not allowed to let this feeling be reflected in their work.
Shonto’s retainers made sure of that.
Shuyun found himself with
little to do, for he had no specific responsibilities other than to advise his
lord when required. Lord Shonto’s staff were masters at logistics, so
advice from an Initiate Monk, who owned almost nothing and had moved only twice
in his short life, was highly unnecessary.
The day was comparatively
mild, but a strong wind blew out of the west, whipping up and pushing at Shuyun
where he moved along the top of the palace wall. He had walked the perimeter of
the Imperial Palace atop its various sections of wall and through its towers
for no other reason than to be out in the air after all the hours spent in the
palace during the winter. Though it seemed to indicate lack of Enlightenment,
Shuyun could feel his spirit lift with each step.
The Palace sat atop a low
rise on the city’s eastern edge, the highest point on the natural island
that formed the anchor of Rhojo-ma. Much of the rest of the city sat upon
manmade islands built on a rock shelf that lay just under the lake’s surface.
The palace’s position hardly offered a high vantage, but it afforded some
views that were worth contemplating and Shuyun had stopped at each of these.
Below, Shuyun saw two
guards in Shonto blue who looked up and pointed in his direction, then one of
them began to make his way at a trot toward nearby stairs.
Lord Shonto must have
sent for his Spiritual Advisor, the monk thought, and increased his pace.
“Brother…
Shuyun.” The guard puffed to the top of the stairs, holding his sword
hilt as he ran. “There has been a missive left for you.” He bowed.
“My corporal was not sure of its urgency, so he sent me
immediately.”
Shuyun gestured down the
stairs. “Please, I will follow.”
They did not have far to
go, for the guard led the way to a nearby gate that opened into the streets
beyond the palace—quiet streets. Guards bowed as the governor’s
Advisor approached and the few pedestrians who passed by stepped aside. Inside
the gate house the corporal the guard had spoken of bowed low to Shuyun.
“Excuse me for
interrupting your contemplation, Brother, but I thought this might be of
importance.”
The corporal’s name
was Rohku; Shuyun had met his father during his brief time in the Capital. He
took from a table what appeared to be a scroll wrapped in plain gray paper and
handed it to the monk.
Shuyun nodded his thanks.
It was not a missive, certainly, for there was no stamp of his Order upon it.
Corporal Rohku bobbed in
a second bow—the story of Shuyun’s confrontation with the young
Lord Toshaki had made its way down through Shonto’s guard, and it brought
even greater respect to the monk. “It was delivered by a Botahist
Brother.‘’
Shuyun turned it over and
found a wax seal with a name-character impressed in it.
Hitara.
Shuyun felt his time
sense stretch as though he practised chi ten, yet he did not.
“How long
ago?” Shuyun asked, his mouth suddenly dry.
“Moments, Brother
Shuyun, only moments.”
“Did you see the
direction he set out in?”
“Toward the market
streets…”
Shuyun placed the scroll
in his hands. “Guard this,” he ordered and then was out the door at
a run before the corporal could protest.
“Follow him,”
Rohku snapped. “He is not to leave the palace without an escort.”
The young guard set out
at a run but was soon outdistanced by the small monk. By the time he reached
the market streets, Shuyun was lost from sight.
Shuyun ran.
“A Botahist
Brother? Did he pass?” he yelled at a peasant leading a mule. The man
nodded and pointed down a narrow side street. Shuyun ran on, increasing his
pace.
At the next meeting of
streets he asked again and was directed left. Then right. Then up a flight of
stairs and across a bridge. Coming to a small square, he was stopped by the
many streets and stairs and alleys.
An old man sat on a step,
working at a strap on an ancient sandal. “A Brother,” Shuyun
panted, “did he pass?”
The old man tugged away
at the strap, looking off into the distance as he did so. After several seconds
of contemplation he nodded.
“Which way?”
Without taking his eyes
from the point in the distance or deigning to look at his inquisitor, he
answered. “I am only a poor old man, Brother, do not ask me to point the
Way.”
“I have no coins,
old man, but I will see you receive coins aplenty if you answer my
question.”
The old man smiled.
“The Way, Brother is not so easily found.” He paused to concentrate
on his task for a second. “And I am not a teacher.”
Shuyun went to speak
again but realized what he should have seen immediately—the man was
blind. Looking around at the many alleys and stairs, Shuyun shook his head.
There was no one else to ask.
‘ ’Who shall
I ask if not you, old sage?‘’ Shuyun leaned against the wall to
catch his breath.
“That is the worst
of it, Brother. Until the Teacher comes, there is no one.” He managed to
free the broken strap suddenly and explored the damage with twisted fingers. He
did not like what he felt. “Tell me your name, Brother.”
“Shuyun.”
The thin smile appeared
again. “He who bears. What is it you carry, Brother Shuyun?‘’
Shuyun sat staring for a
moment—he had once been a scholar, this shriveled old shadow of a man.
Only a scholar would know the origin of his name. He looked down at the
man’s feet. His other sandal was as much a ruin as the one he held in his
hands.
Shuyun slipped quickly
out of his own footwear and put these in the man’s hands. “To aid
you in your search for the Way, old sage.”
The man ran his fingers
over the soft leather, his smile returning. Shuyun turned back the way he had
come, bare feet over cold cobbles. He had not gone three paces before the old
man spoke again.
“If you do not know
what it is you bear, Brother, you risk taking the wrong path.”
Shuyun looked over his
shoulder. The old man sat, gaze still fixed on a distant point, stroking his
gift.
“I bare my feet,
old sage, and pray to Botahara to guide them.”
The old man smiled now,
rocking back and forth like a child. He laughed gently.
As he walked back to the
palace, Shuyun was met by an anxious young guard whose great relief at finding
his lord’s Spiritual Advisor unharmed was visible. When the guard
realized that the monk walked barefoot, he immediately tried to give him his
sandals and was somewhat disconcerted when Shuyun refused.
Returning to the palace
gate, Shuyun retrieved his scroll from Corporal Rohku and retired from the
bustle to his own rooms. After an insistant servant had bathed his feet, Shuyun
was able to be alone. He retreated to his balcony with the package, broke the
seal with great care, and unwrapped the scroll, holding his breath as he did
so, much to his surprise.
The scroll was new, doing
away with Shuyun’s most irrational expectation—Shimeko’s
words had affected him more than he realized. The paper was plain, common in
fact, a dull shade of yellowish-brown, and the brush-work, though perfectly executed,
was unremarkable. He read.
Brother Shuyun:
I regret that we will be unable to speak,
but it is my hope that everything you might ask will be answered here. I have
come recently out of the desert and do not know when I shall be able to return.
The army that you searched for in the
north is, even now, approaching the border of Seh. The brave men of Seh who
rode into the desert to patrol beyond your borders have been returned to the
wheel, may Botahara protect their souls. Although the Khan’s army is
near, it will take ten days to reach your border, such is its size. Over one
hundred thousand follow behind this Khan, Brother, and they are well armed.
Once across your border the barbarian
forces will take another six days to reach Rhojo-ma. It appears they will enter
Seh north ofKyo. There is so little time, Brother.
Lord Botahara took out his sword and
shattered it upon a great stone. His armor he sank into the rushing river and
his war horse was set free to run across the hills.
“In the struggle that comes,”
He said, “such weapons will be as the toys of children. ” Saying
this, the Lord left his army and walked down from the mountain. And so began
the struggle for the souls of men.
May Botahara smile upon you, Brother,
Hitara
Shuyun sat for a long moment,
looking out over the roofs of the palace. The wind still blew, pulling the
clouds into long ragged banners. He unrolled the scroll further, hoping there
would be more and something soft fell onto his knees. Looking down, Shuyun
closed his eyes and began to pray. As he did so, tears ran onto his cheeks
though he did not feel them. He chanted the long prayer for forgiveness and
then the prayer for thanksgiving. Yet he still dared not open his eyes.
When finally he looked
upon this gift, he thought his
soul would swell until it
spread across the sky. His fingers trembled when he reached out and took
Hitara’s gift into his hands. A simple white blossom, five elongated
petals tinged with purple, as soft and supple as if it had just been plucked.
“Botahara be
praised,” Shuyun whispered. “The flower of the Udumbara.”
Twenty-one
Shonto rolled the scroll
with great care as though it were very old and rare. He sat near a screen
partially opened to the cool day and, like the others present, Shonto still
wore outdoor garb. Preparations for the move south were in motion and Shonto
had walked the quay to see some of this firsthand. It was the lord’s way
to have his presence known in times of difficulty.
Shonto seemed more grave
than usual though one could hardly detect any effects of the burdens he bore or
the work he had been doing. It was part of the lord’s persona—his
apparent youthfulness was due less to his appearance than to his manner, his
exuberance. But today the exuberance was muffled under a layer of seriousness.
“It is beyond
question, Shuyun, you have no doubt?”
The monk nodded.
“Though this man is a mystery to my Order, there is no doubt that he is a
true follower of Botahara. I am convinced that what Hitara has written is
true.”
Shonto looked to General Hojo
Masakado.
The general did not
hesitate. “If this information is not true, I am at a loss to know what
purpose such lies would serve. It is my counsel, Sire, that we should act as
though Brother Hitara’s information is beyond doubt.‘’
Shonto nodded, then
turned to Kamu.
“I agree, Lord
Shonto, though I would feel more at ease if we knew more of this Brother from
the desert.” Kamu threw up his hand in resignation. Of all Shonto’s
senior staff, Kamu was affected most by the preparations that they engaged in.
His age was beginning to tell. Yet he went about his work with customary
efficiency and though he seemed to be aging daily, there was never a complaint.
Shonto turned to Komawara
next.
“I do not claim to
have a truth sense, Sire, but I met Brother Hitara in the desert and I do not
believe for a moment that he would lie to us. The guard’s description fit
Brother Hitara perfectly and, like General Hojo, I can’t imagine that
giving us such information, were it wrong, would benefit anyone. Even the
barbarians would rather we stayed in Seh where they could easily defeat us. We
have only a few days, Sire, I think we should act immediately.” Komawara
bowed.
Shonto looked over at
Nishima.
“Certainly we
should act, Sire, but I don’t think we can leave Seh before the
barbarians have crossed the border. I do not mean to tell you your duties as
governor, but we cannot abandon the people of Seh entirely.”
Shonto considered this.
“We can begin our move down the canal, though some may stay behind until
the true situation is realized in Seh. A small group can still easily
outdistance a large army.” Shonto bowed to Nishima, then turned to the
Imperial guardsman. “General Jaku?”
The presence of Jaku
Katta at this council was a mystery to everyone but Shonto who had invited him.
It was doubly a mystery, for Jaku had not been told of Brother Hitara in the
original story of the journey into the desert. Perhaps it was not such a
surprise to Jaku that he had not been told everything—he had lived in the
Emperor’s Palace after all. The Guard Commander bowed formally.
“Lord Shonto, I
agree with Lady Nishima. We cannot begin to move our forces south until the
barbarian threat is realized by the people of Seh. I am forced to admit that
this is a matter of pride as well as prudence. If we leave now, we will be seen
as either mad or cowardly. If we leave after the barbarian army has been seen
for what it is, our actions will be viewed differently by the lords of this
province. As I say, it is a matter of pride—I am a soldier, please excuse
me.”
Other men in the room
nodded. Pride was at issue here with all but Shuyun and perhaps Lady Nishima,
though none had spoken of it.
Shonto nodded
thoughtfully. “Lord Komawara, what do you think your countrymen will do
when they see the scale of the barbarian army?”
The young lord considered
for a moment; he had embarrassed himself in Shonto’s council in the past
and was
taking some care not to
repeat this. “I fear that fewer men than we would hope will follow us
south, Lord Shonto. The Taiki prepare as we speak but, as General Jaku has
said, pride will dictate the actions of many. Some will stay to fight, though
they will understand the futility.”
Shonto pulled his armrest
closer. “Kamu-sum, the tract that you distributed—when can we
expect to see some response to that?”
Kamu did a mental count
of days. “Soon, I would expect, Sire. The lure of gold is great. Armed
men from Itsa and Chiba provinces should be making their way toward us as we
speak.”
“Send recruiting
officers and staff down the canal,” Shonto said, “as soon as you
can—tomorrow if it is possible. Have them begin work in a station south
of Seh’s border. Then have them move in seven days. We will keep them
ahead of us. Put a responsible man in charge of this, we do not want a stream
of soldiers joining our flotilla and slowing us as we move. Camps must be
created in strategic places for these men. It will mean thinning our ranks, but
we’ll have to assign officers to the recruits—we need to have them
ready and useful. General Hojo, it will mean promotions for many junior
officers—see to it.”
Kamu and Hojo bowed.
Shonto stared out the
open shoji for a moment.
“There is other
news.” Shonto reached out and moved Hitara’s scroll as though its
angle to the light was not quite correct. “I have received word from the
Emperor.” Shonto said quietly. He looked up at the others. “The Son
of Heaven writes that an army is being raised for the defense of Seh.”
Shonto seemed to enjoy
the response of the people present or perhaps he made some secret assessment of
those present by observing how they responded to the unexpected.
Lady Nishima stared
openly and with some degree of contempt at Jaku Katta, thinking to herself that
he had again proven himself incapable of telling the truth.
Kamu was not the first to
recover, but he spoke first. “Si-Sire, did the Emperor not receive his
empty tax box?”
“The Son of Heaven
has asked that I look into this matter. The governor’s staff, the Son of
Heaven suggested, have acted in a most foolish manner. Certainly Seh must
retain some of her revenue for defense, but…” Shonto shrugged.
“We are asked to prepare a document describing our exact needs. Our
failure to remit our taxes has been overlooked. So, as requested, we will
prepare a report for the Emperor explaining our military needs.”
“What will we tell
him?” Hojo asked.
“The truth.”
Shonto smiled. “Does that shock you, General?”
Everyone, including Hojo,
laughed.
“General Jaku,
perhaps you can explain the significance of the Emperor’s
decision.”
Jaku bowed. “I had
begun to lose hope myself, Sire. My friends at court could not prevail in the
council to have an army raised to defend Seh. You can imagine why. This army
the Emperor writes of is intended to defend the Capital from the army that Lord
Shonto raises—the tract offering to pay gold to armed men must have
caused a great deal of discussion. The Son of Heaven fears other Houses joining
with us.
“The Imperial force
is not being prepared to fight the Khan, but it is an army nonetheless: who
will control this army once the true threat is apparent, that is the
issue.”
Shonto’s staff
bowed toward Jaku.
“It is some sign of
hope, General Jaku. At least the Empire will not be entirely unprepared. How
large a force does the Emperor gather?”
Jaku opened his hands.
“This is not yet clear. I hope to know soon.”
Shuyun bowed to his
liege-lord. “Undoubtedly the Emperor’s force will be large enough
to counter Lord Shonto’s army—that is the threat the throne
perceives. If it is to our advantage that the Emperor raise a large force, we
could assist our cause by exaggerating the number of our own soldiers.”
Komawara almost grinned.
“Brother Shuyun, you surprise me. Is this what one learns from the
writings of Botahara?”
Shuyun responded as
though no one present smiled.
“I have recently
tried to broaden my education, Lord Komawara. I have heard it said that the lie
no one doubts is spoken by an honorable man. We may tell a great lie and be
believed.”
“We will begin to
move our people south the day the barbarian army crosses the border,”
Shonto said. “We are a laughing stock for gathering so many river
craft… but that will change soon enough. Boats will transport what forces
we have faster than the barbarians will ever ride. And rafts handled by men who
have lived their lives on the desert will be slow—especially when they
find the canal locks impassable. Plans must be complete to burn all other craft
in Seh and also to keep the canal open ahead of us. Once the news of the
barbarian army passes us on the way south, we will be dealing with thousands
fleeing toward the inner provinces. We cannot have our progress
impeded.‘’
Jaku Katta bowed quickly
and not as low as he had previously. ‘ ’I have left garrisons of
Imperial Guard along the canal, Lord Shonto. We can use them to open the
waterway before us.“
Shonto nodded.
“Good.” He considered for a moment. “The Emperor sends his
useless son north with what will no doubt be a small guard. The Prince will be
a nuisance, I’m sure, but we will treat him with proper respect. Who
knows what part he may yet play.”
“Certainly he will
never make a hostage,” Hojo offered. “The Prince is not dear to his
Imperial father. The Emperor may be hoping we will send him to his end fighting
barbarians.” The general considered this. “And perhaps we
should.”
Shonto nodded. “Too
many will find such an end, Masakado-sum, and I will wish it on no one.”
Twenty-two
Beacon fires flare
From hill to tower
To hill
Like sparks escaping the brazier
In a tinder dry house
Lord Komawara stood at
the window in the top of West Tower, watching. At intervals around the horizon
he could see beacon fires blazing with a distant urgency. By morning the news
would have spread to the remotest corner of the province.
It was a cold evening
with a harsh wind, but the lord did not seem to notice. He had been standing in
the same place for more than an hour, and though he felt numb to the center of
his soul it was not from the night.
They come, he thought, they come.
His mind seemed to have
no focus, starting down one path to veer suddenly into another. Thoughts of his
retainers making their way up into a stronghold in the mountains were lost to
images of riders, relaying from the northern border, racing to Rhojo-ma with
news of the barbarian army. Could it be as large as Brother Hitara wrote?
A fire blazed to life on
an eastern hill, and then, far off, another.
Lord Toshaki sat upon his
horse outside a small inn. In the background a narrow river flowed and the
light from the almost full moon wavered on its surface—liquid moonlight
rushing off into the night. Toshaki’s son, Yo-shihira, sat nearby on the
stump of a pine tree, his horse cropping some poor, winter grass beside him.
Neither man spoke. Their guards sat upon horses or stood at in-
tervals around the
clearing without sign of either impatience or intent. Warm light from the inn
reflected off lacquered armor here, a helmet there. A cold wind jostled among
the pines, making them sway and creak.
The moon drifted west.
The innkeeper came out with cups and a cauldron of steaming rice wine, but his
suggestions that the lords would find the night less forbidding inside were
politely rebuffed. The horsemen waiting in the dark felt that the wildness of
the night gave their vigil a certain purity.
The sound of horses at
the gallop. A guard stationed up the narrow road came into sight and whistled.
Toshaki’s son vaulted into the saddle and joined his father.
Men burst out of the inn
and disappeared toward the stable. These were men Toshaki had spoken with
earlier—retainers of Lord Taiki Kiyorama, though they bore the flying
horse emblem of the Governor of Seh on their surcoats. They reappeared almost
immediately with three saddled horses and spent a moment checking girths and
bridles in the light from the inn.
Three men on horseback
broke out of the trees and pulled their mounts up before the inn, horses in a
lather, driven to their limits. A crowd appeared on the porch, talking among
themselves. The riders were off their exhausted mounts, taking a moment only
for drink before setting off on fresh horses.
Lord Toshaki and his men
rode up then, half surrounding the messengers.
“What news?”
Lord Toshaki’s son called. “How large is this army?”
The three riders looked
up to see who questioned them, and at a whisper from one of the Taiki handlers
the men went back to their drinks, handing bowls to servants to be filled a
second and third time.
Young Toshaki rode closer
now, blocking their path. “The Lord of the Toshaki asks the size of the
barbarian army,” he said with some anger.
One rider, a young
captain, swung into the saddle, his horse stepping sideways, catching the
excitement of the men. “Does your lord wish to measure the size of the
force he has spent the winter raising against the size of the barbarian
army?” he asked with little show of re-
spect. “Go back to
your gü board, young Sire, we do the governor’s bidding.”
Toshaki spoke now, riding
up beside his son, the wind whipping his long hair out of its ring. “We
will all fight together now, despite the past. We are men of Seh, tell us what
it is we face.”
The captain rode forward,
working to control his mount as it tossed its head, ready to run. His voice was
pitched low and taut with anger. “You will bow at Lord Koma-wara’s
feet and ask for forgiveness, lord,” he said to Toshaki’s son.
“That is the size of the barbarian army.”
The messengers spurred
their horses then and pushed through Toshaki’s guards. The riders
disappeared into the darkness where the trees tossed like confused seas driven
before a great storm.
The morning after beacon
fires appeared, the first riders bearing the reports from the frontier officers
arrived in Rhojo-ma. By first light a great human stream was flowing into the
provincial capital from the nearby countryside and villages. It was
inconceivable to these people that Rhojo-ma could fall, and so they came,
bearing everything they could load into carts or carry on their backs or drag.
It was late winter and
still cool, but the skies were a clear northern blue during the days and filled
with stars at night. Those who had experience with the movement of troops
prayed for the rains that would be common at this time of year. Rains would
slow the invasion, could even bring it to a halt for some time. The horizon was
studied with an intensity that was unprecedented, but there was no sign of
cloud.
The reports from the
frontier officers came to Governor Shonto and he shut himself up with his staff
for most of a day. They waited for the major lords of Seh who would arrive late
that evening. For the first time in two generations a Council of War had been
called by the Governor of Seh.
The fisherman stood with
his family on the muddy edge of the River Chousa and watched the flames change
his life forever. Smoke and steam from wet planking plumed up in great clouds,
racing toward the heavens, an offense
to the purity of the sky.
Tugging at the flaming hull, the river lapped the shore and passed on, bearing
a slick of oily soot. The fisherman’s wife sobbed and shed bitter tears,
holding their two small children close, but the fisherman stood looking on without
a sound, a deep sadness in his eyes.
Downstream, toward the
bend in the river, he could see another boat pulled up on the bank and put to
the torch. The governor’s soldiers rowed on. The fisherman could see them
searching the mouth of a tributary overhung with willows, a guard standing up
in the boat parting the curtain of branches with his sword.
The fisherman’s
burning boat heaved now, as though some part of it was alive and in agony. This
drew his attention and for a second he looked as though he would join his wife
in tears. But this passed and the sadness returned. The flaming pole of a mast
toppled slowly to the bank, hissing where it touched the wet mud. More ribs
buckled and the boat settled even farther onto its side.
Turning away, the
fisherman went to the pile of goods tossed up on the bank and half covered by a
patched sail—everything he now owned in this world. He pulled aside the
sail and dragged a net out from under a chest. There were wooden floats
somewhere. War or no war, people would need to eat.
Shonto sat in his own
apartments, writing by the light of two lamps. His brushwork was deliberate,
though not slow. The silk and brocade robes of the Imperial Governor were a
bother to him, especially now when his armor laced in Shonto blue had been
readied. He dipped his brush in ink and wrote:
Shokan-sum:
I pray this reaches you. I will send men
down the river and along the coast, hoping they will find a boat to carry them
through the straits. With all of Seh running before barbarian armies, it will
be a miracle if they find a way.
The barbarians have crossed the border
and will arrive at Rhojo-ma within six days. I will
retreat down the Grand Canal, hoping to
slow the barbarian advance long enough that Akantsu can raise an army. Of
course the Emperor will remove me from my command if he can. Look to yourself.
I will control the army as long as I am able, but there is no way to know what
will occur—the Yamaku will have time to consider their course of action
with some care.
Look to yourself. If this war is lost,
our lands will mean nothing. Do not waste time or men defending them.
Nishi-sum stays with me and is a great
comfort and help. Often she speaks of her concern for you.
I have sent word to the Capital and to
Yankura. It would be best if Tanaka were with you, but if this is not possible
do not be concerned—our merchant is ever resourceful.
May Botahara protect you.
Shonto signed this,
folded it carefully, and sealed the letter with his stamp. It was very late,
the middle of the night had passed. He rose and walked to the door. The Council
of War awaited him.
The Great Hall of the
Governor’s Palace held perhaps a hundred men in all and though they were
men used to the uncertainties of life in the north most of them showed some
signs of the deep shock they felt. Shonto had seen the look before in
swordsmen—the split second when they realized they had made a mistake
from which there was no recovery, and so waited for the inevitable touch of
steel.
Shonto watched with great
detachment as the gathered lords bowed. For each man present the governor knew
there was a number and that number represented how many armed men they could
raise. For some of the lords the number would be less than fifty.
Komawara’s forces consisted of three hundred and fifty men, and he had
mortgaged his future to raise that number. The major lords might raise a
thousand men, perhaps two thousand for Toshaki and Lord Ranan.
Fifteen thousand men in
all was the estimate of Hojo
and Komawara. Add to this
the thirty-five hundred men that Shonto had brought with him to Seh. To face a
barbarian force of almost one hundred thousand.
Shonto nodded to the
assembled lords. The lamps flickered around the hall and the scent of burning
oil almost covered the odor of riders—so many had arrived barely in time
for the council. It was readily apparent that this was not the Imperial Capital
where such an assembly would be dressed in clothes of unequaled finery. Many of
the lords of Seh wore hunting costume—practical for riding and ease of movement—clothing
one never saw anywhere inside the Imperial Palace grounds.
Without prearrangement,
the men present arrayed themselves according to their earlier beliefs:
Shonto’s advisors and allies aligned themselves to the governor’s
right, apart from the others who sat in rows facing the governor’s dais.
Shonto looked over at Komawara who knelt stiffly among his allies. It is a
moment of vindication, Shonto thought, no one has suffered as Komawara has. Yet
Komawara hid anything he felt behind a mask of earnest concern.
Off to the left the
governor noticed the Toshaki Lords sitting near the Ranan—hardly a
natural alliance—their only bond the fact that they had all recently been
utterly wrong. Yes, Shonto thought, there will be few moments in
Komawara’s life as gratifying as this.
Shonto nodded to
Seh’s Major Chancellor, Lord Gi-toyo, who bowed and gave a signal to
someone unseen. Outside the hall an enormous drum boomed, twelve even beats,
echoing across the city and the lake long after the drumming had stopped.
Lord Gitoyo bowed again
and pulled himself up to his full sitting height so that his voice would reach
the back of the hall. “The Council of War of the Province of Seh has been
called. The Imperial Governor, Lord Shonto Motoru, has summoned you. Are there
any who would dispute the Imperial Governor’s right to lead us in time of
war?”
Some few shook their
heads, but most indicated their answer with silence.
“Until the state of
war is declared past, the commands of the Imperial Governor, Lord Shonto
Motoru, will be the law of Seh above all but the word of our Emperor.”
The gathered lords bowed.
The Chancellor fell
silent, waiting. Shonto nodded and the Chancellor again drew himself up.
‘ ’The reports of the frontier officers have been received and what
they have written shall be made known to you. Lord Ak-ima…“
The old man who had for
so long tormented Komawara about his “foolish” opinions, unlike the
rest of the men present, did not look like he was about to taste steel for his
own foolishness—he looked like the blade had slid home as Gitoyo spoke.
Akima gathered himself
together to speak, but his voice emerged small and old. “The reports
from… from our northern border are grave indeed. A barbarian force
crossed into Seh west of Kyo before sunset yesterday. This force consists of
cavalry, soldiers, bowmen, and train. The combined force… the combined
force approaches one hundred thousand fighting men.” He could not go on
then for some seconds, but it was hardly noticed. Some of those who had believed
this number to be rumor were as shaken as Akima.
With a visible act of
will Akima continued, forcing some strength into his voice. “I am assured
by Governor Shonto’s staff that this barbarian force will take six days
to reach Rhojo-ma—its apparent destination. This force is well armed and
horsed, with a supply train large enough to support an extended siege.”
Akima finished reading and let his hands fall back onto his knees. He met no
one’s eyes but seemed to stare out to Seh’s distant border.
“And I would not listen to reason,” he said with what sounded like
disbelief.
“Lord Akima,”
the Major Chancellor whispered almost sharply.
Akima seemed to come out
of a daze, and he bowed toward the dais. He returned to a kneeling position,
but his face could not hold the rigid impassivity of the other lords despite
his efforts.
Shonto looked out at the
men before him. They did not seem like men of great pride in that moment, but
he knew this was deceptive. How many could he convince to follow him down the
Grand Canal? That was the question. Proud northerners, none afraid to die. Let
their names be sung in the ballad of a great battle, that would
be reward enough for
them—especially now. Seh was about to fall because they had known too
much to listen to others and now they were proved wrong.
Shonto reached over and
took his sword off its stand, laying the scabbard across his knees. Seh would
have been lost if they had listened to him the first day he had arrived: Shonto
knew this to be true. The barbarian army was overwhelming. How to convince them
to abandon Seh to save the Empire? That was the true task.
Shonto took a long breath
and began. “Lords of Seh, we have often debated the extent of the
barbarian threat… that debate has come to an end. Those who argued that the
barbarians were not a threat believe that their lack of foresight has brought
us to this situation, but they are wrong. If we had begun to prepare for this
war the day I became your governor, we would still not be able to meet the army
that rides toward our capital. One hundred thousand barbarian warriors.”
He let the number hang in the still air of the Great Hall.
“Without the
support of the Emperor and all of Wa, we cannot mount a force large enough to
counter the barbarian threat. Rhojo-ma is a strong city, but force of numbers
will tell even in a siege. One hundred thousand attackers and only fifteen
thousand defenders. Despite the bravery of the men of Seh, it would not be a
battle long enough to allow the rest of Wa time to raise an army. And that is
what we must do… slow the barbarian advance long enough that an army can
be raised.
“This Khan who has
gathered the uncounted tribes of the desert—he could easily have taken an
unprepared Province of Seh in the autumn. But that would have given the Empire
a winter to raise an army. Seh is not the prize the Khan desires. With an army
of one hundred thousand he seeks the throne of Wa.” Shonto looked out
over the hall, trying to gauge the reactions of the northern lords, but he
could not read their faces. It was too much for them to take in all at
once—too much for them to lose at one time. “Yet I am certain that
we can save the Province of Seh.” Shonto paused to let his words have
their effect. “The Khan must reach the inner provinces before a force can
be raised to stop him. If there is no army to fight in Seh, the Khan will not
linger here but will push south. He has no choice. To move a force of that size
the length
of the Empire will take
many weeks—and that army must be fed. We can slow his march south, there
are ways. There are places that will allow the few to battle the many. If the
barbarians can be defeated in Chiba Province or Dentou, Seh will bear the marks
of the barbarians’ passing less than other parts of Wa.“
Yes, Shonto thought, he
could see that he was being heard, by some at least. “I will take my
forces, and those who will follow me, and set out south. All other craft in Seh
will be put to the torch. It is my intention to slow the barbarian march south
and to destroy everything that an army could use for sustenance. When the
barbarians have gone far into Wa, they will be very hungry indeed.”
Shonto glanced over at
Hojo who gave an almost imperceptible nod.
“I cannot command
that you follow me. The course of honor will not be the same for every man. By
sunrise I wish to know your choices.” Shonto rose and left the hall as
the attending lords bowed.
The Kalam appeared after
a quiet tap on the screen leading to Shuyun’s rooms. The tribesman
dressed in Shonto livery was a sight Shuyun had trouble adjusting to, though
not as much trouble as many others. It had been decided that the Kalam should
be dressed like this for his own safety—the times dictated it. Emotions
ran high among the men of Seh and it was not for them to make a distinction
between a member of a hunting tribe and a follower of the Khan.
The tribesman executed a
bow that was a credit to his blue livery. Shuyun did not need to be told the
reason for the interruption—there was only one thing that could make the
Kalam blush: Lady Nishima must be calling.
“Yes?” Shuyun
said.
“Lady
Nishima,” the tribesman said, mangling the “sh” even more
than usual.
Since he had first seen
Lady Nishima, the Kalam had believed that she was a great princess and he still
seemed to think that the distinction “Lady” was a foolish
technicality.
It was very late for a
visit from Lady Nishima, but no doubt few had slept in the hour since the
Council of War.
“Please tell them
to enter.”
A moment later Nishima
appeared in the opening and stopped as though unsure of herself. Shuyun knew by
the sounds of her footsteps that she came unaccompanied by servants or
ladies-in-waiting and he was surprised.
In the light from the
lamp Lady Nishima seemed so slight standing in the door. This evening she did
not display the imperious air that so impressed Shuyun’s barbarian
servant. Instead she seemed fragile, vulnerable. Large dark eyes looked out at
him and Shuyun was not sure what it was they asked, for certainly there was a
question there.
“No one sleeps,
Shuyun-sum,” she said softly. No apology for the interruption and indeed,
Shuyun felt it unnecessary.
He gestured to the
cushions, “Please, Lady Nishima, like everyone else I have been sitting
wondering…”
Nishima retained her
customary grace, despite all, and lowered herself to the cushions as lightly as
a dancer. She pulled her robes close at the throat and looked around the room.
“You have no charcoal burner?”
Shuyun shrugged.
“But I am not cold,” he said rising to his feet and disappearing
from the room through another screen. Returning almost immediately, he brought
a thick quilt and gave it to Lady Nishima. She smiled her thanks and wrapped
herself in Shuyun’s offering.
They did not speak for
some time. More than once Shuyun thought Nishima would break the silence, but
something stopped her. It almost seemed that what was occurring in the Empire
was too momentous—defying the power of words to describe. Shuyun felt
that everyone was in such turmoil that they could not find a place to begin
discussing what they thought and felt.
Nishima looked up at
Shuyun almost shyly. “What is everyone else doing, I wonder?”
“This,”
Shuyun said quietly. “Sitting in rooms alone or with others, saying very
little.”
Nishima nodded, it seemed
true somehow. Rearranging the cushions, Nishima curled up and propped herself
on one elbow. A hanging lamp went out and began to smoke, but neither.seemed to
care. Reaching for the remaining lamp, Nishima said, “May I?”
Shuyun nodded and she turned the lamp low. She lay down, folding her arm under
her head, but her eyes remained open.
“If the Yamaku
fall…” Nishima began, her voice small, almost childlike. “If
they fall, someone must ascend the throne.” But it was not a question,
and the lady did not look to Shuyun for an answer. She stared at the flame of
the single lamp for a long time, drawing Shu-yun’s attention mere. When
Shuyun looked back at his guest, her eyes were closed. Not wishing to wake her,
but feeling it was improper to be in the same room while she slept, Shuyun
started to rise.
Nishima stirred then,
coming half awake. Reaching out, she took his hand in both of hers and settled
back, her forehead against his wrist. She slept.
I must leave, Shuyun told
himself, but even so he did not move. Nishima’s soft hand in his own held
him more strongly than any oath and he struggled with feelings he barely
recognized.
Eventually Shuyun
stretched out on his cushions, resigned to the fact that Nishima would not let
go of his hand. He lay so that they were head to head and willed himself to
sleep so that he would be rested for his duties in the morning.
A bell sounded the hour
of the owl and Shuyun heard Nishima moving. Her hand slipped from his and he
felt the air stir and the warmth of the quilt descended on him. Footsteps
crossed to the screen but there was no sound of the screen opening. A few
seconds passed and then the footsteps returned. Shuyun felt Nishima squirm in under
the cover, pressing softly up against his back. Her arm encircled him and she
searched until she found his hand, pressing it. Breath like a caress on his
neck.
Shuyun could feel Lady
Nishima struggling to control her breathing, but this passed. They lay close
like this, neither of them sleeping for some time. Nishima finally gave in to
sleep, exhausted from worry, no doubt, and Shuyun lay awake, feeling her soft
breathing, the warmth of her hand in his and something more that he could not
name.
Botanist training told
Shuyun that Lady Nishima had reached out to draw him into the Illusion and he
felt as though he did not resist as he should, felt himself stepping into a
cloud of desire and tenderness and emotion that no Botanist monk should know.
The path upon which he should walk was becoming lost in the same cloud.
* * *
Rohku Tadamori, formerly
Corporal Rohku, now Captain, looked down at the camp of the barbarian army in
the first light of day. It was at least five rih off, but from his vantage atop
a cliff he had a clear view and it chilled him to the center of his heart. He
had been sent to assess the possibility of raiding the barbarian train—a
large army on the march was an unwieldy thing and often easily harried.
Rohku handed the reins of
his horse to one of his men and bent over the cliff edge to look at the corner
they had seen from below. It was almost a chimney, stone shattered into uneven
blocks. Sixty feet below there was a ledge with a good sized bush growing on
it. From Roh-ku’s vantage it looked possible.
He turned away from the
cliff and began to strip off his armor, handing each piece to a Shonto guard.
He pulled wanner robes on then and a surcoat and then strapped his sword to his
back. When he was done, he nodded to his guards and turned back to the cliff.
Two of Seh’s best
trackers assisted him over the edge so he would not disturb the sod that clung
to the cliff top. Reminding himself of Shuyun and Lord Komawara’s feat in
Denji Gorge, he began to climb down, stilling his fear of the height.
Concentrating on each step. Above him he heard the sound of the trackers hiding
the signs of his party.
The Khan’s army
would pass directly below him here. Only a few hundred feet would separate him
from the barbarians. It would be the closest look they would have at this
force.
Though much of the rock
was loose, he reached his destination without mishap. The ledge was half
sheltered from above by overhanging rock which formed a natural cave behind the
bushes. He settled himself to wait. It would be at least two days until the
entire barbarian force would pass—and then he would be in barbarian
lands.
Daylight ceased to be a
welcome sight in the province of Seh, for it meant the Khan’s army was on
the move again, drawing closer to Rhojo-ma. Shonto’s senior staff were so
aware of this that when the conversation paused
they seemed to be
listening for the sounds of an army drawing near. The lords of Seh had made
their decisions and Shonto met with his staff to decide what would be done now.
General Hojo held the
tally scroll in his hands. “Ten thousand armed men, most on horse.
Combined with our own men we will field thirteen thousand, five hundred men in
all.”
Against one hundred thousand, was left unsaid.
Shonto nodded to Hojo to
continue.
“We do not yet know
how possible it will be to attack the barbarian train, but it seems unlikely
given the size of their force. Lord Toshaki Hirikawa and Lord Ranan have chosen
to remain in Seh, though they have commanded their sons to join the
governor’s forces. The lords who stay are determined to stay in Rhojo-ma,
hoping to slow the barbarian advance by several days. If the Khan can be
convinced that Rhojo-ma is well manned, he will be forced to waste time
preparing a siege and making rafts—an activity barbarian raiders may not
be masters of. Death in battle, Sire, it is the penance for their error.”
Shonto shook his head.
“Huh.” He tapped his thumb on his armrest. “It is unfortunate
that they put their pride before the safety of the Empire. A glorious
death—their glorious deaths—is preferred to a retreat. A rearguard
action that does nothing but provide others time to raise an army and perhaps
perform the great deeds.” Shonto banged his hand on the armrest, but his
face displayed no anger. “It cannot be helped. There is little time to
mount an assault on the enemy train before it reaches Rhojo-ma. Our own
assessment of the barbarian force?”
“Will take two more
days, Sire, if all goes as planned,” Hojo said.
Shonto turned to Kamu.
The old steward knelt as rigidly as a bronze figure, yet Shonto could detect a
tremor in the man’s frame, a sign of the effort being expended.
“Kamu-sum, are preparations for our departure complete?”
The steward bowed
stiffly. “Our first boats are on the canal now, Lord Shonto, clearing the
way. I have seen to my lord’s craft personally.”
Shonto nodded. “I
will wait until we have our own assessment of the barbarian force. General
Hojo, speak with Lord Toshaki and Lord Ranan—if they will sell their
lives, be sure they are sold dearly.”
Twenty-three
A faint rainbow appeared
above the western mountains, forming a high, pure arc across a tumultuous
sky—ragged clouds trailed dark ribbons of distant rain.
There was no sign of rain
where the newly appointed captain, Rohku, lay—concealed on a ledge high
above the broad valley. In fact the sun shone on what seemed to be a pleasant,
early spring day. Unfortunately, Rohku’s cave looked north and no sun
came to warm his hiding place. Although the rock was both hard and cold, he
would not chance movement for many hours to come. It was early morning, the
second day of his vigil.
The perimeter of the
barbarian camp lay not far to his right and stretched back up the valley in the
direction of the border. Rohku’s initial shock at the size of the
Khan’s forces had been replaced by a growing sense of despair. One hundred thousand men. Since the plague had swept
through the north, the entire population of Seh numbered barely more than that.
Once Rhojo-ma alone had contained one hundred and forty thousand people, but
now it boasted only half that number.
How can they be so many?
the guard asked himself again. It was a question without answers: the question
that had led the lords of Seh to ignore all warnings about barbarian invasions.
Rohku wasn’t sure
which was more disturbing—the barbarian army by day or by night. The
fires in the barbarian camp had been beyond counting. The fires in their camp!
How could they be so many?
Patrols had left the
encampment before dawn. Rohku had not been able to see them, but he had heard
them pass. The Khan sent out both large and small parties. Perhaps thirty men
to a small patrol and more than two hundred to a larger group. It was a
conservative strategy;
the small groups would
travel farther afield but would be able to retreat back to the larger patrols
should they encounter Seh’s warriors in any number. And Rohku found this,
too, unsettling: such a vast army willing to risk so little. It was not the
bravado he had been led to expect from barbarian warriors.
The army of the desert
had come awake like a dragon, a slow ripple passing from head to distant tail.
The head aware and moving before the extremities had even quivered. The dragon
was on the hunt, now, snaking slowly across the landscape like a great worm.
The van passed below
Rohku, riders on fine horses, well armored in the style of the Empire and
carrying swords and short lances. Rohku could see bronze helmet ornaments
flashing in the sunlight, but he could not distinguish their shapes.
Banners waved their
colors in the breeze, displaying characters and symbols that Rohku did not
recognize. Banners bearing the shapes of animals; a running horse, a winged
tiger, the blue desert hawk, a coiled viper. Prominent among them were
standards of gold silk bearing the shape of a strangely twisted dragon.
Behind these warriors
came a vast cavalry mounted on the ponies of the steppe though among these men
rode captains or chieftains on horses.
This sight forced Rohku
to control his anger: where did the barbarians find horses except among the men
of Seh and he knew that the raids could hardly have brought the tribes so many
fine animals.
The cavalry were not
outfitted with the consistency of the vanguard. They had not the well matched
armor and elaborate helmets, but that hardly mattered. Their arms were more
than adequate and appeared to have seen use. By the time the Khan’s
cavalry had passed, the sun was at its zenith.
The faces of the
tribesmen were far enough off that they were hard to distinguish, but Rohku
could see that this army was made up of men of all ages—from boy-men to
seasoned fighters of the age of Lord Shonto and older. None looked frail; life
in the wastes saw to that. It was a hard testing ground, and the tribes had
their own rites of passage. The weak, no matter what age, found no place at the
fireside.
After the passing of the
cavalry came bowmen and foot-soldiers, marching so close they ceased to appear
human, as though a nest of ants had spewed its contents onto the valley floor.
A great moving mass bristling with pikes and spears—and even these men
were armored and wore helmets.
A sea of banners followed
the foot soldiers and behind these rode turbaned men dressed in gray. There
were rumors of these men in gray—it was said Lord Komawara and Brother
Shuyun had seen them on their journey to the desert and that they guarded the
skeleton of an ancient dragon. The Shonto guard caught himself straining
forward for a better view and pulled back. The gray men were few in number and
passed quickly, followed by what looked like an honor guard wearing armor laced
in black with crimson and gold. Rohku could see the backs of these riders now.
Imperial Crimson, he realized suddenly— they wore the colors of the Emperor of Wa.
A chieftain rode among
them, a man upon a great bay horse—a horse that would have been the envy
of a lord of Seh. His armor was crafted in the style of the Empire but worn
with the high boots favored among the tribes. Even from a distance,
Rohku’s practiced eye told him that an artist of the armorer’s art
had created this suit—armor worthy of an Emperor. Rohku shook his head as
he watched the man pass, armor laced in Imperial Crimson with trim and sash of
gold. This barbarian chieftain wore a helmet crested with high plumes of deep
red which bobbed and swayed as he rode. Rohku leaned forward again, a sudden
realization shaking him: the Golden Khan rode before him dressed as an Emperor
of Wa. Rohku pressed his eyes closed for a second. The men of Seh believe they
are about to fight for control of their province, yet Seh is the smallest of
this barbarian’s concerns, he thought.
Inside the circle of the
Khan’s guard, Rohku saw other chieftains riding and though none wore the
Crimson, they were finely outfitted in laced and lacquered armor with surcoats
of wolf and tiger skins. These men talked among themselves and laughed
as’though they were on a hunt or riding for pleasure. Down the length of
the great column riders passed and reported occasionally to a chieftain near
the Khan.
A pebble bounced on the
ledge before the Shonto
guard, and he pulled back
against the cold stone. He stopped breathing. A trickle of dirt scattered
across the moss. Something or someone, was on the cliff above. Had he just been muttering to himself?
Voices came down to Rohku
now. Despite being raised in the south it was a tongue the guard
recognized—he had heard Shuyun speak it to his barbarian servant several
times. Horses now and more men. May Botahara protect me. Rohku tried to push
himself into the rock, hoping no part of him could be seen. With great care but
little expertise the captain had studied his ledge—hiding a footprint in
the moss, being sure he snapped none of the bush’s branches. He hoped
that a barbarian tracker would not be able to see signs of his passing from so
high above, but he was not convinced this would be the case.
The reputation of the
barbarian trackers was legend among the men Rohku had met in Seh, and this made
the young captain slowly unsheathe his dagger. The ledge would be too small for
a sword. The Shonto guard’s left leg was asleep and he knew that it would
not respond if needed quickly. He offered a prayer to Botahara.
Another pebble bounced on
the ledge and more talk drifted down to him. If only he had taken the time to
learn some of this language from Kalam!
The sound of hoofs seemed
to echo through the stone and then grew fainter. There were no more voices.
Rohku lay without daring to move for some time, realizing that he would do
exactly this if he wanted to take a man hidden on a ledge: ride away and let
the man believe he was safe, taking him when he was unprepared.
Something in the long
line of barbarians drew the guard’s attention. Within another circle of
the Khan’s guard Rohku was amazed to see women. They rode like the men of
the desert, though Rohku could see hints of fine silk being worn under robes of
rougher material. There were perhaps a hundred women, their heads wrapped in
bright scarves that covered all but their eyes and foreheads.
And thus they go to war,
Rohku thought, how amazing.
Late afternoon came, the
clouds scattered across the sky grouped for an assault on the expanse of blue
and the
day turned gray. Rohku
began to shiver. He ate some food and drank water from his skin, but not having
room to move was making him very cold. It would be at least another day before
he could leave his ledge and he began to wonder if he would be able to manage
the climb up.
Following another group
of armed riders came the supply train. The barbarians did not seem to have
carts or wagons, so everything came on the backs of ponies and mules. Darkness
came before the train had passed and the man of Wa spent the first part of the
night listening to the sound of the barbarian flutes wafting up from
innumerable campfires.
A soft rain fell, but
Rohku’s prayers for a downpour were not answered.
Shonto sat on the railing
of the balcony outside the governor’s personal apartments. The day was
fine, hinting at warmth to come. Billowing white clouds scattered themselves
against the great expanse of spring blue sky. It would be a day to lift the
heart—if the heart were not burdened with other matters.
Shonto could see the long
line of people being forced to leave the city, so many of them only newly
arrived. There were no boats to carry the population of Rhojo-ma and animals of
burden were being taken for the war, so the refuges were forced to flee on
foot. They crossed the long bridge to the shore and then made their way up a
low hill to the crest where the road divided. About half the people chose to go
south toward the inner provinces while the rest turned east toward the sea. One
could almost see them“ hesitating at the top—suddenly unsure of
their decision.
It is a gamble either
way, Shonto thought. His own course was already set—to leave as
he’d come, along the Grand Canal. And that was a gamble, too.
Shonto read Lord
Toshaki’s letter for the second time.
Lord Shonto,
Imperial Governor of the Province of Seh:
It was your own ancestor who said;
“The way a man dies is as important as the way he lives. ” I honor
his memory.
Having realized how poorly I have lived,
I will take more care with my death. When this is delivered to you I will have
returned to the wheel. I have chosen this course to erase my shame and because
I am not worthy enough to die beside my comrades fighting the barbarians.
You see, Lord Governor, I have conspired
with my Emperor to end the life of one Shonto Motoru. No doubt the design is
known to you, though perhaps my part is not clear. Send Lord Shonto north with
express instructions to end the barbarian raids—an
impossibility of course— especially
when the barbarians are being paid to raid across the border by the Emperor.
You would have failed, Sire, it was inevitable. I would even surmise that the
situation could have become worse.
You would be removed from your
appointment and ordered back to the Capital—or
so it would be said. In truth I was to remove you from your position by force.
The Emperor would claim that you had refused to return to the Capital to face
the consequences of your failure. In your desperation you tried to establish
yourself in Seh. The Emperor’s loyal subject, Lord Toshaki, however,
would not allow this—saving the
Empire from civil war. Among other rewards I would become the Governor of Seh,
as would my son after me.
I have betrayed Seh, the people of Wa,
and neither of these I intended. I admit to my part in the plot against the
Shonto House: I did not intend to assist the barbarians in their invasion. Like
the rest of the lords of Seh I did not imagine the barbarians could mount such
a force—can still hardly believe it. Even as you struggled to
save my province, I worked against you.
I give my oath that my son, Yoshihira,
knew nothing of this, and so I have commanded him south with your army so that
our House might continue or that he might find an honorable end. It is my hope
that you will allow this. My countrymen will believe that I have chosen this
course to pay for my errors: I would not
allow an army to be raised in Seh nor would I listen to reason. It is my hope
that you will let them continue to believe this. In return I will give you
information. The man who devised and guided this plot against you is in your
midst: Jaku Katta planned every detail of your fall, Lord Shonto. Why he is
here now I am not sure—you have heard the same rumors as I.
At the gü board
It is not possible to sacrifice
Honor for position.
I take my place on the battlements.
The plunge as cold as steel
As soft as ashes.
Lord Toshaki Hirikawa
Shonto looked off at the
long straggling line of humanity that wandered up the side of the hill. So sad.
Was it true that
Toshaki’s fool of a son was innocent? Perhaps. Certainly Toshaki Shinga
was party to this plot—there could be little doubt of that. But Toshaki
Shinga had chosen to stay in Rhojo-ma—where he commanded the garrison.
That was a life put to better use than his lord’s! The fool should have
stayed alive long enough to die slowing the barbarians’ advance.
Shonto rose from his
position and returned inside. He had shed the official robes of the Governor of
Seh that morning and was dressed more comfortably now—ready to travel.
Prodding the coals of a charcoal burner to life, the lord went to toss
Toshaki’s letter in but stopped himself. No, he would save this—it
might be of interest one day—historically at least.
The last inhabitants of
Rhojo-ma trickled out of the gate and set out across the bridge. Bells rang
from many towers throughout the empty city—the gates were about to be
shut for the last time. Shonto stood on a quay that would soon be on the lake
bottom—such was it designed. Far off he could see men beginning to work
on the single
bridge that spanned the
distance to shore. It, too, would be under water within the hour.
Toward the north end of
the quay, Shonto could see Lord Toshaki’s son surrounded by his
retainers. Word had spread about the old Toshaki’s suicide—a plunge
off the battlement into the depths of the lake. The lord had worn full armor.
It was an odd suicide—one that indicated great shame. Nonetheless, Lord
Toshaki had been a man respected in Seh and there was obvious concern for his
son among those present, though, as northerners, they were equally concerned
with his pride. All expressions of concern were therefore kept within bounds
strictly defined by an unwritten code which said: young Toshaki is a warrior and lord of Seh, therefore
he is strong. All expressions of regret will be offered formally—the Toshaki do not require comfort. This is a matter
of respect only.
Shonto’s senior
staff continued to work nearby, attending to the thousand details that would
allow an army of thirteen thousand, plus a few thousand others, to move south
at speed. The barbarian army could travel five rih in a day, but the canal
would carry Shonto much faster than that.
Men cut away the branches
of an ancient lintel vine that clung to the stone around the city’s gate.
This seemed like a sign of things to come to Shonto, and he looked away.
A delegation appeared at
the gate. Guards pushed through, heavily armed and bearing banners. The lords
of Seh had arrived—the lords who would remain behind. Most of the older
generation had chosen to pay their penance by defending Rhojo-ma—an
endeavor whose outcome was as certain as the night following day. Five thousand
warriors stayed with these men, chosen for this great honor: to die with their
lords in a battle that could not be won.
A crier preceded the
fated warriors.
“Make way! Make
way! Make way for the lords of Seh. Make way!”
The fools of Seh, Shonto
thought, brave fools.
As the senior member of
the most important House, Lord Ranan led the delegation. He bowed as he
approached Lord Shonto and the lord returned this with a
deep bow of respect rather
than the nod his position allowed.
“Our preparations
go as planned, Lord Shonto,” Ranan said with an air of importance.
“We will be ready before the Khan’s outriders appear.”
Fool, Shonto thought, arrogant fooll
“You are to be
honored, Lord Ranan, as are all who prepare for Rhojo-ma’s…
defense.‘’
Ranan bowed again.
“It is our intention to slow the barbarian force by as many days as our
strength will allow. May those days be well used, Sire.”
Everyone on the quay
bowed to those who would remain.
Shonto was about to step
back toward his boat when a tunnel opened up in the crowd and the young lord of
the Toshaki stepped forward. Bowing quickly to Shonto and Lord Ranan, the young
lord turned to Komawara whom Shonto had not seen arrive. Members of Komawara’s
guard stepped closer to their lord—the Hajiwara men, Shonto realized.
Though they wore the Komawara colors, deep blue and black trimmed in gold, the
former residents of Itsa retained a length of shoulder trim in Hajiwara green.
“Lord Komawara,” Toshaki began with great formality, as though he
repeated a speech carefully rehearsed, “I once suggested that you would
need a proper weapon to fight barbarian hordes.” He reached his hand back
to a retainer who laid a sword in a scabbard across the lord’s palm.
Bringing this around, he held it in both hands as though it were a treasure.
“This blade belonged to my father, Toshaki Hirikawa. It was made by
Toyotomi the Younger and gained great renown in the Ona War. This blade has
been in the Toshaki family for seven generations and has proven its worth in
many battles against the barbarians. It is my hope that you will accept this as
a mark of my respect. Among the lords of Seh you were the first to realize our
position though so many of us argued against you.” He offered the sword
now with a slight bow.
Komawara seemed frozen in
place and for a second
Shonto thought he would
refuse it. But then Komawara
bowed and reached out,
taking the blade from Toshaki in
a gesture almost equally
reverent.
When he spoke, Lord
Komawara’s voice was tight as
though he choked back
emotion with difficulty. “This is a great honor, Lord Toshaki. I hope
that the hands of the Komawara will wield this with even half the skill of your
ancestors. If so, it shall be a blade of great fame indeed.”
Toshaki bowed again, and
at a gesture from Shonto his senior staff began retreating to their appointed
boats. We are at war, Shonto thought, there is no time to sit and drink wine
and fabricate lies about the great esteem our ancestors felt for each other.
As the boats pushed away,
Shonto walked back to the quarterdeck. Sails were raised, luffing and snapping,
until the helmsmen fell off the wind and the sails were sheeted home. Shonto
saw Nishima wave from a nearby boat as did Lady Okara and Lady Kitsura. A
sailor pointed, and Shonto looked up in time to see the Shinta Blossom at
Rhojo-ma’s high tower quiver and then come down. Seconds later it was
replaced by the Flying Horse of Seh.
A line of boats tacked
into the breeze, heading toward the mouth of the Grand Canal and the first set
of locks. Shonto’s boat found a place near the end of this line, for in
the campaign to come the command would need to be in close contact with the
retreating rear. A strange thought.
Lady Nishima leaned
against the rail, glad of its support, for she felt a weakness in her will that
was disturbing. Despite all of her prayers, war had come. As they cleared the
end of the city, she looked off toward the north. Barbarian armies would appear
there in only a few days. All of her other concerns seemed petty and trivial
now. People would die—and not just from battle.
She thought about the
people of Seh setting out south and toward the sea. Not all of them would
escape, nor would they understand their danger. They would try to hide themselves,
hoping the storm would pass by without harming them. Her father had left a
small force behind, hidden somewhere in Seh’s hills for this very reason.
Its only purpose was to be sure nothing would be grown where the barbarians
could find it. They would raid upon and quite possibly be forced to kill their
own people.
Leave nothing for the enemy, her father had ordered. Which
meant nothing for the peasants.
A report like strange
thunder echoed across the lake and Nishima turned in time to see the first span
of the bridge collapse into a cascade of white. For the briefest instant a
rainbow appeared in the spray, but then the waters rushed back together like a
healing wound. Rhojo-ma’s tie to the land was gone.
Around the south end of
the city a funeral barge appeared, covered in the white flower of the snow
lily. The light breeze picked up the petals, strewing them like a wake on the
calm water. Lord Toshaki, Nishima realized. The barge set off with purpose
toward the lake’s southwestern end as though its destination had never
been in doubt. Nishima raised her hands to cover her face but realized what she
did and stopped herself. Instead she made a sign to Botahara and offered a
silent prayer.
The boat suddenly began
pitching in the waves created by the falling bridge. Nishima clutched the rail
until the water was calm again and then made her way quickly below. In the
privacy of her small cabin Nishima took out her writing implements and prepared
ink in what was almost a ritual.
Our boat of gumwood and dark locust
Her paint scaling like serpent’s
skin
Sets forth into the throng of craft
On the Grand Canal.
Uncounted travelers,
Uncounted desires
Borne over blue water.
Only the funeral barge
Covered in white petals
Appears to know its destination.
Twenty-four
An abandoned stable,
recently refurbished for the presentation of plays, had been commandeered by
Shonto’s recruiting officers. The thatch leaked in places when rain and
the west wind joined forces and there was still an unrecognizable odor in one corner,
but otherwise it suited well.
Two officers sat behind a
large, low desk upon what had been the stage. On three sides men knelt in more
or less straight rows. In the light from hanging lamps they seemed to be of one
type, but upon closer inspection it became apparent that they were of all ages,
sizes, accents, experience, and temperament.
Despite this, they had
one thing in common. They were warriors without Houses and though some had
actually been raised to the way of the sword, many were the sons of merchants
or farmers who had broken with their families to take up this life. The men who
gathered in the hall had all passed a test of skill with both sword and bow.
Those who failed had been sent elsewhere—all men would find a place in
the war to come.
Of the hundred or so who
had passed the test of arms, most seemed to be without serious criminal
records. The senior recruiting officer, a Shonto sergeant, looked at his list
and pointed to a name which his assistant called out. A man of perhaps forty
years rose and crossed the room to kneel before him. Like most of the men in
the hall, his clothes were rough, though, unlike many, his were clean and bore
the marks of expert mending. He was a large man, well formed, his face hidden
by a dark beard. What wasn’t hidden had been darkened by time in the sun
and lined with deep creases, especially across the forehead and in the corners
of the eyes. “Shinga Kyoshi?”
The man nodded, a half
bow.
“Your weapons are
in order?” the sergeant asked.
The man nodded again.
“Complete armor and sword. I-I have no bow.” A deep voice.
The sergeant nodded.
There was a note by this man’s name—he was very good with a sword,
apparently. “Your sword,” the sergeant said holding out his hand.
The kneeling man
hesitated for a second, as though not sure of the request, but then drew his
blade and handed it to the officer, pommel first.
It was a fine weapon,
beautifully balanced and honed to a perfect edge. The sword guard was a small
work of art—a lacquered scroll of sea shells over polished bronze. The
maker’s name on the blade was Kentoka,
undoubtedly a forgery, but it was a well crafted weapon nonetheless—not
what you would expect from a wandering soldier. The sergeant fixed the man with
his gaze—a gaze that melted strong young
men. “It says here that you are from Nitashi.”
The man nodded.
“I’m from
Nitashi,” the sergeant said. “You don’t have the Nitashi way
of speaking.”
“It has been many
years, Sergeant.”
The officer continued to
stare. He would wager that if he looked in the man’s armor chest he would
find new lacing in some neutral colour.
He returned the
man’s sword. Stared for a few seconds more, then looked back to his
lists. He pushed a scroll across the table and held out a brush. “See the
quartermaster,” the sergeant said. The man signed his name, bowing low
and hurrying off.
Looking at the
man’s signature, the recruiting officer hid his reaction. That was the
third man the sergeant had seen in the last two days who he believed had served
the Hajiwara—and this one had been an officer! He shook his head. If
there were too many more, he would have to consider turning some away. There
were the Butto to consider.
“Ujima
Nyatomi!” the officer’s assistant called.
Another bearded man
hurried up and knelt before the sergeant who leaned over his reports.
“Ujima
Nyatomi?”
The soldier nodded. If
the sergeant had looked up, he
would have noticed that
this one was older than the last, and less powerfully built.
“Your weapons are
in order?”
The man nodded again.
“Your sword.”
The man placed the pommel
in the officer’s hand. The sergeant looked up from his list, eyes
widening. This was a sword indeed! It came into the hand like a dream. The
handle was covered in the skin of the giant ray, then wrapped in blue silk
cord, and the sword guard, the sergeant suddenly realized, was formed in the
shape of a shinta blossom!
The sergeant looked up at
the man kneeling before him. Before he could begin to react the man spoke.
“My armor is of similar quality, Sergeant, and I have bow, lance, and
horse as well.” He shook his head almost imperceptibly.
The sergeant returned the
man’s sword then and searched his lists. Pushing the paper and brush
across the table he said, “See the quartermaster.”
The man signed, bowed
quickly, and hurried off. Another name was called, but the sergeant did not
register it. He had just enrolled Rohku Saicha, the Captain of Shonto’s
guard, into the lists of the army of Seh. He wondered how many others had
escaped the Capital. He smiled in spite of himself.
The flotilla had entered
the Grand Canal and immediately slowed to what seemed like a walk. Kamu knew
that progress south would not compare with the speed they achieved passing
north—there were too many refugees on the canal and the number of boats
used by the retreating army was greater. Still, an army of one hundred thousand
could hardly make better than seven or eight rih a day over level ground.
It would take the
barbarians over three lunar months to reach the Imperial Capital by land. With
fair winds the river craft could often traverse the distance between Seh and
the Capital in less than thirty days—half that time if they had crew
enough to travel both day and night.
At our present speed,
Kamu reminded himself, we’ll travel twice as far in a day as do the barbarians.
Shonto’s fleet had left at least two days, probably three, before the
barbarians would reach
Rhojo-ma. It was a significant lead.
Kamu’s cabin was a
riot of paper, scrolls stacked in holders like firewood, sheets of paper and
letters in carefully laid out piles, none without a paperweight. Folders of
paper, rolls of paper, notes written on scraps, rice paper, mulberry paper.
There seemed to be no end of this valuable commodity. And every piece of paper
bore information Kamu could not lose. He found himself occasionally daydreaming
about a small thatch house beside a river in some quiet range of hills.
A knock on the door was
followed by Kamu’s assistant, Toko, entering bearing a folder that seemed
to contain more paper. In the months since the attempted assassination in
Shonto’s garden this young man had proven to be an invaluable assistant.
Oh, he had much to learn, there was no doubt of that, but he learned well and
seldom made mistakes twice.
Kamu raised one eyebrow
at his assistant in an unwitting imitation of Lord Shonto.
“Requests for
passage or to join the flotilla, Steward Kamu,” Toko said quietly. He had
not lost the ways of those who served. The boy was still almost entirely
unobtrusive—silent of movement, and quiet of voice.
Kamu nodded. He pointed
with a brush. “There will do.”
Toko placed the folder on
the appointed pile and then stood quietly. Kamu realized the young man was
waiting to be noticed, which almost made the old warrior smile.
“Toko?”
“Steward
Kamu,” the young man started, his tone revealing a lack of certainty,
“several of these requests are from members of the Botanist faith. I was
not sure if I should let them wait.”
“Huh.” Kamu
considered the column of numbers in the report he read. “How many,
precisely?”
“Two Sisters and
five Botanist monks—one claims to have been a teacher of Brother
Shuyun.”
“Ah,
yes—Soto…” Kamu trailed off.
“Brother Sotura, I
believe, Steward.”
Kamu squinted to make out
a figure. “Yes, I have met him. Give them quarters somewhere well out of
harm’s way. This is an army at war—not an Imperial Progress.”
Toko nodded. He quickly
opened another ledger, made entries, and then was gone.
Kamu shook his head. It
isn’t an Imperial Progress, the old steward thought, may Botahara protect
us.
Dusk and rain. Young
Captain Rohku was stiff with cold and lack of movement. He stopped climbing and
tried to control a persistent tremor in his left leg. If one of his men had not
thought to bring a rope, he realized, he would never have been able to climb up
on his own. Five more feet, then stop. Water ran down the corner he climbed,
making the rock as slippery as ice.
He moved again and his
feet came off their hold—he fell. For the third time the rope held him.
Flailing until he felt the rock under his feet and hands again, Rohku leaned
his cheek against the cold stone. Perhaps fifteen feet remain, he told himself.
It would be shameful if he had to be pulled up by his men. This thought gave
him some strength and propelled him upward.
There were barbarian
patrols close by, so silence met Rohku when he clambered over the cliff edge.
He sat on a stone and ate a little cold food. Something warm to drink was what
he wanted, but a fire could not be risked even if they could find enough dry wood.
Finally, nodding to one of his men, Rohku rose stiffly and went to his horse.
It took every bit of strength he could find, but he mounted without assistance.
There were men of Seh present, it was important that he keep their respect.
A long ride awaited them.
First a report to Rhojo-ma, then onto the canal. They would catch up with Lord
Shonto’s fleet within three days. Rohku had a great deal to tell. A great
deal indeed.
Tadamoto found the
Emperor walking near the Dragon Pond. A flower viewing had been arranged, for
the blossoms of late winter and early spring were pushing up toward a sun that
showed signs of warming. Although the Emperor was ostensibly in the company of
members of the court, he walked off by himself and none dared interrupt his
sullen mood.
Tadamoto looked over the
gathered courtiers and noted with some satisfaction that there were a number of
young women of great beauty who had recently come to court.
May one of them catch his
fancy, Tadamoto thought—it was almost a prayer.
But then among the pure
young faces and elaborate robes Tadamoto saw Osha. She was watching him with a
look of such sadness that he almost wept at the sight. Osha, Osha. … To Tadamoto’s eye there was a great
depth of spirit reflected in her face, while the faces of the young women
around her seemed almost like masks painted with only a single, vague
expression.
Tadamoto’s step
almost faltered. Tearing his gaze away before anyone should notice, he
continued on toward the Emperor. It was a familiar exercise now, closing off
his emotions. Tadamoto often thought of himself as some spiritual hermit who
had developed this control through meditation. He could make himself feel
nothing almost at will. When he knelt before the Emperor, he was as devoid of
feelings as a stone.
The Emperor nodded and
then beckoned to Tadamoto to rise and walk with him. The colonel hesitated,
casting a glance toward the gathered courtiers who pretended not to watch. A
lowly colonel being invited to walk with the Son of Heaven—that might raise
an eyebrow or two.
They moved slowly away
from the others, the Emperor pausing to look at a spray of snow lilies that
clung to the shade of a chaku bush. A few more days of sun and they would be
gone.
It was a warm day for the
time of year. A breeze so gentle it barely rippled the surface of the Dragon
Pond felt as sensuous and delightful as a lover’s secret touch. A sky,
bright as a ringing bell, bore a smattering of clouds like echoes and overtones
in the midst of clarity.
“You have something
to report, Colonel.” The Emperor continued to look at the snow lilies.
Let the courtiers wonder what they discussed, there would be no clue from the
Emperor.
“I do, Emperor. We
have finally managed to get officials into Ika Cho Province. Lord Shonto Shokan
has disappeared with a force of significant size, perhaps four thousand
men.”
“It is a difficult
trick to perform—to disappear with so many. We don’t know how this
was done?”
“It seems that the
Shonto son may have taken his force into High Wind Pass, Sire.”
The Emperor nodded.
“It is early in the year to attempt the pass. Is it possible that he
could win through?” The sound of women’s laughter pealed across the
water.
“It is thought
unlikely, Emperor. The snows in the mountains were substantial this
winter.” Tadamoto almost turned his gaze back to the courtiers but caught
himself. “I find it strange that he did not go north to Seh by ship.
Certainly the storms would be no greater risk than attempting the
mountains.”
The Emperor plucked a
snow lily and examined it closely. “The High Wind Pass would bring Shokan
to northern Chiba, yeh?”
Tadamoto nodded.
“Huh.” The
Emperor handed the blossom to Tadamoto. “For your honored wife from the
Emperor, Tadamoto-sum.” The Emperor gave him a distracted smile.
“Set men to watch the western end of the pass. If he were not Shonto, I
would say a prayer for his soul but…” The Emperor shrugged and
walked on, leaving Tadamoto scrambling to bow, clutching his snow lily.
The voices of several
hundred women raised in a melodic chant seemed to emanate from the floor and
the walls. The Prioress reclined in her litter, eyes closed. It was impossible
to tell if she slept or simply lay listening in a state of total concentration,
for there was only the merest movement of her breathing. Sister Sutso hesitated
to approach her.
From the nave below, the
singing soared up into the rafters where a balcony perched like a well hidden
nest. The room that opened onto the balcony was one of the Prioress’
favorite retreats and her staff preferred not to disturb her there.
Sutso decided it would be
better to wait and took a step toward the balcony. The Prioress did not move,
but her voice sounded almost inaudibly over the chanting.
“Sutso-sum?”
“Yes,
Prioress.”
The old woman did not
open her eyes or move in any way at all. “I believe our singers become
more inspired with each year,” she said in a voice that seemed dry and
withered.
The Prioress’
secretary came and knelt at the side of
the litter. “I
agree, Prioress. I feel closer to Botahara even now.”
“It is the height,
child,” the Prioress said and a beatific smile spread across her wrinkled
face. Sutso did not laugh, she dared not, even though she was quite sure the
Prioress intended humor. No, this ancient woman was as close to perfection as
anyone Sutso had ever met. In the presence of the Prioress one did not act in
any way that could be interpreted as disrespectful.
“You have something
weighing on your mind, Sutso-sum.” It was not a question.
Sutso nodded though her
superior’s eyes remained closed. “I wrote to Morima-sum, as you
instructed, but I am concerned. There has been no response.”
Still, the Prioress could lay so utterly still.
“Morima-sum will not fail us, Sutso-sum, do not concern yourself. Much
goes on in Seh. Writing a letter may not seem as important to her as it does to
us. Wait a little yet.”
Sutso nodded again. She
bowed and started to rise when the Prioress spoke again.
“You are concerned
about the coming war.”
Sutso sank back to her
knees. “Everyone is concerned, Prioress. It is not like the Interim War
where all concerned were followers of the Way. The barbarians will not treat us
with respect. Our Sisters will be in danger.”
The Prioress’ large
dark eyes sprang open and she studied her secretary for a moment. The eyes
closed again. “If the men who fought the Interim War had truly been
followers of Botahara, there would have been no war, Sutso-sum.” She fell
silent for a second. The chanting suddenly became slow and gentle. “The
Empire is vast. This war will be like others—parts of Wa will suffer
terribly while other regions will be entirely unaffected. It saddens me…
Until the Way is truly followed, there will always be wars. We have made every
preparation we can. Let wars be the concern of others. Our concern is the
Teachings of Botahara.” She smiled again.
“But think, child,
the Teacher—in our own lifetime! It is
a miracle beyond imagining. We can spare no effort, even if the Empire
collapses around us. It has been one thousand years, child—forty
generations! The Teacher… we must find the Teacher. It is the reason for
our being.”
The collective voice
began to grow, it reached up like hands in prayer. It touched Sutso with its
beauty and a tear appeared at the corner of one eye. She reached out and
touched the sleeve of the Prioress’ robe so softly it seemed she caressed
a sleeping child.
Twenty-five
Spring’s first swallows Glide down
from winter’s sky They soar across rivers, Finding joy in every turn.
Twilight lingers like a lover
Unable to leave,
Unable to say what is in the heart
From the Palace Book, Lady Nikko
The chambers of the
Empress Jenna. Jaku Tadamoto sat on the ancient bed of the Empress herself and
wondered if Osha would come—it had been so long. Perhaps she had been
unable to leave her rooms without being seen or had been intercepted by some
agents of the Emperor’s. Or, worst of all, she had been summoned by the
Son of Heaven. Because this disturbed him the most, Tadamoto’s mind
filled with images of Osha in the Emperor’s embrace.
Did she respond to his
touch? The image in his mmd showed Osha driven to heights of passion she had
never known with Tadamoto. He began to feel like a fool for
waiting. …
The lantern Tadamoto had
used to guide him sat on the floor casting a feint circle of light out into the
large room. They had spent their first night together here. It was
Tadamoto’s hope that returning to this place might allow them to
recapture things felt in the past.
Running his long fingers
across the sheet covering the bed, he had a clear recollection of touching
Osha’s breast for the first time, here, on a warm autumn night.
For some weeks now they
had been avoiding each other, but seeing Osha among the courtiers by the Dragon
Pond that afternoon had affected him in a way that he could not explain.
Suddenly he was desperate to see her— would not eat or sleep until he
spoke with her.
So he sat wondering if he
was making a fool of himself—wondering if Osha was lost in pleasure in
the Emperor’s arms even as Tadamoto sat pining for her. And yet he could
not make himself leave.
An impulse to do
something took hold of the young colonel and he went to the screens opening
onto the balcony and pulled them aside. He was not concerned with being seen
this high up in an unfrequented section of the palace, for even if someone did
notice him the reputation of the Hanama chambers being inhabited by ghosts
would be all the explanation anyone would require.
Tadamoto stood looking
out over the impossibly complex curves and planes of the palace’s roofs
lit by a waning crescent moon. It seemed so tranquil. It was difficult to
imagine that Wa was about to be shaken by war, for Tadamoto was certain that
was about to happen. A civil war with the Shonto against the Yamaku or the
barbarian war Shonto and Katta warned of: but war either way. Less than a
decade since the Yamaku ascendancy and already war seemed to be flickering to
life, like a fire that had only disappeared temporarily into the earth.
Pacing the perimeter of
the room made Tadamoto realize how little control he felt and he forced himself
to sit and be calm.
The screen leading to the
room slid aside a few inches and Tadamoto started. Osha! He could not really
see her in the dark, but he was so familiar with her size he knew this could be
no one else. She slipped in through the crack and pushed the screen closed
behind her. Leaning against the wall she stood regarding him. In the darkness
Tadamoto could not see her eyes and this unsettled him. He felt he needed to
look into her eyes to know what whispered in her heart.
Osha favored him with a
nod and then crossed to the open screens, her movements slow and deliberate as
though her life force had been reduced to a flicker.
She does not glide,
Tadamoto found himself thinking.
Silhouetted against the
night Osha seemed very beau-
tiful to
him—perfect, in fact. Small and extraordinarily delicate. He could almost
feel the warmth and softness of her skin. Beyond Osha the sky was not black but
the deepest possible blue. Banners of cloud so distant they seemed to be in the
heavens reflected a hint of moonlight. And the stars lacked definition, as
though seen as reflections in dark water.
Osha turned and leaned
her back against the frame of theopening.herhandsclaspedbehindher.
“Thisroom…” she began, her voice flat, “it brings me
deep sadness to come here.”
Tadamoto sat, suddenly
awkward, his hands on his thighs. “Yes,” he said, “I thought
it would be different.”
Osha took a deep breath
as if she would speak but dien let it out slowly. She turned and looked out at
the night, not seeming to care that the air was cool. “My
heart…” she began, “my heart is in ruins, Tado-sum, and I do
not know if anything can survive the wreckage.” She almost seemed to fall
back into her former position.
There was a long silence
and then Tadamoto braved the question that tormented him. “Do you love
the Emperor, then?”
Osha looked down at her
feet, shaking her head slowly. When she raised her face Tadamoto could see her
cheeks shining with tears in the starlight. “I do not love him.”
Tadamoto nodded; it was a
gentle motion, heavy with resignation. He seemed so weighed down with sadness
that it stopped him from moving—and so he sat on the bed, slumped as
though something inside him had collapsed. The sound of Osha crying pained him
even more, but he could not rise to go to her. Even when she sank to her knees
and buried her face in her hands, he did not move.
Twenty-six
The canal runs thick with rumor
Overflowing its banks Spreading to the four directions. Intrigues and betrayals
Flood into the countryside Banishing truth to the rooftops
Lady Okara Haroshu
A young officer gave the
orders which were carried out by stone-faced soldiers and dismayed peasants.
Everything that had been planted in the early spring was destroyed.
Winter’s remaining hay was piled in the yard and set to the torch, going
up in a blast of heat. The blaze was fed stores of seed and grains and the farmers’
carefully nurtured seedlings. The soldiers were determined to leave nothing for
the barbarians. And nothing for the villagers and peasants either.
Shimeko could see it
written in each peasant’s face: but we will starve. Is it better to be murdered by your own people? The sight of this had been more
than she could bear, so she had set off, avoiding the road used by the fleeing
peasants. I am a servant of the family that turns them from their homes, she
had said to herself, and it was not a thought that brought her comfort.
Shimeko had been forced
to walk some distance up the canal to find a place where she could be alone and
not be an unwilling witness to the destruction. Part of the fleet had stopped
in this valley to “create the desert” as she had heard one soldier
say, and Lady Nishima’s boat had been unable to pass.
Under the branches of a
willow that hung over the canal, Shimeko set out a grass mat and made herself
com-
fortable. The fine
curtain of willow branches was covered with delicate green buds and would be in
leaf in mere days. Boats from the flotilla had been moored against the opposite
shore, and she could see them busily taking aboard cargo from the surrounding
farms. Leave nothing for the
barbarians.
A family sailed past in a small river boat, the sail
filled by a soft breeze from the east—the Plum Blossom Wind it was
called, and it was eagerly awaited by the people of Wa. And though it
invariably meant warmer days and planting and the blossoming of cherry and plum
and apple, this year it was not being celebrated. At least not in the wake of
Shonto’s army.
Shimeko could see the
looks of anxiety on the faces of the man and woman in the river boat. He looked
up at the sail and then off to the east. Her years in the monastery told her
that he was praying for the wind to hold. All boats had been ordered to pass
ahead of the flotilla or be destroyed.
A kingfisher dived into
the boat’s wake and came out of the water in a flash of iridescent green.
It darted off with its prize, disappearing into the branches of a willow.
In the privacy of the
bower she tried to meditate, but after several minutes she gave this up. It
seemed even that comfort was lost to her. Taking a comb from her sleeve, she
ran it through her still very short hair. Lady Nishima had told her that in
little more than a year she would be able to put her hair up in such a manner
that it would be impossible to tell how long it was. This is foolish vanity,
she told herself, but continued to comb as though the action would hurry the
course of nature.
Shimeko found herself
wondering again about Lady Nishima. It was difficult to dislike her, Shimeko
found, though she had been prepared to. And certainly the rest of Lady
Nishima’s staff adored her. Even so, it seemed odd to Shimeko. Lady Nishima
was so young and had not spent the years of discipline and denial senior
Sisters had—and yet she was renowned throughout the Empire for her
accomplishments.
Shimeko shook her head.
Certainly Lady Nishima was a harp player of great skill and her hand was one of
the finest she had ever seen. No doubt her social discourse was charming and
witty, but they were only social con-
versations. Shimeko
tossed a pebble out into the water. In her former world, Lady Nishima would
have been a senior Acolyte, no matter what her accomplishments, and many years
away from becoming a senior sister. Yet in the world of Wa, Nishima was
something of a sensation though barely more than a girl.
Shimeko tossed a second
pebble after the first, gaining the brief interest of a kingfisher that hovered
over the rings where the pebble had disappeared.
This interest that the
Lady Nishima showed in Brother Shuyun… Shimeko was beginning to wonder if
it was entirely proper. The former nun was aware that she had little experience
of the world, but even so—the way Lady Nishima brightened when Brother
Shuyun appeared, it was difficult to mistake. If Brother Shuyun is the Teacher
who was foretold, then this situation with the Shonto daughter was most
unseemly.
Shimeko remembered
searching the archives for Lady Nishima and this brought to mind the sculpture
of the Two Lovers—an image she found most disturbing. Though, if truth
were told, it was an image she had had difficulty taking her eyes from when
they had waited in Denji Gorge. She had found herself drawn to it more than she
would ever admit.
Is Brother Shuyun the
Teacher who was spoken of? she asked herself again. If there was only some test
she could perform… but she knew of no such thing.
The day wore on until she
felt it must be time to return. She had been given leave only to stretch her
legs, not to disappear for an extended period.
Rising, she rolled the
mat and found her way through the curtain of willow wands. A few steps brought
her back to the path which ran along the top of the raised bank. Plum trees
were planted here and she could see that only a few days would bring them into
bloom—an event awaited with great anticipation by everyone in Wa. An
image of lines of refuges passing through the plum tree orchards came like a
sharp pain.
Some distance off, coming
toward her, Shimeko could see a large peasant woman wrapped in cotton robes and
shawls. And she had so hoped to avoid the refugees who had been turned from
their homes. But then her head
snapped up again. It
could not be! That walk, Shimeko was sure she could not mistake it.
The woman came closer and
raised her covered head. “Sister Morima?” Shimeko said.
The senior nun nodded,
her face contorting in a brief, forced smile. Before she realized what she did
Shimeko bowed as Acolyte to senior Sister. But then she rose slowly and forced
herself to look the older woman in the eye.
“This is a pleasant
surprise, Sister,” Shimeko said.
Morima nodded again. She
waved her hand to the side of the track and they turned and took a few steps
among the plum trees. “Do not be surprised, Tesseko-sum, the Sisterhood
releases few entirely.‘’
Realizing that Morima
labored as though from great exercise, Shimeko laid her mat on the grass and
helped the nun sit. She knelt on the mat facing her, fighting an impulse to
take on the posture of humility.
“Thank you,”
Morima wheezed. “A moment.” She sat regaining her breath and then
she tried another smile-marginally more successful.
“The Sisters will
not release even me, and I have lost the Way almost entirely.” She stared
at Shimeko who finally had to look away.
“Is the path you
follow easier, child?” she said in a voice full of concern.
Shimeko shrugged.
“I do not yet know, Sister.”
Morima nodded as though
she understood. “You appear well enough.” A genuine smile this
time. “And you will have a proper head of hair very soon.”
Shimeko colored at the
mention of this. “I must be getting back, Sister Morima, I have
duties.”
“Do you,
indeed?” Morima said. “May I speak briefly, Tesseko-sum?”
The younger woman nodded.
“I am Shimeko now, Sister—Shimeko.‘’
Morima tried to smile
again but failed. “The Sisterhood has sent me to speak with you. They
advised me to come dressed as a peasant and to claim that I had left the Order
also. They want information about Lord Shon-to’s Spiritual Advisor and
anything they can learn about the barbarian war and the intrigues within the
Empire.‘’
The senior Sister looked
up at her former charge and
shrugged, apparently
embarrassed. “It is the worst foolishness. You might think they would become
tired of lies and intrigues, but that does not seem to be so.”
She reached down and tightened her sandals. “I must be getting
back myself, now that I have fulfilled my duty.” She rose with
some effort and stood looking down at Shimeko.
Shimeko could not hide
her look of confusion. “That is all you have to say, Sister?”
“Yes,
child.” The older woman wiped her forehead with the tail of her shawl.
Shimeko nodded though
she was not sure why. They remained as they were for a moment—an echo of their former lives: the
younger woman kneeling, the elder standing.
“Morima-sum?”
Shimeko said suddenly. “You have met Brother Shuyun. Do you think it is
possible that he is the leacher?”
Morima thought for a
moment. “I cannot say, child.”
Shimeko pulled up a
blade of new grass and twirled it slowly. “Brother Shuyun claims he is
not. Is it possible he could be the Teacher and not be aware of it?”
Morima shook her head.
“I don’t know, Shimeko-sum. When did Lord Botahara know
that he would become the Perfect Master? It seems possible that Brother Shuyun
may not know.”
Shimeko nodded.
“I am concerned…”
Morima cut her off
with a gesture. “Take care in what you say, Shimeko-sum, I do not know
what I may yet repeat to my Sisters.”
The young woman nodded
slowly. She rolled the mat with exaggerated care.
“Go,”
Morima said, “I will wait a while.” She met the former
Acolyte’s gaze. “And may Botahara walk beside you.”
On impulse Shimeko
reached out and the two women squeezed hands. Shimeko turned and hurried back
to the path.
The river craft that
Shimeko traveled on with the ladies from the Capital lay where it had been
despite her worst fear that it had gone off without her. She nodded to the
guards as she came aboard. A maid passed her as she scrambled down the steps to
the cabin.
“Lady Nishima has
gone ashore, walking with the other ladies, Shimeko-sum.”
The young woman sat down
on the bottom step, deep in thought. She felt vaguely uncomfortable for having
talked to Sister Morima. I should not have done this, she said to herself, I
cannot serve two masters nor do I wish to. She thought a while longer, then
rose and retraced her steps.
She had noticed
Shuyun’s barbarian servant on the boat moored just down the bank, a place
he would not have been without his master. Approaching the guards of this
craft, she gave a password and the appropriate hand signal.
“Is Brother Shuyun
aboard?” she asked. The guard nodded.
“Will you ask if I
may speak with him? I am Shimeko, Lady Nishima’s secretary.”
The more senior guard
nodded and his companion hurried off. Shimeko nodded to the tribesman who
served Brother Shuyun. He paced the deck, looking off toward the destruction
taking place in the fields, then down at his feet as he resumed pacing.
The guard returned in
moments. “Shimeko-sum, please,” he gestured toward the boat ramp.
“Brother Shuyun will be only seconds.”
Shimeko went aboard and
saw the barbarian crossing toward her. They had met once or twice in the palace
in Seh and she had been struck by his devotion to Brother Shuyun. The sight of
him dressed in Shonto livery she found quite incongruous.
The Kalam waved at the
fields as he approached her. “Bad, yeh? A bad thing.” He shook his
head vigorously in case she did not understand his use of the language. Shimeko
nodded. “It is a very bad thing. Very sad.” The tribesman nodded
agreement, obviously happy that he had been understood.
Shuyun appeared from a
hatch behind the barbarian and the Kalam bowed low. Shuyun gave the Botahist
bow in return, to both the Kalam and Shimeko.
“We speak,”
the Kalam said with some pride, nodding toward Shimeko.
Shuyun smiled and said
something in another tongue.
The Kalam bowed to both
Shuyun and Shimeko and returned to his pacing.
“Shimeko-sum, it is
a pleasure to see you. How do you fare in your new position?” They walked
across the deck and stood by the rail where their voices would not carry to
others on deck or on the bank.
“Well, Brother. I
thank you again for your efforts on my behalf.”
“Lady Nishima has
said that you are becoming an invaluable member of her staff. Consider this as
a compliment of high order.”
Shimeko gave a half bow.
Polite conversation
continued for some minutes. Cha was offered and refused. The weather was
commented on. The nearness of the plum blossom season was noted and the
lengthening of the day came under some scrutiny. Finally it was appropriate to
go on to other matters.
“Is there some way
that I may serve you, Shimeko-sum?”
Shimeko shook her head
slowly and Shuyun nodded, waiting for her to speak.
“Brother
Shuyun…” she began. “Brother, I was approached today by
Sister Morima, the nun I served on my journey to Seh. She came dressed not as a
Sister but in lay clothing. Sister Morima freely admitted that she had been
sent by the Sisterhood.” Shimeko paused, overcome by a sudden need to
swallow. “She had been sent to ask me for information or to persuade me
to become an informant—it was not clear which. All of this she admitted.
Her Order wanted to know anything I could tell about the barbarian invasion,
the intrigues of the Empire, and you, Brother.” She hesitated. “I
thought you should be told of this.”
Shuyun nodded. If he
found this news disturbing in any way, he did not show it. “Do you know
what specific information she was looking for, Shimeko-sum?”
The woman gestured with
opened hands. “I did not inquire further, Brother, nor did Morima-sum
pursue the matter. It almost seemed that she was performing a duty so that it
could be reported done. I do not think it was a true attempt to enlist my
assistance.”
“Huh. This interest
in me I find most strange, and the
interest in the Shonto
House… What did you say to
her?“
“She did not try to
impose on me, Brother, so I did not need to argue or even refuse. We spoke
briefly. When Morima-sum thought, erroneously, that I was about to speak of the
matters she mentioned, she cautioned me that my words might be repeated to her
Sisters.”
“Might be
repeated?”
“That is what she
said, Brother.”
“Most
strange.” He gazed down into the waters of the canal. “Is there
more I should hear?”
She shook her head.
“I thank you for
speaking of this, Shimeko-sum. I am not sure what I shall do, but it is
possible Steward Kamu may wish to speak with you also.”
She gave a tight nod.
“Most
strange.” Shuyun said again.
Twenty-seven
The Plum Blossom Winds
Spread leaves and flowers among the hills
Laughter and song echo from
The Hill of the North Wind,
Harp and flute from
West Wind Hill.
The valley between the
Hills of the North and West Winds became the center of focus for a disturbing
meditation by the men of Seh. Barbarian patrols had appeared there the evening
before and again that morning. Now everyone watched, waiting without talk for
the barbarian army to show itself.
General Toshaki Shinga
stood at a narrow opening in the north tower and looked toward the point in the
landscape that had become the morbid fascination of everyone in the city. The
rhythmic sounds of sword polishers working drifted up to him.
It is too fine a day, the
general thought. He leaned out and looked down the wall to the water lapping at
its base. It is a strong city, Toshaki told himself, but it was not built to be
defended by so few.
Silence had invaded the
city more completely than any army could. Toshaki could almost feel men
waiting. The gap between the hills drew his attention again.
A small barbarian patrol
could be seen among the budding trees at the base of the Hill of the North
Wind. They had not moved from that place since first light.
Two boats swung to
anchors off the lake’s northern shore, waiting for the last scouts
returning to Rhojo-ma. Toshaki wondered what choice he would make if he were
out on patrol. Would he return to the doomed city or would he strike out,
hoping to catch Lord Shonto’s fleet?
He pushed on the edges of
the opening, rocking back and forth on his heels. It was the waiting that was
the worst.
The men remaining in
Rhojo-ma had received a detailed description of the barbarian army from a
Shonto captain. Toshaki shook his head. That had been the strangest
intelligence he had ever received for, rather than assist them with their
strategy, the report had destroyed all hope. The sheer numbers in the barbarian
army reduced their defense of Rhojo-ma to absurdity. The sole purpose of the
men in Seh’s capital now was to convince the Khan that the army remaining
in Rhojo-ma was too large to leave at his back. If the barbarians spent several
days mounting an attack across water, Shonto would have a few more days to
raise his army. A few days, Toshaki thought, we sell our
lives for so little! At least it would be an honorable death.
Watches were changed on
the city’s walls as the men of Seh began to create the appearance of a
large force. The Scarecrow
Army, someone
had named it, winning a forced laugh.
Toshaki was making an
inspection of defenses when the vanguard of the barbarian army appeared between
the hills. Banners as numerous as the blades of grass came down the valley,
fluttering in the spring breeze. Slowly but inexorably the riders spread across
the plain north of the lake. Only when they had established a perimeter of two
rih did the leading edge of the army stop but, behind this, the barbarians
continued to spill out onto the plain. Tents began to appear almost immediately
and horses were staked out to graze. There was little to indicate that this
army feared attack. With the colored banners waving and the tents beginning to
appear, the scene almost looked festive.
Barbarians on foot and on
horseback came out to the edge of their camp and stood staring at Rhojo-ma,
then they would return to their camp to be replaced by others who would then be
replaced by others again.
When the sun set, the
barbarian army was still arriving. Just as the dusk descended, the first tree
was felled and dragged to the shore of the lake.
Twenty-eight
The dinner conversation
had faltered badly and each attempt to fan it back to life had ended in silence
and embarrassed smiles. The news that the Golden Khan’s army was poised
to strike Rhojo-ma destroyed everyone’s tranquillity and purpose.
Attempting to collect
their wandering thoughts in music, Ladies Nishima and Kitsura played the harp
and flute for Lady Okara. Though famed for her gracious manners, Lady Okara
found it difficult to concentrate on the music of her young companions and it
showed in her face. In truth, the players kept losing their focus, resulting in
a less than inspired performance. Lady’Nishima, especially, seemed to be
elsewhere.
A clatter from the deck
of the river barge was enough to destroy their focus altogether and the music
lost its rhythm and failed. A dull thudding of footsteps passed over their
cabin and then back again. Traveling in the dark often led to emergency
maneuvers and even these did not always prevent groundings.
“It is nothing,
I’m sure,” Lady Okara said, and gave them an encouraging smile.
Neither Nishima nor
Kitsura showed any indication of continuing and, after a moment’s
hesitation, set their instruments aside with apologies.
“Even though we
have known what was occurring for many months, I still find it difficult to
believe that war has begun,” Kitsura said.
“Yes,”
Nishima said quietly. “So many men in Rhojo-ma. It is a foolish waste for
the few days we will gain.” She rubbed her hand down the frame of her
harp. “I’m glad that our Lord Komawara is not among them.”
Kitsura nodded and then
she smiled. “I’ve grown quite
fond of him. It seems a
very long time since we met at the Emperor’s celebration.“
Lady Okara shifted her
pillows and reached for her wine. “He seemed so young then.” She
shook her head sadly. “It is difficult to believe this Lord Komawara is
the same young man. He has become very grim.”
The conversation faltered
again and finally Kitsura and Nishima bade their good nights and left Lady
Okara in her cabin. The barge they traveled on now was markedly different from
the one that had carried them north. This one was larger and far more
elegant—not a cargo-carrier with a few cabins aft but a boat designed for
passengers from Wa’s wealthier class.
At the door to
Nishima’s cabin they hesitated to say goodnight and when neither of them
seemed ready to sleep, Kitsura was invited in. Nishima’s cabin was lit by
a single hanging lamp which cast a warm glow on the rich woods of the walls and
beams. Being in the stern the cabin had actual windows rather than ports,
though these were all shuttered but one. Spread over the straw mats were two
thick wool carpets made by the tribes. Nishima always tried to bear in mind
something the Ka-lam had said about the tribal people—they did not all support
the Khan. In her mind her rugs were made by those tribes that hid themselves
from this new chieftain.
“Oh,
Nishi-sum,” Kitsura said to an offer of wine. “I have had enough
for one evening.”
They sank onto cushions
and back into silence. The coolness of the night was just starting to find its
way into the cabin, so Nishima called a maid and asked for a charcoal burner.
Kitsura held her hands
close to the heat when it came. “It is a sign of spring, Nishi-sum. The
heat from this burner is not immediately stolen by the darkness. It may even
warm the cabin.” She flashed her incomparable smile.
Nishima nodded. Kitsura
was not one to remain sad, no matter what the circumstances, and she could
never bear to see her cousin anything but cheerful. But Nishima could not
pretend happiness; any smile she summoned would be entirely artificial. Kitsura
fell silent for a few seconds before she spoke again.
“Do you wonder what
part Jaku played in the sudden
decision to raise an
Imperial Army? He claims it was the influence of his friends at court,
but…“
Nishima opened her fan
and looked at the pattern of plum trees in blossom. “I think our test
told the truth, Kitsu-sum: he is no longer in favor at court. I do not think
Jaku would align himself so closely with my father if he were at all concerned
with the Emperor and what he might think. No, he is ever the
opportunist—when the Emperor decided to raise an army to protect himself
from any designs the Shonto might have, General Jaku stepped to the fore and
claimed credit. I do not trust him, Kitsu-sum. I do not trust him at
all.”
Kitsura shrugged.
“Still, he is a handsome man…”
“You are
impossible.” Nishima said, and though her tone was meant to be mock
dismay she did not quite carry it off. “Jaku Katta is so embroiled in plots
that it is a wonder he knows who to tell what lies to.‘’
Kitsura smiled tightly.
“We all plot, cousin. For some reason those of us from older families
think we have a right to plot, while those who have only recently risen step
beyond social conventions when they do the same.” She shrugged.
Nishima did not know what
to answer. “I made the mistake of allowing myself to be drawn by his
appearance, Kitsu-sum, but I was acting in a very foolish manner.”
Kitsura regarded her
cousin, who stared at the pattern on the charcoal burner. “You have not
developed another interest, have you, cousin?”
Nishima glanced up, then
went back to her examination of the burner. “No, of course not. I simply
feel that I was foolish in my regard for Jaku Katta.”
“Huh.”
Kitsura produced a brush and began to comb out her long hair. “We will
pass the fane of the Lovers again—in a few days if we do not pause. A
fascinating thing, don’t you think? It would be interesting to know more.
I regret that I did not look into the archives while we were in Seh.”
Nishima carefully
smoothed a crease in her robe. “Yes, it would have been intriguing,
I’m sure.”
The silence returned. The
sounds of water lapping and bubbling past the hull. A tap sounded on the door,
making them both start.
“Please, enter.”
Nishima said.
Shimeko’s face
appeared as the door opened. She bowed quickly. “Brother Shuyun calls,
Lady Nishima.”
Nishima was not quite
able to hide her pleasure at this news. “Ahh. Please, ask him to join
us.”
Kitsura nodded to her
companion and started to rise. “I must be going, cousin.”
“Kitsu-sum,
I’m sure Brother Shuyun would welcome your presence.”
As she said this, the
door swung open and Shuyun stepped past a bowing Shimeko. Kneeling, Shuyun
bowed and as he did so Nishima noticed Shimeko perform a sign to Botahara as
she pulled the door closed.
Kitsura and Nishima
nodded to the monk.
“It is kind of you
to visit, Brother. I am having difficulty convincing Kitsura-sum to
stay…”
Kitsura favored them both
with her most disarming smile. “Please, cousin, Brother Shuyun, I have
other matters calling me. I regret missing your company,” she said to
Shuyun, then nodded again. “If your duties allow you time for gü,
Brother, I would be delighted to have your company.” She nodded to
Nishima. “Cousin.” Kitsura slipped out, opening the door herself
and giving a final smile as she left.
The sounds of the river
craft’s progress seemed to fill the cabin.
“I received a
message from Lady Okara.” Shuyun said quietly. “She was concerned
that the news from Seh had afFected both you and Lady Kitsura most adversely. I
came to inquire of your well-being.”
“You are kind,
Shuyun-sum, and Lady Okara is most considerate.” She gestured to the
windows. “It is difficult to remain tranquil when war has returned to Wa.
So many men remained in Rhojo-ma. It is a tragedy, certainly. To provide us
with a handful of days…” She shook her head. “It is like the
coming of the plague. You look around you and ask ‘who will live and who
will die’? I’m certain it haunts everyone equally.” She
looked up and tried to smile. “Do not be overly concerned, Brother, the
shock of it beginning—becoming real, will soon wear off.” Shuyun
nodded. “It is a sad truth, Lady Nishima. The
shock of war wears off.
Perhaps if it did not, fewer wars would be undertaken.“
A look of pain flickered
across Nishima’s face, but she recovered her poise immediately.
“And you Shuyun-sum,
how do you fare, now that war is with us?”
Shuyun thought for a
moment. “When I traveled in the desert, the monk I met there… he
said that war brings no soul to perfection. The suffering to come—it is
difficult to imagine that it is the karma of so many to suffer this way.”
He fell silent, looking toward the stern windows.
“I am a follower of
Botahara, yet my Order has instructed me to support Lord Shonto in all of his
endeavors—for the good of the Brotherhood which preserves the teaching of
Botahara. So I go to war also.” He looked up and met Nishima’s
eyes. “It is not the place of a Spiritual Advisor to burden his charges
with his own conflicts. I apologize.” He bowed low.
Nishima reached out and
caught his sleeve as he bowed. “Shuyun-sum, please, do not apologize.
Outside of this room I must be Lady Nishima Fanisan Shonto—I have great
obligations to my uncle and our House. I confess that I find this role taxes me
to my limit at times. If I did not have some place and someone with whom I could
speak openly…” She shrugged. “Your role is as difficult,
I’m sure. It seems to be true that our lives are fraught with
contradictions and I am honored that you would speak of these to me.” She
gestured with a sweep of her sleeve. “This room feels like a haven in
which I do not have to play out my role of Lady of a great House. In truth,
Shuyun-sum, I feel less need for a Spiritual Advisor and more need for a
friend.”
She took his hand.
“What happens in this room is between us and no one else. I would not
speak of it even to my liege-lord. Be at your ease, Shuyun-sum. It is my hope
that here the Lady and the Advisor may be only Nishi-sum and Shuyun-sum.
Nothing else.” She tugged at his hand as if she would draw him closer and
he seemed to become stiff and awkward.
“It is difficult,
Lady Nishima,” he said formally, “to forget that I am a
Brother.” Nishima stared into his eyes until he looked away. “It
is not easy to forget
that I am the daughter of two great Houses. I have been trained to always be
thus.“ She bowed formally, returning to a kneeling position, her posture
relaxed but erect. The look on her face spoke of lack of involvement with the
world around her—the pose of the sophisticated aristocrat. Then she broke
into a smile.
“And you, my
friend, are always so.” She performed a perfect imitation of a Botanist
double bow and then returned to the kneeling position, hands on her thighs, her
face an impenetrable mask of serenity. She let out a long controlled breath as
though she would enter a meditative state.
So perfect was her
imitation that Shuyun was at first shocked and then he broke into a grin.
“There!”
Nishima said in triumph. She moved quickly to his side, still facing him.
“I have just seen the true Shuyun-sum.” She took his hands and his
smile was gone as quickly as it had come. “Please, do not disappear
again,” she said in a small voice.
Shuyun’s face
almost seemed to flicker like a candle, wavering between the mask of a Botahist
Brother and the expressive face of the young man that Nishima had just caught a
glimpse of.
“This discomfort
you feel in the presence of women, Shuyun-sum, it simply has to be
overcome.”
He started to protest,
but before words formed she reached out and pushed him, almost toppling him
over.
“Ann, a point of
resistance! Your teachers would be most disappointed.” She slipped into
his arms and buried her face in his neck. “This is the comfort I need.
The comfort of a friend,” she whispered. “And you, Shuyun-sum, must
learn comfort in the company of women. I will be your teacher in this.”
They stayed thus for a
moment and then Nishima spoke again. “Breathe as I do,” and they
went through a breathing exercise designed to relax the muscles.
“The night we spent
together—I could feel your resistance, as I can feel it
now.‘’ She pushed against him with her body and again there was a
second of resistance. Pulling away, she stood quickly and blew out the hanging
lamp. She took his hands then in the dark, a hint of light
coming in the stern
windows. “Promise me you will not leave?”
Shuyun hesitated and she
squeezed his hands until he nodded. She disappeared into another part of the
cabin and returned almost immediately. In the dim light she rearranged the
cushions and spread a thick quilt over them. She turned to Shuyun who sat like a
stone. “Lady Nishima, I…”
She took both his hands
again. “There is no Lady Nishima present and all Spiritual Advisors are
henceforth banned from my chambers. You, Shuyun-sum, are welcomed.”
He followed as she gently
pulled until he was in the hastily made bed. She joined him, pulling the quilt
over them both. Taking his hands between her own she said, “The object of
tonight’s lesson is to attain a state of tranquillity in the presence of
a woman.” She reached out and squeezed the muscle in his shoulder which
was a knot of tension. “You must begin by relaxation of the muscles. You
do know how to do this?”
He nodded.
“Begin,” she
instructed and felt him control his -breathing, sinking into a meditative
state. After a few moments she pushed herself into his arms again. She was
wearing only a single robe of the thinnest silk and when Nishima came close to
him she felt the tension return. “Do not let my presence destroy your
tranquillity, Shuyun-sum,” she whispered in his ear. “I intend to
let your presence enhance my tranquillity.” She took a long deep breath
and released it like a shudder. “Your arms are around me, but your hands
float in the air. You cannot possibly be relaxed like this… That is better.”
They lay close in the
dark for a long time, neither speaking nor moving. Then Shuyun felt soft lips
kiss his neck and Nishima whispered in his ear, her words as soft as a sigh.
“We come soon to
the Faceless Lovers.”
He nodded.
“Lord Botahara knew
women?”
He nodded again, more
slowly.
“And yet he
attained perfection… Meditate upon that if you will not sleep.” She
kissed his neck again, then he felt her breathe herself to sleep.
Shuyun lay awake for some
time thinking of the image carved into the wall of Denji Gorge and then he,
too, forced himself into sleep.
Later Nishima awoke,
feeling Shuyun’s warmth close to her. They were of a size in height, but
the years of training had given his muscles a tone that could not be equaled
and yet he did not have the massive physique of the kick boxers she had seen.
She turned carefully, trying not to wake him but was unsuccessful. Gently
pushing her back into his chest, she felt him stir.
“Shh, sleep,”
she whispered. She took his hand in the dark and kissed it softly. Holding it
for a moment as though making a decision, she guided his hand through her open
robe to her breast then held it there firmly. Stifling a small moan, she began
a breathing exercise. That is enough for this lesson, she thought, I will
certainly frighten him away. Thinking this she pressed his hand tighter. The
burbling of the boat passing through calm water was like the music of delight
itself, joyous, irrepressible.
When the watch changed,
Nishima awoke again, warm, languid. Shuyun’s hand still caressed her
breast and she felt her entire body flash with heat, her breathing became
urgent. She started to control this but then felt Shuyun wake in response to
her own state. His hand moved on her breast and she turned toward him,
shrugging her arm out of the sleeve of her robe.
Pushing as close to him
as was humanly possible, she began kissing his neck, then his cheeks and the
corners of his eyes. He reacted by pulling her closer, so close that she could
not move.
“Nishi-sum… I
cannot…” He started to pull away, but she would not release him.
“No, Shuyun-sum,
please… stay a while. I will feel I have acted terribly if you go. I will
never forgive myself.”
He stopped trying to pull
away and they lay rocking each other gently until both found their breath
again. Nishima made no attempt to replace her robe but lay in the circle of
Shuyun’s warmth.
He ran his fingers slowly
up her spine and she found herself focusing on this touch as if nothing else in
the world mattered. Heat seemed to radiate from his hand.
Slowly his fingers went down her back
and she willed him not to stop. Pushing his palm flat against the
base of her spine, she felt the chi flow, like a glowing warmth, like a tiny
branch of lightning.
And then the chi flowed
out from his hand and Nishima felt it touch the center of her desire. She could
not catch her breath. She smothered a moan, fighting not to let him know what
she was feeling. As though it had a will of its own, she felt her body push
closer to Shuyun’s. The lightning branched from his hand.
Burying her face in
Shuyun’s chest Nishima moaned uncontrollably. She began to convulse, his
hand almost unbearably hot on her back. Shuddering for what seemed like moments
on end Nishima finally lay, unmoving, in Shuyun’s arms.
Botahara save me, she
thought, did he feel nothing? Could I have felt the skies open while he felt
nothing?
Before the darkness
disappeared, Shuyun slipped out onto the deck, finding himself a place to sit
among the cargo. He had left Nishima sleeping, using his Botahist training to
move silently. And now the cold air and infinite night were an almost painful
contrast to the warmth of Nishima’s cabin, the warmth of her presence.
Shuyun began a silent
prayer for forgiveness but lost the thread of it almost immediately. What is to
become of me? he wondered. For what I have done I should be stripped of my sash
and pendant and turned out of my Order. He brought a lifetime of training to
bear on the chaos he felt within, but the turmoil resisted the attempt to
impose order.
Shuyun sat as though in
meditation, but in fact his mind was filled with an image of the Lovers in
Denji Gorge—features beginning to appear on the two faces. This was mixed
with a strong memory of Nishima in his arms, lost in a pleasure so overwhelming
that it was like a moment of great discovery.
Twenty-nine
In the midst of the vast
sprawl of the barbarian encampment a single plum tree had blossomed, appearing
like a lone act of defiance, a statement poetic in its purity. The cloud of
white blossoms floated just above the tents and teaming thousands as though the
land itself had unfurled its standard.
It was early morning on
the second day of the siege of Rhojo-ma, though not an arrow had been loosed
nor a sword drawn other than to test its edge. A fast boat sailed along the
lake’s northern shore out of range of barbarian bows. Toshaki Shinga
wished he were in that boat himself. He desperately wanted to look into the
faces of his enemy, see them for what they were, though he could not explain
this impulse.
The barbarian rafts lined
the shore and the men of Seh waited. The wind was not terribly strong, but it
would gather its reserves intermittently and send a great gust down the lake
and this might be what was stopping the expected attack. They wait for the Plum Blossom Winds, was the phrase Toshaki heard
again and again; it was said with a note of scorn.
The men who sailed along
the shore had reported that there were pirates in number among the barbarian
warriors. It was an indication that the barbarians were capable of better
preparation than the men of Seh had wanted to believe—the second time the
barbarians had been underestimated. Toshaki wondered about this
Khan—where did he come from and how had he gathered
so many?
A young man recently
given an officer’s rank appeared at the top of the stairs to the tower
from which Toshaki observed the plain. He bowed quickly.
“Lord Ranan reports
that the fleet is in readiness, Sire.”
Toshaki nodded. “We
must be patient. The barbarians gather their nerve slowly.” Looking back
out at the enemy’s army, Toshaki said, “The signals are
understood.”
“They are,
General.”
“Good.” He
nodded a dismissal, and the officer returned the way he had come.
Horsemen came and went
from the barbarian camp, usually in patrols of some size. No doubt they had
realized by now that the army of Seh had retreated south. And how many do they
think remain in Rhojo-ma? Toshaki asked himself. The men in the city had been
entirely true to their Scarecrow Army ruse and perhaps that explained some of
the hesitation the barbarians were showing.
A boat set out from the
shore toward the city. Toshaki had to look twice: a boat! They had found a boat
that Shonto’s men had missed. A flag of truce flew from a staff at the
bow and, as it approached, the general could see that it was manned by
experienced oarsmen. Pirates were among the barbarians, indeed. Toshaki could
see their brightly colored turbans. The enemies of Wa had formed an alliance of
the unholy—not a follower of the Perfect Master among them.
The city’s own boat
changed its course to stand within arrow’s shot of the pirate’s
craft, holding that position until they approached the walls.
Toshaki turned and yelled
for an aid. A young soldier appeared immediately at the stairhead.
“Go to the
signalmen,” the general snapped, “have them signal our patrol boat.
If this strange craft attempts to round the city, they must take it at all
costs.”
By the gods, Toshaki
thought, we can’t have them seeing everything we prepare.
But the boat made no
attempt to round Rhojo-ma, continuing toward the tower Toshaki had made his
command position. Realizing what they did, the lord made his way down the
flights of stairs to the top of the wall.
As the boat pulled
closer, Toshaki could see a single man sitting in the bow not handling an oar.
The lord squinted.
“That man in the
bow,” Toshaki said to a young bowman standing at hand, “can you see
him?”
The bowman focused for a
second. “I can, Sire.”
“Is he a
barbarian?”
The younger man shook his
head. “He is not, Sire, nor is he a pirate. He is dressed as a man of Seh
might dress.”
Toshaki took hold of the
stone wall, leaning out over the water. A gust of wind pushed the bow of the
boat off, and the steersman fought to put them back on course. Five strokes
closer, then ten. A muttering began down the wall and progressed from man to
man. Toshaki turned to his aid.
“Some say this is
Lord Kintari, General.”
Toshaki turned back to
the scene before him. By Bo-tahara, it could be. The general thought Shonto had
done away with the Kintari clan.
Lord Ranan appeared at
his elbow followed by several other senior lords. “Lord Kintari,”
Ranan said, “reincarnated as himself. May Botahara be praised.”
Even Toshaki smiled at this.
“Reincarnated as a
traitor, I think, Sire,” said another and there was a quiet nodding of
heads.
The boat came close
enough for shouted speech. The steersman turned it head to wind and the oarsmen
held that position. The man in the bow stood, and if there were any still
unsure of his identity the doubt was buried now.
“Lords of Seh, I
come with a message from the Great Khan of the tribes.” Kintari paused as
if time were needed for his words to be fully understood. His voice sounded
small against the noise of the wind and the waves lapping the stone wall.
Kintari was so close that Toshaki could see the man’s robe ripple in the
breeze, could make out a strand of hair in a streak across Kintari’s
forehead.
“He is without
sword,” Ranan said quietly and Toshaki nodded.
“Your numbers are
known to the Great Khan, my
lords. You cannot hope to
stand against the force of the tribes. What will you gain by this futile
defense? Did your Yamaku Emperor send an army to protect Seh? You give up your
lives for an Empire that will not even notice you have done so.“ He
paused again.
“The Yamaku care
only for their own ascendancy. They are not Emperors of Wa—they do not
govern, they divide the Empire against itself and rob from all. You will give
up your lives for blood-suckers?” His voice rose on the last word, and it
echoed from the buildings.
“I know you, lords
of Seh. You are brave men—all of you—but your sense of duty is
misplaced. The Khan has come to bring down the Yamaku, not to destroy Wa. The
Khan is a man of greatness, lords—greatness the like of which we have not
seen since Emperor Jirri rode upon this very plain.
“You are invited to
feast with the Khan, lords. You may know for yourselves. The Yamaku have bled
Seh for ten years. The Khan will bring us peace and wealth as we have never
known. Those who ride with him will be great men in the Empire to be. Consider
this army.” He pointed to the encampment. “Among one hundred
thousand only the Khan and a handful of others are men of culture. When the
Yamaku are brought down, the Khan will need men of skill and knowledge to
govern the new Empire. If you are those men, how can it not be an Empire of
justice and culture?
“A feast, lords,
not a trap—for you have already trapped yourselves. What word shall I
take back to the Great Khan?”
There was a
second’s hesitation as men looked from one to another, questions in their
eyes.
“Bowman,”
Toshaki Shinga said quietly.
“Sire?”
“Silence that
traitor.”
An arrow flashed,
appearing in Kintari’s heart as though it had sprung from there. The lord
did not move to clutch his pain but slowly toppled over the side like a falling
tree. The pirates set to their oars in a frenzy, pulling to get beyond bow
range, but no arrows fell among them.
Lord Kintari was left
bobbing, facedown, in the small
waves that broke the
surface of the lake. The pirate’s craft, under its flag of truce, raced
to the far shore where the oarsmen ran it up on the bank as though arrows were
aimed at their hearts.
Toshaki looked down at
the floating lord. There was silence on the wall.
“It was a better
death than he deserved,” Lord Ranan said so that all might hear, ‘
’but it was the best that could be managed.“ He bowed to Toshaki
and nodded to the bowman, then turned and started back to his duties.
A shout echoed across the
lake, as powerful as distant thunder, and Toshaki looked up to see rafts being
pushed out onto the waters.
“Give the
signals,” Toshaki said calmly to his aide. “It begins.”
Along the wall he saw men
make signs to Botahara and then, in a warrior’s ritual, they tightened
their helmet
cords.
Toshaki loosened his
sword in its scabbard and mounted the stairs to his tower, pulling his helmet tight
as he did so. There would soon be little he could do, but he would try to give
some direction to the defense while it was still possible.
There must not have been
enough pirates to man all the rafts, for many were paddled by barbarians under
the tutelage of screaming, gesturing pirates. On at least one raft Toshaki saw
a fight underway, swords flashing.
Fools, the lord thought,
come a little further.
The vast flotilla moved
slowly toward Rhojo-ma, the cumbersome rafts colliding and hampering each other.
Against all efforts the crosswind blew them off to the west and soon they were
strung out, paddling into the wind and trying to make their way crabwise toward
the walls.
Toshaki almost laughed.
In an attempt to send the greatest number of men against the city, the
barbarian chieftains had built too many rafts and now they became their own
enemy. At least one raft had broken up, leaving terrified tribesmen clinging to
the logs, armor trying to drag them under.
Boats appeared beyond the
east wall of the city, towing makeshift rafts piled with shattered furniture
and straw
floor mats. The men of
Seh were not strangers to the water and their operation was executed with a
precision that would have made a naval officer proud. Positioning their craft
quickly upwind of the enemy, the men of Seh fired the rafts and cut them free.
Toshaki hit the stone
with his fist. The barbarians on the windward rafts saw what bore down on them
and stopped paddling, which sent their craft into the rafts behind.
A gust of wind fanned the
fires into hot blazes and pressed the fire rafts down on their victims. The
barbarian flotilla lost all way then as men on the windward craft jumped to the
rafts behind. The fire touched the first barbarian raft and flaming straw
started to blow free.
Toshaki saw men in
flaming clothes and men falling into the waters to slip beneath the surface
with barely a struggle. The fleet blew east now, all chance of making the walls
of Rhojo-ma gone.
Someone pounded up the
steps behind him and an out of breath Lord Ranan appeared at his side.
“Ah, Admiral Ranan.
Your squadron has done well.”
“Who thought it
would become a naval battle, General?” Ranan said with obvious
satisfaction. “And the men of the desert make poor sailors.” A
bitter laugh forced its way out from behind his face-mask.
The remains of the
barbarian flotilla ended up on the west shore of the lake. Most of the logs
were new cut and too full of spring sap to burn, so the fire rafts did less
damage than one might have hoped.
“We have given Lord
Shonto the gift of another day at least,” Lord Ranan said. “May his
army swell by a thousand men.”
Toshaki turned to his
aide. “Order our patrol out again. I want to know everything the
barbarians do.”
Ranan leaned his back to
the wall and opened his face-mask. “I wonder what they will do? Is it
possible they might dare this again?”
Toshaki shrugged.
“We will soon have the measure of this Great Khan. If he cannot take an
almost undefended city in a few days, he will be no match for Shonto Mo-toru.
The great lord is a gü player of some fame. He will
never let this upstart
catch him where mere force of numbers can win the day.“
He turned back to the
north. In the midst of the barbarian army the plum tree swayed and released a
flurry of petals to the wind.
Thirty
The flotilla carrying
Lord Shonto’s army south sailed by night, trailing a wake of terrible
destruction. Word had spread quickly down the canal and the people of Wa fled
before Shonto’s fleet as though it were the barbarian army itself. In
places the canal choked with the boats of refugees and when this slowed the
progress of the flotilla, soldiers were sent ahead to clear the way. Everyone
in the flotilla had seen the results of this earlier in the evening. They had
passed the still smoldering hulks of half a hundred craft, stranded on the
canal banks.
I feel as though we
follow on the heels of war, not precede it, Brother Sotura thought. He stood at
the aft rail watching the following-wave pull a ribbon of moonlight along their
wake. Just at dusk he had heard the sound of a flight of cranes passing over
and it had saddened him in a way he could not control.
It was a night of great
beauty. The Plum Blossom Wind pushed the river craft along the waterway like a
gentle, guiding hand, and the scent of budding trees and opening flowers
perfumed the air. In so steady a wind and a section of canal free of hidden
bars, the sailors on watch had little to do. A charcoal fire smoldered
amidships and the sailors cooked and brewed cha and lounged about the deck
talking quietly, awaiting their turn as lookout or at the steering oar.
A sailor approached
Sotura, offering the senior Brother a bowl of cha which he accepted with a nod.
He sipped cha and watched the night landscape slip by. The constellation of the
Two-Headed Dragon appeared above the calypta trees lining the bank, and the
breeze murmured in the branches. It was night rich in beauty.
Steps approached, not the
barefoot slap of a sailor, but a studied gait. Sotura turned and saw a woman
walking
toward him. She seemed at
first bent and tired, but the Botahist Master could see that this was not a
statement of truth: she was neither. The moonlight outlined the familiar shape
of a square jaw.
“Sister
Morima,” Sotura said quietly. He bowed. “I am honored to find
myself traveling in your company.”
She was dressed in the
yellow robe and purple sash of her Order though over that she wore shapeless
robes of gray and brown, her head wrapped in a shawl. She nodded in return and
leaned against the rail as though she had just expended great effort.
Sotura thought she was
thinner than when he had last seen her—at Jinjoh Monastery where she had
come for the opening of the scrolls. To an untrained eye, her clothing would
have hidden this change.
“You keep close
watch on your prote”ge’t Brother Sotura, one would think his
judgment was in question.“
It was an insulting
statement and doubly so, for the nun had shown the worst manners, refusing to
respond to his polite greeting.
“Shuyun-sum seems
to be watched by many, Sister, which is the true question.”
“Huh,” Sister
Morima blew the syllable out like a sharp exhalation. “True
questions,” she mused. “Tell me, Brother, do you not have true
questions now that the Teacher has arrived and is not among your senior
Brethren?”
Sotura turned and looked
back at the boat’s wake. “You listen to rumors, Sister. I am
surprised.”
“The blossoms were
seen, Brother,” Morima hissed in a low whisper, “touched by my own
Sisters. Touched! Do not play the fool with me, Senior Brother Sotura.”
He shrugged.
“Believe as you will, Sister.”
“That is die
conclusion I’m coming to, Brother.” She fell silent then, and only
the wash of boat slipping through water was heard.
Sotura looked over at the
steersman, but the man was too far off to hear and too well mannered to notice.
“Do you wonder,
Brother, who Shuyun-sum was in his past incarnation? A child of such
accomplishment was not a merchant or a lord. It is not possible.”
Sotura shrugged.
“As you are aware, we cannot always know.”
“With the
unaccomplished, perhaps,” Morima answered but carried the thought no
further. She turned also, leaning over the rail and joining her hands.
“It must be difficult for you, Sotura-sum; the blossoming of the
Udumbara, Sacred Scrolls that are missing or worse, the coming of the Teacher
you cannot find, and a young protege1 with an ear for the
truth.” She paused looking down into the dark water. “Lies cannot
come easily, even to the seniors of your Order. What will you say when
Shuyun-sum asks of these things?”
Sotura stood away from
the rail so that he looked down at the woman. “It is rumored,
Sister,” he said icily, “that you have had a crisis of faith. I
will pray to Bota-hara to guide you.” A stiff bow and he was gone,
leaving Morima at the rail.
The monk made his way to
the bow where he sat in the lee of the gunnel. It was as far forward as he
could go and yet he still felt the lies that pursued him close behind.
Thirty-one
The entire line had come
to a halt for perhaps the hundredth time that day. Lord Shonto Shokan looked
down the draw at the horsemen strung out behind him. Like their lord, they had
long since dismounted to lead their horses. Shokan stepped to the right for a
better view and plunged through the softening crust up to mid-thigh. He cursed.
They were completely
surrounded by mountains now, above the snow line and into an area that, each
afternoon, became truly frightening. The guides had signaled a stop and gone
ahead to assess the danger. They had lost thirty men to avalanches already and
Shokan wanted to lose no more. Of course, this was quickly becoming a moot
point. Could they go ahead at all? That was the question they asked now.
Willing himself lighter,
Shokan tried to pull his leg free and step back onto the crust. His other leg broke
through and he sat down, sinking to his waist. He cursed again and then
laughed.
The night before they had
debated leaving the horses, hoping men could win through where horses
couldn’t. With care, men could travel in the mornings when the surface of
the snow was still frozen from the bitter cold of the mountain nights.
A boy ran lightly up the
line of men, earning Shokan’s envy. When we have no more food, perhaps we
will all run as lightly as this one, Shokan thought. The child dropped to his
knees on the crust before his lord and bowed. Shokan nodded for him to speak.
“Sire, Lord
Jima’s men have reached the end of our line, but the snows caught seven
and swept them into the gorge.”
Shokan made a sign to
Botahara. “Can they go on?”
The boy hesitated.
“Lord Jima says they are prepared to proceed, Sire.”
Shokan nodded. This might
be as far as they went this day though it was barely midday. With some effort
he stood and looked up the draw. There were perhaps twenty men above him and
then the track of the guides disappearing over the curve of the endless snows.
Movement caught his eye and he turned quickly. Yes! he was certain this time.
“I saw it, also,
Sire,” the boy said, his tone tentative. He had just spoken to the great
lord without being requested to do so.
Shokan did not seem to
notice. He pointed up at a ridge line above them to the south.
“There?”
“Yes, Lord
Shonto.”
“Huh.” They
had started appearing on and off two days before. It was considered good luck
to see one of the Mountain People, so men had begun keeping a lookout. Down the
line he saw others pointing.
Turning back, he looked
up the slope. Certainly it is not possible, he thought, we will have to leave
armor and all the horses behind. He looked at his stallion, the horse he had
brought from Seh, and shook his head sadly. They would butcher the horses for
all the meat they could carry; there was no other choice. He smiled at the
child.
“Tell Lord Jima
that I await word from the guides. We will not move until then.‘’
The boy bowed low, rose,
and jogged off. Thirty paces away, he plunged through the snows up to his chest
and had to be rescued by a wallowing rider.
Thirty-two
The ruin of a treed hillside Wounds the
heart. Plum Blossom Winds Wltisper across still water. Spring’s gentle
arrival Lifts the eternal spirit
Lord Akima
Lord Ranan and Lord Akima
stood at the wall on the city’s eastern extremity and watched the building
of a floating bridge. The barbarian army had spent a day skidding logs from the
western end of the lake, where they had been blown after the first failed
attack. The arrival of the Plum Blossom Winds had precipitated this tactic, and
the men of Rhojo-ma looked on with something approaching approval: it is what
they would have done in the barbarians’ place. With the breeze at the
barbarian army’s back, it would be impossible for the men of Seh to
position fire rafts upwind.
The floating bridge grew
by the hour, reaching out toward the walls of Rhojo-ma. The last sections of
the bridge were being readied near shore. When done, these final sections would
be easily floated into place, connecting the shore to the wall of Rhojo-ma with
a causeway wide enough to allow fifty men abreast. It was only a question of
when this would be done.
“There are too many
sections, look.” Lord Akima pointed to the north and south of the
floating bridge where work was going on at an astonishing pace.
Lord Ranan watched the
activity briefly and then nodded. Teams of horses kept arriving with planks
torn, no doubt, from nearby barns and houses. These were being
used to tie the bridge
together and provide a relatively even footing for the attackers. “They
must plan to make the bridge wider at this end. I would do the same.” It
was the ultimate approval of anything the barbarians did: / would do the same.
Akima looked over his
shoulder at the position of the sun. “They might finish while there is
still light.”
“But they will not
attack until dawn—when we will have the sun in our eyes. That would be my
choice.”
Akima nodded.
Most of the men who
remained in Rhojo-ma were concentrated on the defense of the city’s
eastern end now, drawing them away from the more easily defended
Governor’s Palace and inner city. Lines of retreat to the western end had
been prepared through the city—bridges destroyed, streets blocked. Only a
man who knew the route could move quickly from east to west and that route was
the most easily defended. Even so, the men of Seh were preparing to hold the
city’s eastern end for as long as possible.
Lord Ranan bowed
suddenly. “Please excuse me, Lord Akima, I have matters that must be
attended to.”
Akima bowed and watched
the man go. “How the great have fallen,” Akima said to himself. Ten
years earlier the Ranan had been the virtual rulers of Seh— Imperial
Governors generation after generation. And now here was the senior lord of that
House—a general at the fall of Seh’s capital.
How we pay for our mistakes,
the old man thought and turned back to the eastern shore for a final look
before attending to his own duties.
The sound of the
barbarian flute-pipes echoed across the water in the night. It was a melancholy
air played in the strange scale of the desert tribes and it did nothing to
raise the spirits of the men in the city. A night attack was unlikely but not
impossible, so large numbers of men stood watch and others stayed in the
recently abandoned buildings nearby.
Boats had been sent out
from the city to patrol the lake to be sure the barbarians did not move their
bridge in the dark. An attack at first light on some other quarter of the
city would be a disaster.
The men of Seh were too few to be spread around Rhojo-ma.
Other boats were readied
after the moon set, but they had their own purpose. Men, armed and armored,
went aboard these boats in number. In complete silence they pushed off, setting
course by stars and the barbarian fires on the shore. The light evening breeze
bore them along, barely rippling the sails as they tacked. It was a difficult
exercise, for the boats could risk no lamps, so there was a very real danger of
being separated or colliding.
Fires set in sand burned
at intervals along the floating bridge, and they illuminated the span from one
end to the other.
A torch on the wall of
the city was extinguished, and the boats turned toward the agreed upon fire on
the bridge. There was not enough wind to give them speed, so the helmsmen aimed
the boats directly at the floating span and ran their bows up on it, snapping
anchor lines in the process.
A shout went up
immediately from the barbarian guards, and the sound of swords shattered the
peaceful evening and stilled the playing of flutes. Torches came to life among
the attackers in an attempt to fire the bridge planking.
Lord Ranan reached the
top of the wall and found Ak-ima and Toshaki there ahead of him.
“It does not
burn,” Ranan said.
The noise was fierce now
and men appeared at all the stairways, believing the siege had begun. In the light
of the fires, barbarians could be seen pouring out along the floating causeway.
Torches were kicked into the water though here and there the planking burned
feebly.
Out beyond the point
where the attack had been aimed, a watch fire burst apart and men could be seen
spreading the burning wood across the float. Suddenly there was a tearing sound
and the outer watch fires began to drift toward the walls of Rhojo-ma.
“They have broken
it!” Akima said. “Look!”
A cheer went up from the
walls of the city, but the sound of swords continued. Bowmen strung their
weapons then, ready for a section of the bridge to come covered in barbarians
and hard-pressed warriors of Seh. So
slowly did the section of
bridge move that men’s arms began to grow tired holding arrows at the
ready.
The sound of clashing
swords stopped abruptly and the shouting of the barbarians fell silent also. On
the section of bridge that had been broken free, flames began to spread as the
dry planking caught. It drifted on like that toward the wall of the city, a
long torch illuminating the area for more than a rih. Barbarians standing on
the end of the now truncated bridge could be seen clearly in the orange light.
A small boat under sail passed by the burning raft—a patrol boat, no
doubt looking for survivors.
The men of Seh watched as
the burning hulk began to break up as it drifted near the city. Signs were made
to Botahara. The first defenders had died, and the attack slowed by half a day.
Morning came, a clear
spring day. Another tree had blossomed on the hillside north of Rhojo-ma.
General Toshaki stood at the wall, looking at the scene. He tried not to think
of the funeral barge that had born his lord across the lake only a few days
earlier, for it had been white with blossoms also.
The sound of the
barbarian army preparing their siege echoed across the lake, ruining the
perfect stillness. It would be only a few hours now. Toshaki loosed his sword
in its scabbard for the hundredth time. The men on the wall around him were
silent. There was no need to discuss plans and strategy—their intent was
not that complicated.
Captain Rohku stood on a
hill south of Seh, hidden by brush and trees that had not been taken by the
barbarians for their great floating bridge. He wondered how he had been chosen
for the function he now performed. Perhaps being the first to report the
arrival of Jaku Katta had started it. Rohku knew that events of even less
significance had set men off on a life’s endeavor. Whatever it was, the
young captain had become the watcher—the witness.
It had been Rohku who had
hidden on the ledge and watched the army of the desert pass. Having reported
all he had learned from that to Rhojo-ma and sent reports on to Lord Shonto, he
had been given sealed orders. And
now he and a few of his
company were to be witnesses to the fall of Seh’s capital. No doubt what
he saw would tell Shonto and his staff much about the barbarian army and its
leaders, but Rohku did not relish the duty. As foolish as he thought the lords
of Seh were, he did not want to watch them die.
Much had happened in the
dark the previous night though it had been difficult to know what. The men of
Seh had obviously staged an attack on the bridge and cut a section of it free,
setting it to the torch. Rohku had watched the flaming raft as it spun slowly,
breaking up before it reached the wall of the city. It was impossible to tell
what had happened to the men of Seh. They had seen only barbarian warriors in
the light from the burning bridge section which had led to much speculation. His
companions had finally agreed that most or all of the men from Rhojo-ma had
escaped in boats, but Rohku was sure they didn’t really believe this. The
attackers from the city, the captain thought, lay on the bottom of the spring
cold lake, weighted there by their armor for all time—may Botahara
protect their souls.
The last section of the
span that would connect the barbarian army with the walls of the island city
had been warped out to the bridge’s far end where preparations were being
made to move it into its final position. The Shonto guard looked around to make
sure his men watched the woods behind and not the drama that unfolded on the
lake.
A guard appeared at
Rohku’s side just as he turned back to his duty.
“Another barbarian
patrol passes to the west. They should appear below us.” He waved off to
their left.
Rohku nodded. Barbarians
were exploring the surrounding countryside with great determination and this
resolve was showing occasional results. More than one patrol returned with some
hapless resident of Wa in their midst. Not everyone had left quickly enough. By
now the Khan would know where Shonto’s army had gone.
The barbarian patrol
appeared as had been predicted— this one without captives. Watching them
ride past, Rohku had to admit that they were fine horsemen. If they
handled the sword and bow
as well, they could make a formidable army.
“Captain,”
one of Rohku’s men pointed.
The final section of
bridge was beginning to move. Using ropes and poles, the pirates and barbarians
began maneuvering the makeshift structure into place. With the Plum Blossom
Wind still wafting in from the sea, there was nothing to struggle against but
the inherent momentum of the raft itself, and they had enough men a thousand times
over to deal with that. Slowly it moved, so slowly there was not a ripple in
its wake.
Barbarians holding
shields over their heads began to make their way out to the section’s far
end, guarding against a foray by the men of Seh. Arrows arced out toward the
bridge as it came within range of the strongest archers, but the barbarians
knelt down and shields gave protection.
Looking quickly toward
the shore, Rohku saw the banners of the Khan close to the shore where the
bridge began. Warriors in red were stationed there on horseback, and the Shonto
captain assumed the barbarian chieftain was there, inspiring his warriors to
perform great deeds.
When the bridge was
almost under the city walls, a shadow appeared on the waters like a passing
cloud, but it was a cloud of arrows. Realizing that he held his breath, Rohku
tore his eyes away to be sure his guard watched behind, for he would need to
give his full attention to the battle now so that he could give as complete an
account as possible to Lord Shonto.
As the bridge bumped
against the wall, Rohku saw the men of Seh swarm down the wall on ladders and
ropes at the same time as the vanguard of the barbarian army started across the
last section. The barbarians who guarded the bridge’s end were pushed
back almost immediately, much to Captain Rohku’s satisfaction. Those will
be their strongest fighters, he thought, and yet they could not stand against
the men of Seh.
The barbarian army and
the men swarming out of the city met in the center of the bridge, and a great shout
went up from both sides. The sound of steel ringing on steel echoed across the
valley like the sound of an enormous bell.
r
* * *
Toshaki turned command of
the city over to Lord Ak-ima and grasped a rope, lowering himself quickly down
the wall. The floating bridge heaved as his feet struck, swaying and jerking
like the deck of a ship. Men dropped to the bridge around him; they were the
third wave of men from the city and would replace those falling where the
opposing sides met.
Despite the number of barbarians,
the Khan could not bring his great force to bear, for the causeway to the city
would only support fifty men abreast. The second wave of men from the city had
won another hundred feet, not pushing the great column of tribesmen back but
driving them into the lake and cutting them down where they stood.
Toshaki turned and made
his way among the fallen, the deck slick with water and blood. He drew his
blade as he went, not looking at the faces of the dead and wounded. He did not
want to know who had fallen. As he came up behind the wall of men fighting, he
saw men of Seh poised, ready to cut as much of the bridge away as they could if
the barbarians began to push them back. It was their intention to drive the
barbarians as close to the shore as could be done and then cut the bridge away,
forcing them to build again.
We are five thousand
strong and we will lose five hundred in this very hour, Toshaki thought, how
long can we carry on such a defense?
Thinking this, he threw
himself into the fray, cutting down a barbarian in a single stroke. After that
it was as if he had lost consciousness—a lifetime of training took hold
and he fought on without his mind grasping what truly occurred.
A barbarian tripped and
Toshaki felt his boot take the man in the ribs, knocking him into the cold
waters. He felt a blow to his shoulder and registered vaguely that he might be
wounded. He slipped and fell hard and found himself jerked to his feet by a
young giant he did not recognize. He fought again.
He fell back to rest, and
others took his place. Forcing himself up before truly rested, Toshaki returned
to the battle. Arrows whistled overhead and suddenly the men of Seh began to
win ground again. He tripped over a
barbarian, dead from an
arrow in the throat. The smell of smoke. A huge warrior knocked him down with a
shield, but a man of Seh stepped in and took the blow while yet another felled
the giant. Those men wore Toshaki colors, the lord realized afterward.
The sound of fire
crackling and hissing. Again Toshaki fell to the rear to rest. The men of Seh
were being driven back now. Toshaki turned to look for his reinforcements and
saw the bridge behind him in flames, beyond the fire men of Seh had severed the
span and maneuvered their section away.
We are cut off, some part
of Toshaki’s mind informed him. He looked back at the battle raging and
realized that they were all exhausted and falling. Forcing himself to rise, the
lord moved to the platform’s edge. He would not chance capture; the
waters could take him but never the barbarians.
A lifetime
To discover a single truth.
A solitary white petal
Drifting on the wind
Comes to rest on my breastplate
More beautiful
Than all the works of man.
Lord Toshaki Shinga
Thirty-three
Brave heart
Contemplating the plum trees blossoming
Against the infinite blue
From “Poems Written in Old
Age” Lady Nikko
Along the banks of the
Grand Canal willows and ca-lypta trees began to unfurl tiny, embryonic leaves
adding yet another scent to the complex perfume of spring. Rushes appeared,
straight and green, in the growing shade of the trees, and the banks were newly
grassed and awash in spring flowers.
Shonto sat on a low
platform placed on a high point of the bank. A silk awning in the blue of the
Shonto banner protected the platform and a fence of silk hangings bearing the
shinta blossom created an enclosure, giving the lord privacy in all directions
but east, toward the canal. Boats of armed guards patrolled the water before
the enclosure, forcing all traffic to the opposite side. Other guards were
posted around the enclosure and beyond them another ring of armed men both on
foot and on horseback.
Nishima watched her
father as her sampan approached. In the midst of war he has set himself in a
place where he can truly appreciate the changing season. Her boat hissed to a
stop in the mud, its bow barely on shore, and guards hurried down to pull it up
far enough that disembarking would not be difficult.
Nishima looked up again
and saw that her father was deep in conversation with a senior military aide.
She nodded to the guard who had assisted her and walked a few paces along the
grassy bank looking at the spring
flowers. The last of the
snow lilies were spread there in the shade of a great calypta, but a few days
of such warmth and they would be gone until the next season.
She picked a tiny purple
flower not recognized, reminding herself to ask Lady Okara what it might be. An
aide of Kamu’s hurried down the bank toward her, and she looked up to see
Shonto smiling at her as though they had not met in a long time.
On the platform a cushion
had been arranged for her and Nishima slipped out of her sandals. She bowed to
her father and he surprised her by bowing low in return, a large grin
appearing.
“Lady
Nishima,” he said in mock formal tones, “your presence honors
me.”
“The honor, Lord
Governor, is mine entirely,” she answered.
Shonto waved to a
servant. “Governor is no longer a title I claim. When our esteemed
Emperor learns that I have abandoned Seh and travel south with an army, I will
have achieved a new office—that of Rebel General.”
Nishima’s smile
disappeared. “It is a frightening thought, Uncle.”
Shonto continued in the
same tone, not showing any of the signs of distress that his daughter
displayed. “Not at all, Nishi-sum. Think of all the great men of history
who have borne this same title: Yokashima, Tiari, even our beloved
Emperor’s own father. My only concern is that my accomplishments will
pale in such esteemed company.” He reached out and touched her arm.
“Do not be of barren heart, Nishi-sum, the Shonto are in the best of
company.”
A servant brought cups
and wine, placing them on a small table. Waving him away before the wine was
served, Shonto proceeded to pour the wine himself, surprising his daughter for
the second time.
“You are in a
bright mood today, Uncle. I wish I could feel as light of heart in our present
circumstances.” Nishima started to refuse the offered wine, as was
polite, but Shonto took her hand and curled the fingers around the cup,
squeezing her hand gently. She laughed.
“Hakata wrote that,
as he grew older, spring became more beautiful and more painful each year. I,
personally, have reached the age where spring is more
beautiful but has not yet
begun to cause me too much pain. Perhaps in a few years you will be able to
appreciate the spring as I do. War cannot be helped now, but there will be
beauty in spite of it. The truly brave soul will find time for beauty in the
midst of the most terrible destruction.“
“Lady Nikko,”
Nishima said. “Though I believe she meant that the truly brave hearts
would see beauty at the hour of their death.”
“Poets… why
must they all be so dramatic?” Shonto gestured toward a branch of the
plum that grew down to eye level, not an arm’s length away. “See
these blossoms? I have been watching them all morning. They prepare to open.
They gather their resolve as we speak. Their opening will be an act of singular
beauty, more lovely than the blossoms themselves. In the midst of all that
occurs, we will sit here and observe. It will be a test of the bravery of your
heart.”
Nishima nodded and they
both shifted their cushions to face the emerging flowers. They stayed like that
for more than an hour, side by side: a tall, willowy young woman and the
strongly built older man. Despite this contrast in their appearance, there was
little doubt that they both focused on the same thing.
The plum blossoms
unfolded in the sun. “As slowly as the timid heart,” Lord Shonto
whispered at one point. A quote from another poem and the only words either of
them spoke until a flower had spread its petals like fragile wings. A bee came
then and thrust its head into the flower, emerging covered in pollen.
The two renegade
aristocrats turned away then, Nishima holding back her sleeve as she poured
more wine into their cups.
“There is one other
matter, Nishi-sum, that I hesitate to speak of.”
Nishima nodded, recognizing
seriousness in her father’s tone.
“The river people
have a saying: ‘A whisper aboard ship is a shout upon the land.’
Keeping secrets aboard a boat is a difficult thing.” Shonto looked down
into his cup, turning it slowly, then up at the plum blossom again.
Nishima nodded, sipping
wine into a suddenly dry mouth.
“Brother Shuyun is
a magnetic young man, but he is a monk who has taken a sacred oath. A heart can
be broken against more malleable things, Nishi-sum, I have seen it.”
Nishima gathered her
nerve, not quite certain whether she heard disapproval or concern in her
father’s voice. “Satake-sum had taken this same sacred oath, Uncle,
yet he did not live according to its letter, as we both know.”
Shonto nodded. “He
remained a monk despite his independent spirit. Shuyun-sum—what will
become of him?”
“Do you fear to
lose your Spiritual Advisor, then?”
Shonto considered this.
“Shuyun-sum would always be invaluable, there is no question of that. I
feel little need of a guide to the words of Botahara—I can read them
myself. That is not my concern.
“You are a lady of
a Great House, Nishi-sum, and though I have often spared you the responsibility
that comes with your position I may not be able to continue to do so in the
future. This war will require sacrifices of everyone—perhaps even of you.
You may not be able to choose your own course, Nishi-sum, any more than I chose
the path followed now.”
Nishima nodded stiffly.
She looked out over the canal at the trees blowing in the soft breeze, wafting
their spring greens like new robes. A guard stood up in one of the patrolling
boats, looked off to the far bank. Years ago Nishima had trained herself to
remove such things as guards and walls and strong gates out of any scene she
viewed, but she knew this was only an act of the imagination—they had not
gone away.
She swallowed with
difficulty. “Your words are wise, as always, Uncle. I thank you.”
Shonto nodded, half a shrug.
“Uncle, there is
something I have not spoken of. Kitsura-sum asked Jaku Katta if he would have a
letter conveyed to her family, which he agreed to do. Kitsu-sum received word
from her family that this letter arrived. This would seem to
indicate…”
Shonto held up his hand.
“Kitsura-sum has already informed me of this. It raises another question
of the Guard Commander’s claims.”
Nishima suppressed her
annoyance at her cousin’s in-
terference. “I
believe Jaku Katta is no longer in favor in the Emperor’s court,
Sire.”
“Huh.” Shonto
looked down at his cup. “I agree, daughter, but I am not sure who this
young Jaku supports—Tadamoto—is he loyal to his brother and family
or is he loyal to his Emperor? It appears to have been Jaku Tadamoto who
convinced the Emperor to raise the army. Does the younger Jaku intend that army
to fight barbarians or to fight Shonto, and perhaps even his own brother? It is
a curious puzzle. For the time being, at least, Jaku Katta has little choice
but to side with the Shonto and hope the Yamaku do not stand. He plays out the
charade quite admirably, I think.”
Nishima picked up her cup
but did not drink. “I confess that I no longer find much to admire in the
Guardsman,” Nishima said softly.
Horses were heard coming
to a halt outside the compound and General Hojo appeared at the opening.
“I must excuse
myself, Uncle. Please give my regards to General Hojo.”
Shonto nodded. “I
thank you for viewing the plum blossoms with me. It added another facet to the
beauty entirely.” Shonto bowed again to his daughter as he had when she
arrived. She bowed as her position required, slipped into her sandals, and made
her way down the bank.
The boatmen pushed out
into the slow moving current and began to scull toward Nishima’s barge.
But Uncle, she thought, I
have discovered the rarest beauty in the midst of terrible destruction. If my
heart is truly brave, can I turn away?
Guards cleared a way
through the long line of refugees strung out along the south road. It seemed a
last indignity for these people. They had been turned from their homes, crops
torn from the fields, livestock taken, feed stores set to the torch, and any
food they could not carry confiscated to feed the growing army. And now they
were being forced to stand aside for the lord who had failed to stop this
alleged barbarian army in Seh where such things should be done.
Yet when Shonto and his
company rode past, the refugees bowed low, displaying nothing of what they
felt.
They were fatalists in a
manner that a person of action like Lord Shonto would never understand. Karma
dictated that they would occasionally be the victims in the machinations of the
Empire. It had always been so and would never change—unless one
progressed, perhaps becoming a monk or a sister of a Botahist Order.
Passing on horseback,
Shonto was saddened by the endless procession of villagers and peasants, some
leading ox-drawn wagons, others carrying everything left to them on the backs
of mules or on poles slung across their own shoulders. It affected him, but he
knew what he had said to Nishima was true—everyone would make sacrifices
in this war. There would be few exceptions.
They crossed a stubble
field, damp from the spring rains but firm enough for horses. Another group of
riders waited on a low rise and Shonto could see the banner of the Komawara
House—the mist-lily against a night blue background. Komawara bowed from
his horse as Lord Shonto approached while his men dismounted and bowed
properly. Shonto noticed the trim of green lacing on two of these men—the
Hajiwara Komawara had found in the Jai Lung Hills.
“This is the
place?” Shonto asked.
Komawara nodded.
Spurring his horse,
Shonto gained a few feet in elevation and then turned to look west toward the
hills, trying to gauge the height of the undulating land.
“This entire plain
has been under flood many times,” Komawara said, coming up beside Shonto.
“Six years ago there was a sea here sixty rih wide. We can dam the canal
and defend the dam. This defense could last many days. Once the dam is burst
the land will still be impassible for days until it dries.”
Shonto nodded as he
looked both east and west again. “What of the Canal? It will have no
source of water, yeh?”
Hojo pointed off to the
south. “Ten rih away the river Tensi joins the canal. There will be no
difficulties once the fleet has passed that point. The section of the canal
from here to there may be shallower than usual, but…” He shrugged.
“And the roads
through the hills are narrow and perfect for ambushes,” Komawara added
with satisfaction.
“We can hold the
barbarians here for many days, I think.‘’ The young lord rubbed his
sword hilt and Shonto realized this was not the weapon Komawara usually
carried. The Toshaki gift, the lord realized.
“General Hojo, Lord
Komawara, begin planning the tactics to be used in the hills. Lord Taiki will
take responsibility for seeing the dam built and defended. We will move the
fleet south immediately.” Shonto gestured to the line of refugees.
“These people must be clear of the area by this time tomorrow.” He
looked around again as though weighing the plan one last time. “We will
see what this Khan can do when he meets the unexpected.”
Thirty-four
The first swallows had
returned to the north that day, and the wood vibrated with the excitement of
birds calling and courting. Rohku Tadamori held his horse by its bridle and
watched the city of Rhojo-ma. The Flying Horse Banner of the Province of Seh
had come down from the high tower of the Governor’s Palace and the gold
banner of the Khan with its strangely twisted dragon had appeared in its place.
The dissonant sounds of horns and clashing of metal had echoed across the water
then. Rohku’s horse nudged his shoulder, pulling at the lacing of his
armor.
Seh had fallen. For the
first time in the history of the Empire the province had been taken by the
barbarians. And Rohku served the man who had allowed that to happen. Though not
a man of Seh, the captain felt the loss all the same.
Smoke curled up from the
eastern end of the city, but there were no signs that the rest of Rhojo-ma was
being put to the torch. If anything, the smoke was diminishing.
Five thousand men, Rohku
thought, may Botahara rest their souls. It was impossible to say how many
barbarians had fallen. More than five thousand, Rohku thought, many more. He
looked out at the floating causeway that connected the shore and the eastern
edge of the city. Beneath the waters lay uncounted warriors of both armies. The
fighting had been hard.
The barbarians had not shown
themselves to be brilliant tacticians, but they had not exhibited any lack of
resolve either. The Khan had thrown wave after wave of men against the walls of
Rhojo-ma, spending as though he had endless resources, and in the end this had
won the day.
Rohku made a sign to
Botahara and mounted his horse. He looked back at the city again.
Now we play gü, he
thought, struck by how cold this seemed to him—but it was true. Who would
learn the most from this first encounter? Who would come to the board next time
armed with greater wisdom? He prayed that he could provide his lord with all
the information they would need. The good name of his family depended on such
things.
Thirty-five
Soldiers were neither
numerous enough, nor skilled in the work, and in the end, peasants were pressed
into the effort as well. Poles with baskets hanging from their ends proved more
effective than oxen and carts when loading and unloading were considered.
Shonto’s advisors in this matter soon realized that stopping the flow of
the canal would not be enough—the dam needed to stretch from higher
ground further back from each bank to create the depth of water required. The
volume of water flowing into the new sea was simply not great enough to backup
sufficiently due to a mere constriction. Near the forming dam, workers dug away
the bank to allow the blocked waters quicker access to the lowlands beyond.
Imperial messenger boats
had been confiscated for the war effort and they plied back and forth to the
north bringing news and moving observers. The word had passed to most
now—Rhojo-ma had fallen and this news cast a shadow of desperation over
the men who built the dam. Suddenly the war seemed real and the odds truly
impossible.
There was as yet no news
of the barbarian army moving south and, predictably, there were some that
speculated the Khan had already achieved his goal. The victory in Seh would be
consolidated and all this dam building would prove a fool’s work.
Rhojo-ma had stood for
five days. Five thousand against one hundred thousand. Though no one would ever
truly know what had happened inside the city’s walls, poets and writers
of songs would not hesitate to fill in the missing details.
Ten days had passed since
Shonto’s fleet had left the northern city and in that time they had not
traveled far. Creating the desert in their wake took time.
Captain Rohku Tadamori
stood on top of a section of the new dike and watched the teeming workers. His
report would have reached Lord Shonto by now, but his presence would still be
requested. There would be questions not answered by his report.
Riders came up the rise
toward him, wearing night blue and black. Lord Komawara Samyamu himself pulled
his horse up before the young guard.
“Captain
Rohku?”
Rohku bowed.
“Captain Rohku Tadamori of Lord Shonto’s guard, Lord
Komawara.”
“Lord Shonto would
have you join him.” A horse was led forward and the young captain
mounted.
“It is a ride of
several rih, Captain. I have not eaten today, would you share a meal with
us?”
“The honor, Lord
Komawara, would be mine entirely.”
Motioning for Rohku to
ride at his side, Komawara turned his horse and set off.
Passing the lines of
workers, both men and women, coming from the stone and gravel pits, Rohku was
astonished by the numbers who toiled. They passed an old man who sat on the
ground in the grip of a fit of coughing. A young girl bent over him, obviously frightened.
A soldier rode down the line toward this pair. Seeing the rider, the girl
reluctantly tore herself away from the old man, tears appearing as she went.
Rohku turned away.
“We have little
time.” Komawara said softly. “The rains this spring have not been
great, so it will take many days for the waters to gather.” He said
nothing for a moment but then spoke again. “It has been said that we have
created a desert in our wake, but now we will create a sea. I am told, Captain,
that the barbarians proved to be poor sailors so perhaps seas will serve our
purpose better than deserts.”
Rohku kicked his foot
free of a stirrup and shortened it as they went. ‘ ’The lake
surrounding Rhojo-ma proved an excellent defense. If it had not been for the
pirates, the siege would undoubtedly have taken days longer.“
“Pirates!”
Komawara exclaimed, proving again that he was from the outer provinces.
“I had not heard there were pirates.” Komawara looked at his
companion in
I
amazement. “Brother
Shuyun and I saw no pirates among the barbarians.”
Rohku found his now
properly adjusted stirrup. “I am sure that is true, Sire, but there are
pirates in the Khan’s army now.”
“This Khan, he has
built an army out of impossibilities.” Komawara could not get over his
surprise. “Pirates!”
“It would indicate
that my lord was correct, Sire. The Khan has enlisted pirates so his army can
follow the great canal south to the inner provinces. It seems the barbarian has
considered the possibilities with some care before embarking on this endeavor.”
Komawara nodded. “I
agree, though I suspect it never occurred to the Khan that the army of Seh
would not stand and fight. Once the army of Seh had been defeated, the canal
would take him easily and quickly to the undefended center of Wa. Lord Shonto
has done the unexpected,” Komawara said with satisfaction. “The
canal will prove a difficult road indeed.”
Komawara raised a hand to
stop. “This seems a likely place for a meal, Captain, would you
agree?”
Rohku nodded. They were
on a low hill, the first of the range that lay to the west of the canal. Below
them a large plain stretched north toward Seh, black soil ready for
planting—though it would bear a crop of weeds this season.
They dismounted and a
bamboo mat was rolled out for the lord and the man he treated as a guest.
“As you say, Lord
Komawara, I am sure Lord Shonto will slow the barbarian advance to a crawl. If
only the Emperor will raise the army we need.”
Komawara smiled.
“Yes. It is the one instance where we may pray the Emperor’s spies
are alert. Once they have seen the barbarian army, one would hope the Son of
Heaven will respond accordingly. Though we may be in Itsa before that
happens,” Komawara said with a show of frustration.
A small fire was lit and
food was laid out for the two men. Rohku was unused to the company of
lords—even minor ones from outer provinces—but Komawara was so
natural and likable he soon found himself put at ease.
War, the Captain thought,
may break down more walls than one would expect.
“You have served
the Shonto long?” Komawara asked, trying to carry on the polite
conversation he believed Rohku would expect. Rohku was obviously too young to
have served anyone long.
“Not long, Lord
Komawara. My father is the captain of Lord Shonto’s personal
guard,” he said, trying not to show any sign of pride.
“How is it that I
have not met him?”
“He stays in the Capital performing
duties for our lord.”
“Ah. And you are
also a captain.”
“Recently promoted.” He waved to
the north. “This war has already seen many a junior officer receive ranks
that would otherwise be years away.‘’
“You are modest,
Captain. Lord Shonto would not have sent you to watch the barbarians and
witness the battle of Seh if he did not hold great respect for you.”
Rohku shrugged, coloring
almost imperceptibly. “You are too kind, Lord Komawara. I myself wonder
if any number of lieutenants will not find themselves generals before many
months have passed—such is our need.
“Lord Shonto is off
in the hills somewhere?” What Shonto did and where he was at any given
time was not considered a topic for general discussion, especially now that war
had come, but there was no one within hearing and Komawara seemed at ease with
Rohku—he might drop a hint at least.
The lord waved to the
west. “We make plans for defending the hills. Perhaps Lord Shonto will
explain.”
Rohku nodded. Pressing
the point was out of the question. He looked off to the west. The barbarians
might try to skirt the new lake, and then there might be opportunities for
ambush.
“Perhaps,”
Rohku said, “I will take a more active roll in the near future.”
Komawara nodded as he
ate. When he spoke again, he seemed quite serious. “What you have just
done, Captain Rohku—witnessing the battle of Rhojo-ma—I would have
found this a most difficult duty.” He gave a nodding bow. “You are
to be commended for this.”
Rohku did not look up as
he spoke. “At the battle of
Rhojo-ma I watched, Lord
Komawara. I did not lay down my life.“
“Exactly,”
Komawara said softly.
The conversation failed
then and they ate in silence. Finishing the meal, they set out into the hills,
the conversation stilted until Captain Rohku commented on the quality of
Seh’s horses and then it flowed like a steep river.
They found a road among
the hills and followed that, riding out of the direct sunlight into the trees
robing themselves in new leaves. Shonto guards blocked the way until Komawara
gave the password and they continued on, encountering more and more riders in
blue as they went. Finally, Lord Shonto stood before them in a clearing
surrounded by guards and officers. Conspicuous among them was an ill-dressed
soldier, unarmored like the senior military men, though armed. He carried a
sword in Shonto’s presence.
Komawara and Rohku waited
beside their horses until General Hojo waved them forward. The ragged man
turned and then a smile flickered across his face. It was Rohku Saicha, the
young captain’s father.
The two monks sat on mats
that had been placed in the bow of the river boat. The fair wind of the season
moved them south, if not at great speed, with a consistency that saw the rih
pass in surprising numbers. A rain shower had blown over earlier, but the sun
soon dried the decks and only the occasional droplet from steaming sails
indicated that there had been rain at all. Plum and cherry trees flowered on
the banks and where there would normally be gay parties out under the boughs to
observe the blossoming, frightened refugees streamed south instead.
Brother Sotura was glad
that he could speak to his former student in privacy—only the tribesman
in Shonto livery stood nearby and he was not close enough to overhear. The
sailors had little to do and, as they followed a boat with deeper draft, there
was no lookout in the bow nor did anyone sound the bottom, but out of respect
for the Botahist monks they confined their idling to midships.
“These events are
unsettling, Shuyun-sum,” the sen-
ior Brother was saying.
“So many people torn from their homes. Already there are hungry and, with
such numbers on the roads and canal, disease is appearing. I spend time as I
can now with the sick, but there are more every day.” He shook his head.
“I have written to Brother Hutto in Yankura, but it will be some time
before our Order can respond to a situation that grows worse as we
speak.”
Shuyun touched his hands
together, rocking back and forth slightly as though nodding agreement. “I
have asked Lord Shonto if I could assist you, Brother, but he will not spare
me, though often I have little to do. Every precaution is taken to isolate the
sick from the army and Lord Shonto’s staff. Even our meeting was
difficult to arrange. I regret this.”
“It cannot be
helped, Shuyun-sum. Your part is to advise Lord Shonto so that the interests of
our Order are represented among the powerful of Wa. Now that the situation
gathers momentum by the hour, your role is even more crucial.”
At this Shuyun stopped
rocking.
‘ ’We do our
best to prepare for this calamity, Shuyun-sum, but it is difficult. The future
is uncertain.“ Sotura caught the eye of his student. ”If we knew
more of Lord Shonto’s intent, we could act to assist him and to preserve
our Order so that Botahara’s word would not be lost.“
Shuyun examined his palm,
rubbing it slowly. “My lord hopes to slow the barbarian advance so that
an army may be raised to defend the Empire.‘’
Sotura paused for a
second as though he had suffered a small insult and was unsure how to respond.
When he spoke, he had lowered his voice. “No doubt, Brother Shuyun, this
is true but the Yamaku still sit upon the Dragon Throne and we could do much if
we knew what Lord Shonto… thought about this situation.”
Shuyun shrugged. ‘
’In truth, Brother Sotura, I do not know.“
“Perhaps it would
be useful to find out.”
“My lord gives me
the information he feels I need in my capacity, Brother. I do not presume to
ask for more.”
“As his loyal
Advisor it might be to your lord’s benefit
if you spent time
informing yourself of the situation in the Empire and of your lord’s
intent.“
Shuyun blinked.
“Jaku Katta is
another question, Shuyun-sum. Does he truly have Lord Shonto’s
confidence?”
Shuyun watched a sampan
drift past, carrying men in Shonto blue. “Did not Botahara say, ‘Do
not trust truth to a liar.’ ”
Sotura nodded. “The
guardsman is an opportunist of the worst sort. Trusting him would be an error
indeed. Does he still seek the company of Lady Nishima?”
“Perhaps. I do not
know,” Shuyun said slowly.
“Maybe she has seen
him for what he is and has another interest?”
Shuyun shrugged.
“The personal lives of my lord’s family…” Shuyun threw
up his hands.
Sotura nodded.
“It is a crucial
time, Brother Shuyun. Much could be lost in the coming struggle. We must be
vigilant. The True Path must be protected and we are its chosen
protectors.”
Shuyun stared at the chi
quan instructor until the Master
became uncomfortable.
“Brother
Shuyun?”
Motioning to the Kalam
suddenly, Shuyun leaned toward the tribesman and spoke in the man’s
tongue. The Kalam gave a proper bow and hurried off.
“There is something
you should know, Brother,” Shuyun said quietly. “It will make many
things clear to you. We must wait for my servant.‘’
The Kalam appeared a
moment later, bearing a brocade bag containing something small and angular.
Giving it to Shuyun, he retreated to his former station by the rail and stood
silently.
With great care Shuyun
slid a plain lacquered box out of the bag. He set the box carefully on his
knees and unlatched it. “There is a matter we have discussed before,
Brother Sotura. Let me show you what I have found.” Saying this he opened
the box gently.
On the lining of green
silk lay the blossom of the Udumbara. The breeze touched it and the petals
moved as though still fresh from the branch.
It was not possible to
tell from Sotura’s face if the
older monk was overcome
with joy or deep sadness. He did not move for some time and then, almost
tenderly, he reached out, but as he did so Shuyun withdrew the box, closing it
sharply. The young Brother’s face was very cold.
“I will not trust
it to you, Brother,” Shuyun said firmly.
* * *
I fear that our young protege is
following the path of Brother Satake—I regret to say that Shuyun is not
inclined to provide the information we seek about his liege-lord. The change in
him is remarkable considering the short time he has served the Shonto House,
but there are circumstances we could not have foreseen. Shuyun has in his
possession a blossom from a tree at Monarta. I do not know where this has come
from, but if it was Lord Shonto’s desire to undermine the
Initiate’s loyalty to our Order he could hardly have chosen a more
effective ploy. This situation will be difficult to retrieve now, especially as
Lord Shonto controls my meetings with Shuyun and allows far fewer than I
request. How Shonto came by a blossom from the Udumbara is a mystery—one
can never underestimate this man. Although Shonto’s situation in the
Empire does not appear to be secure, I hesitate to say more. The Emperor may
yet discover that circumstances are not what he believed.
As to Shuyun I am not yet certain what
should be done—he was always a perfect student in the past. Some
action must be taken soon or he will have turned so far from the light that he
will find it difficult to return.
Sotura stopped writing
suddenly. He wondered what the Supreme Master and Brother Hutto would decide
about Shuyun. We have been
caught in a lie by one who believed what he was taught about lies. The deeper
reasons for our decision cannot be seen by a young Initiate, no
matter how talented—all he will see
is our hypocrisy. The Teacher has come and we deny it. How can Shuyun but think
we act from motives that are less than pure? He has not stepped off the True
Path—we have pushed him. May Botahara forgive us.
Sotura picked up the
letter, read through the first few lines by the light of his lamp, and then
very slowly crumpled the paper into a ball. He was not certain that any action
his superiors took with the willful Initiate would not drive this young man
further away. Even I have begun to distrust my superior’s judgment,
Sotura realized, and he made a sign to Botahara.
The monk remembered the
interview with his former student. Even sitting as far as I was, Sotura
thought, I could feel the strength of his chi. I have never known its like.
Thirty-six
The hunting party
followed a winding road down the hillside, riding slowly in the spring
sunshine. It had not been a successful day as the tiger the villagers claimed
to have seen could not be found. The Emperor was disappointed. They had shot
some game birds, certainly, but when one has set out after tiger, pheasant is a
poor substitute. Still, it was a beautiful day and Akantsu II, Emperor of Wa,
was coming out of his sullen mood.
Many varieties of cherry
and plum flowered along the roadside and scattered their petals like a snowfall
across the soft ground of spring. It would not be long now until the Plum
Blossom Wind would perform the feat it was named for, stripping the trees of
their petals and carrying them aloft until the wind seemed laden with blowing
snow.
The rivers, too, would be
covered in fallen blossoms, for the people of Wa loved to plant their flowering
trees along the waterways—the sight of the perfect blossoms borne toward
the sea was symbolic of Botahist thought. Over the centuries so many poems had
been written about the Plum Blossom Winds that it was said nothing new could
ever be written about them—though that stopped no one.
The Emperor rode a gray
mare of the same line as the animals used in the Ceremony of Gray Horses.
Unlike the Hanama who seldom hunted, the Yamaku men rode and rode well. Perhaps
a family that had won its way to the throne only a decade before was not yet
willing to give up the skills that had brought them their victory, so sword and
bow and lance and horse were thought of as essential disciplines in the
Imperial family. Akantsu was a fine horseman and skilled with a sword, though
his
sons, under the influence
of the Empress, had never achieved the mastery of their father.
The Emperor’s
hunting garb was plain by the standards of the lords of the inner provinces,
though it bore trim in Imperial Crimson which more than made up for its lack of
style. As he had hoped to meet a tiger that day, the Emperor’s garb
incorporated a certain amount of lacquered and laced armor, although light and
incomplete by battle standards. A dragon-crested helmet swung from the saddle,
and the Son of Heaven carried his own sword in his sash—not the ancient
sword of office but a blade that had seen many battles and duels.
It was well known among
the courtiers that when Ak-antsu wanted to show displeasure to one of the many
officials who attended him he would sometimes invite them on a hunt. It was
invariably quite unpleasant, for few of the higher officials rode, having spent
their entire lives caught up in the functions of the government and court—and,
of course, in the Capital, as in much of Wa, one usually traveled by boat. The
Emperor reserved this treatment for officials who had done something mildly
annoying. To cross the Emperor seriously would mean postings in the outer
provinces or far worse.
Today there were no
victims in the party. A distant cousin from Chou rode near the Emperor though
they spoke little. The Son of Heaven’s earlier mood had quickly curtailed
attempts at conversation.
A dark feathered hawk
floated across the road, disappearing into the cloud of white blossoms and when
the Emperor turned his eyes back to the road he saw a column of Imperial Guards
appear around a bend, led by Jaku Tadamoto. The Emperor’s men made way
for their acting Commander who dismounted quickly and bowed before his ruler.
“Colonel.”
The Emperor smiled, much to the relief of his party. “Your arrival was
foretold. Only seconds ago a hawk I believe was a Choka passed before
us.” He turned to his cousin. “Almost an apparition, wouldn’t
you agree?”
His cousin, Lord Yamaku,
a small man perhaps a dozen years older than the Emperor, most definitely
agreed. He nodded his head vigorously. More than anything else, Lord Yamaku
resembled a successful mer-
chant. He had that
wealthy, ill-bred manner and dress that bad taste damned many with in the
Imperial Court. Not that the man’s taste was glaringly awful, but among
people whose standards were strict and whose imagination was limited he stood
out like a farmer in a Sonsa troupe.
“The Choka hawk has
proven to be well chosen, then,” Tadamoto said. The Emperor had given the
Jaku House the symbol, raising their status considerably among the new Houses.
The Emperor smiled again.
“It is kind of you to ride out to meet us, Colonel. I intend to stop at
the shrine for the view. Would you accompany us?”
“I would be more
than honored. May I ask, Sire, how went the hunt?”
A cloud drifted across
the Emperor’s face, but then a wan smile replaced it. “I believe
the tiger we hunted today was mythical. Or a master of subterfuge. We had
beaters out for several rih and managed to move nothing. And Lord Yamaku had so
wanted to use his new bow.”
“I am sorry to
learn this, Sire. Tigers make poor subjects, sometimes—ignoring their
duties, leaving without being dismissed, and eating perfectly dutiful subjects.
I don’t know what can be done about them.”
The Emperor laughed.
“Yes, this one is said to have eaten a loyal woodsman. A beastly thing to
do when I have any number of courtiers and officials I could willingly spare.
Most inconsiderate.” He laughed again and the others nearby, deeming the
Emperor’s mood changed, laughed as well.
Turning off the road they
followed a trail out onto a rounded promontory where a small shrine to the
plague-dead stood. Knowing the Emperor’s opinions on the matter, no one
made signs to Botahara. They passed on to the lookout point where the Emperor
and his party dismounted.
“String your new
bow, cousin,” the Emperor said pleasantly. “Tadamoto-sum is an
appreciator of fine weapons.”
An archery contest was
quickly organized among the officers of the guard using Lord Yamaku’s
bow. Much laughter accompanied the Emperor’s suggestion that an officer
donate his very stylish hat for a target. This was
fixed to a nearby tree
and the Emperor took up a seat on a rock, flanked by Tadamoto and his cousin as
judges.
Lord Yamaku did not join
the contest as it would have been very impolite for anyone to best a member of
the Imperial family and Tadamoto was the guard Commander, so a similar
etiquette applied.
Each contestant shot
three arrows and though not every one found its mark, the hat was soon well
ventilated indeed. The archers could not be said to be remarkable in their
skill, but they were well matched so the contest was close and therefore more
enjoyable for all concerned.
Once the contest had
drawn everyone’s attention, the Emperor turned to Tadamoto. “I
trust you did not ride all this way to view the blossoms, Colonel?” he
said quietly.
Tadamoto nodded. “I
have received a report from the north.” He searched for the right words.
“It is a disturbing report, Emperor.”
The Emperor nodded. He
watched a young officer make a shot and applauded the result. Leaning over, he
spoke quietly to his cousin who bowed quickly. The Emperor nodded to Tadamoto
and the two men rose. All present dropped to their knees until the Emperor was
several paces away.
Walking to the lookout,
the Emperor leaned against the railing that protected the foolish from the
steep drop. Behind him the land stretched off to the Imperial Capital and the
Lake of the Lost Dragon. The river wound its way toward the sea and as far as
Tadamoto could see the landscape was decorated with flowering trees. Even the
distant Mountain of the Pure Spirit seemed to be covered in a haze of white.
“Colonel.”
The Emperor nodded for Tadamoto to continue.
“I have a report
that Lord Shonto has left Seh and proceeds south on the canal accompanied by an
army.‘’
The Emperor nodded calmly
as though he had not just heard an announcement of civil war—civil war
with the Shonto.
“A missive has
arrived bearing the seal of the Governor of Seh. I broke all protocol and
brought it with me, Sire.”
The Emperor nodded again.
“There is more?”
Tadamoto nodded.
“Reports have been received that a large barbarian army has crossed the
border of Seh. I do not consider these substantiated at this time, however.
‘’
“The
missive?”
Tadamoto signaled one of
his guards, and a small box was brought forward. Opening this, Tadamoto removed
the official letter and, to the guardsman’s surprise, the Emperor reached
out and took it directly from the Colonel’s hand. Looking at the seal,
the Emperor broke it and opened the letter with no show of haste. He read.
Tadamoto pretended to
admire the view. It was impolite to look directly at the Emperor for more than
a few seconds and, under the circumstances, Tadamoto thought even a few seconds
might not be advisable.
The Emperor lowered the
scroll. He looked off at some unseen distance for a moment and then handed the
paper to Tadamoto. “Read this,” he said, his tone mild.
Sire:
A barbarian army has crossed the northern
border of Seh, an army of one hundred thousand armed men. Their immediate
objective appears to be Rhojo-ma, but I do not believe this army plans to
finish its campaign in the provincial capital. As the entire force available in
the Province of Seh is less than a quarter the number in the invading army, I
do not feel we can stop the barbarians from advancing into Itsa Province and
then further south.
Our decision, therefore, has been to
leave Seh and move our army down the canal, resisting the invaders as we go. If
all goes well, I believe this will give the Empire until midsummer to raise the
force necessary to combat the barbarian army.
Five thousand men of Seh stayed to defend
the city of Rhojo-ma, hoping to give the main force time to cross the border
and begin the recruitment. This we will do.
I regret to say that I do not think this
barbarian force can be countered successfully without assistance from the
Imperial Government. I do not
expect to be able to raise enough men to
meet the threat to the Empire even by the time we reach Chiba Province.
We can say little yet of the skills of
this barbarian army and its commanders and will report as soon as more is
known. Certainly, the tribes are led by the Golden Khan who flies a banner of
gold bearing a dragon of crimson. I believe, Sire, that this chieftain has
designs upon the throne of Wa.
Those who have followed me in this move
south are brave and industrious men and I have faith that we can slow the
invaders’ advance, but an army must be raised to meet this threat,
preferably in Chiba Province. We destroy all crops as we go, but once the
barbarians have reached Chiba, this will become more difficult and if they
cross the border into Dentou it will be impossible. They will also be within
striking distance of the Imperial Capital.
I remain your Majesty’s servant,
Shonto Motoru
The Emperor had no
compunctions about watching Tadamoto’s face as he read and the young man
found as he finished the letter that he was being stared at.
“He makes no
mention that it was his sworn duty to protect the borders of the Province of
Seh.”
Tadamoto nodded, not
needing to ask who “he” referred to.
The Emperor turned and
looked out at the view, his hands resting lightly on the rail. For some moments
he stood like that in silence and when he spoke he did not turn his head.
“We did not think
he would be able to find the support for a civil war—not in Seh. He fails
to mention how large a force accompanies him south?”
“That is true,
Emperor.”
“A significant
oversight in the former governor’s report. It is not possible that Motoru
has raised the force he needs in Seh.” This did not seem to be a
question, so Tadamoto said nothing. The “thunk” of arrows strik-
ing wood punctuated the
silence. “How goes the raising of our army, Colonel?”
“Well, Sire, but I
will redouble our efforts now.” The Emperor nodded. “We will do
more. We must prepare a plan to meet Shonto’s army—somewhere beyond
the Capital. There is no telling who will flock to his banner once he enters
Dentou Province.” The Emperor fell silent again. “Where on the
canal is my useless son?”
“He has not yet
crossed the border into Chiba Province, Sire.” Tadamoto brushed white
petals from the small dragons embroidered over the breast on his uniform.
The Emperor’s
shoulders went stiff. “Not yet in Chiba?”
“Yes, Sire.”
The Emperor snorted.
“I will send a letter to the Prince in my own hand: an Imperial directive
to proceed north with all haste and relieve Shonto of the command of the army.
He is then to stop any barbarian invasion he is able to find and send Shonto to
the Capital under guard. How do you think the former governor will react to
that?”
“To do anything but obey the son of the
Emperor, Sire… would be a foolish mistake.”
“Yes, but it would
do away with this pose of protector of the Empire. He will be a rebel and
called one.”
Tadamoto nodded even
though the Emperor looked out toward the Capital.
“Have you heard
from your brother, Colonel?”
“I have not, Emperor.”
The Emperor rubbed his
hands slowly along the railing. “We might hope that he stayed in Seh to defend Rhojo-ma. All who accompany Shonto support a rebel.”
“He shames the Jaku House, Sire. We
will turn our back to him.”
The Emperor nodded
slowly. “I believe this matter should be discussed immediately in the
Great Council. We will have the Empire know that Shonto has abandoned his
duties in the north and comes south with an armed force. It is not this ragged
Khan who has designs on the throne. If we had only kept that Fanisan daughter
in the Capital!” It was the closest thing to an expression
of anger the Emperor had
made, but when he spoke again his voice was calm. “She will not sit upon
my throne, Colonel, nor will Motoru stand behind it.” He turned now and
looked directly at Tadamoto. “So we must raise a great army, Colonel. My
father fought the Shonto and won—I intend to do the same. But I will not
be so generous after my victory.‘’
Thirty-seven
Shokan lay still in the
darkness wondering what one felt when overcome by the cold. Did a person simply
sleep and not wake? Or was it painful or frightening? If one still felt the
cold, was that a sign that one was closer to life than death? Cold was what the
young lord felt: deep, pervasive cold. The bones of his legs ached with cold
and in his feet there was no feeling at all.
With some effort the lord
pulled his mind away from this avenue of thought and tried to consider the
coming day. He had held a brief council with his staff that night, huddled in a
circle in the dark, no fire to offer warmth or even cheer. Hard choices had
been discussed and decisions made. Destroying the horses had weighed heavily on
everyone; unfortunately, no one had offered an alternative that would allow the
group to continue. It had been a fool’s hope that the snows would not be
deep in the pass so early in the season, but then there had been few paths open
to them. Bringing the horses was a risk perhaps not everyone had understood.
Shonto Shokan had made
the decision to destroy his stallion himself, though certainly it was not a
task a lord of a Great House should even consider. Still, he felt this
situation was of his own making and could not ask another to perform the duties
his poor decision had made necessary. This kind of thinking was a trait of the
young lord’s that drove his father mad. The senior Shonto even went so far
as to blame their former Spiritual Advisor, Brother Satake, for encouraging
this trait, saying it was good education for children but the worst foolishness
for the lord of a major House. Shokan almost laughed aloud at the memory. It
was his impression that Brother Satake had quietly defied everyone; may
Botahara protect him.
There had been no wood
for fires that night and the
sky had remained
perfectly clear, allowing the bitter cold of the mountains free rein. The
eastern sky was barely gray behind the white peaks that loomed above, but that
was enough to have men up and moving, trying to restore circulation, praying
the sun would not tarry and the sea wind would bring them warmth. It was a
great irony that by night they huddled together in teeth-chattering cold while
by day the sun burned their faces and had them stripped down to their lightest
robes.
Shokan pushed his cover
aside and turned onto his back. He had been rolling over at regular intervals
all night trying not to expose one side for too long to the bitter chill that
seeped up from the snow—not a restful night. He was hungry and worried
about their food supplies. Horse meat would take them some distance, no doubt,
but they were still many days away from the western end of the pass. In a
purely foolish act they had, to a man, fed some of their precious grain to the
horses the night before—a last meal—but the lack of fires to melt
snow had meant no water. There was no doubt that the horses would soon be dead
without any assistance from their reluctant riders.
Forcing himself to sit
up, Shokan felt the chill wind that still swept down from the peaks. He stayed
sitting for a moment, beating his hands on his arms and shoulders. The snow
would be frozen into a steel-hard crust now, a surface that would support a
man’s weight with ease, but it was also steep, treacherous ice and had
led to the loss of many of their party.
From up the gulley Shokan
heard the measured rhythm of footsteps as the guides moved higher. The previous
day they had made a stairway while the snow was soft and now they climbed up to
its top where they would continue by cutting more steps in the hard snow. It
was a slow, laborious process.
Shokan thought again of
their limited food supplies, wondering if he led his retainers to a futile end
in some frozen pass. My father needs every armed man he can find, he reminded
himself. Every risk is acceptable.
Looking up at the
mountains, Shokan thought of the vast valley that lay on their opposite side
down which ran the delicate ribbon of the Grand Canal. It seemed very far away,
almost unreachable.
A single peak above
caught the light of the rising sun and the young lord felt a great relief.
Around him he could make out the shapes of men and horses. Shades of gray began
to take on color and shapes definition.
“Sire?” a
voice whispered.
Shokan turned to his
guard who pointed up the slope. Not far away, half a dozen bearded men crouched
down on their heels and watched, their faces impassive. Mountain people…
Shokan turned to his
guard who stared openly, unaware that his lord regarded him. Moving with great
care, Shokan found the small platform he had stamped out before the snow froze
and got unsteadily to his unfeeling feet.
Though he half expected
them to start like deer and bound off, the crouching men made no move. It was
the worst manners, but Shokan found himself staring like his guard. Mountain
people! He could not hide his surprise.
The men crouching before
him were dressed so completely in furs and skins that nothing showed but
weathered faces. At their belts they carried long knives, almost swords, and,
on their backs, bows of an almost pure white wood. As he had read, these men
had deep blue eyes, like one sometimes saw among the southern barbarians.
Slowly, Shokan extended
his hands, palms out, all the while searching his memory for words he had heard
Brother Satake speak in the mountain tongue—but none came. His father had
said that Shuyun spoke their language, and Shokan wondered if this was not
uncommon for a Botahist scholar.
Turning to his guard
Shokan said, “The Botahist monks often know the mountain
tongue—pass the word down the line to anyone educated by the
Brothers.”
The mountain people
looked on as Shokan extended his hands, but there was no reaction
visible—it might have been his private morning ritual for all the
response it received. He tried gesturing to the snow nearby and smiling in
invitation, but the men crouching in the snow did not move. Both parties were
soon reduced to staring at each other in silence.
After this had gone on
for some time, Shokan noticed a movement higher up on the guides’
stairway. Another
group made its way down
toward the snowbound low-landers.
As this second party
arrived, the first group turned and bowed stiffly. The object of this show of
respect seemed to be an old, leather-faced man in a worn hooded robe gathered
at the waist by a silk sash of faded purple. What animal had contributed its
coat to this old man’s warmth Shokan could not say, for the fur was
unknown to him— deep gray with tips of silver.
The old man continued
right past the bowing mountain people and stopped about three paces beyond Lord
Shon-to’s guard who had been unable to move quickly enough on the
treacherous footing to stop him. Shokan gave them a signal to stand ready but
do nothing for now.
The old man stood, arms
crossed, hands buried in the sleeves of his robe. His face was as impassive as
his companions’ though his eyes were the color of a sky washed with a
high mist. The mountain race seemed to be smaller than the people of Wa though
Shokan suspected they were broad of shoulder under their layers of fur.
The old man pointed at
the Shonto lord. “Name,” he said, not inflecting the word like a
question, though Shokan assumed it was meant to be one. “Lord Shonto
Shokan. And you?” The old man did not respond, but among his companions
there was a whispering. Shokan was certain he heard the name of his
father’s Spiritual Advisor spoken more than once, as impossible as it
seemed.
“Brother
Shuyun,” Shokan said. “Do you speak of Brother Shuyun?”
After a moment the old
man nodded his ancient head once, his expression never altering. It was such an
odd movement, Shokan was not sure the man’s head had not simply fallen
forward and then been returned to its upright position. It hardly seemed an
expression of agreement.
With a quick motion the
old man pointed up the slope. “Fight,” he said with some animation.
Shokan was not sure what
this meant but obviously some response was desired.
“Shu-yung
fight!” the man said with more urgency.
“This is
hopeless,” Shokan whispered to his guard. “What does he
mean?”
“Tribes…
fight, shu-yung,” the man said, and pointed up into the mountains again.
Tribes; the word struck the lord like cold wind. He nodded
slowly, still far from certain. He was not even sure that nodding meant
agreement to these people. Shu-yung, the old man was saying, a word so close to
Shuyun in their odd pronunciation that to Shokan’s ear it was barely
different—a slight ring in the last syllable, that was all.
The old man’s face
split in a smile then and he broke into his own tongue, speaking so fast that
the men listening could have easily been convinced it was all a single long
word. He smiled again. “Fight tribes, shu-yung,” he said with some
finality. Turning to his companions he spoke again, and Shokan was almost
certain he heard the word Yankura.
A man detached himself
from the others and ran easily up the slope, causing the men of Wa much envy.
“Yankura?”
Shokan said. “Yankura?”
“Yan-khuro,”
the old man enunciated slowly, as though he corrected a child.
“Yan-khura.
Yul-khuro, yan yul. Shu-yung,” he said, and then, as if for good measure,
“fight.”
Shokan nodded and smiled.
Am I agreeing? he wondered, and if so, to what?
Pointing at
Shokan’s horse with that same quick motion, the old man spoke in his
tongue again, then shook his head. Holding his hands together as though he held
a bowl, he made a drinking motion and then pointed at the horse, his face
suddenly sad.
“Sire,”
Shokan’s guard said quietly, “above us.”
A small army of fur-clad
mountain dwellers descended the slope, many down the stairway but as many
walking directly down the steel hard snow without losing their footing. Shokan
realized he stared openmouthed, but then it was a wonder indeed.
“What will happen
now?” Shokan heard someone say. He gave a short laugh.
“I don’t
know.” Despite a lifetime’s training in suspicion, the lord somehow
knew these people meant them no harm. “I don’t know,” he said
again.
The mountain people
passed by Shokan with barely a nod and a half smile, but the horses were
another matter. These were objects of great admiration. Shokan was afraid the
numbers of people milling around would spook the animals, but it quickly became
obvious that the mountain dwellers were well versed in the handling of animals
and undoubtedly horses, too.
The old man came a few
paces closer to be heard above the noise of his people. He spoke a few words in
his own tongue and then pointed at Shokan’s horse. “No
fight,” he said quietly. Then pointing at Shokan’s saddle bags and
assorted gear. “Shuyunal.” He gestured to his people.
“Shuyun.” Then he pointed up the pass and gave his odd single nod.
Shokan copied the
gesture, then turned to his guard. “Find the boy. Have him tell everyone
to offer no resistance to these people. We will leave them the horses and they
will assist us over the pass… I think.”
Shokan turned back to the
old man, but he had turned and was trudging slowly up the stairway.
“Shuyun,” a
voice said beside him. Shokan turned to look at a beardless, smiling child.
Tapping his chest, the child smiled again. “Shuyun,” he said.
“Ah,” the
lord said. This is Shuyun? But then he realized the same word was being
repeated up and down the line. Two others were fitting die pole to
Shokan’s armor box and lifting it easily to their shoulders although the
lord knew it contained suits of both heavy and light armor as well as other
arms and assorted pieces of gear for repairs.
The smiling child beside
him began to collect the lord’s belongings, and a guard quickly moved to
intervene.
“No,” the
young lord said. “I will allow it.” He began to roll his own
bedding, though rather clumsily.
“Shuyun,” he
heard someone say down the line, and then again and again as though it were a
chant.
To Shokan’s
surprise the mountain people led his party back down the gulley, making steps
for the lowlanders as they went. He feared that there was a great misunderstanding
and the mountain people were returning the lowlanders to the valley they had
escaped, but he decided to wait a bit and see what would happen.
As the party came out
from the shade of the great stone peak, the sun hit them and Shonto saw signs
being made to Botahara by his men. They smile now, the lord thought, but in
only a few hours the snow will soften and then the dread will return. They had
seen what happened as the softening snow began to lose its hold, seen it come
thundering down in great, white waves.
Looking over his
shoulder, Shokan could still see the horses—surrounded by admirers. He
hoped they were not to suffer the same fate at the hands of these people that
they were about to at the hands of their owners. His foot slipped, but he
recovered quickly. This was no place to be looking about or admiring the
scenery. The footing was treacherous and would be until the sun had done its
work.
The great coastal plain
appeared around a corner, stretching off to the sea lost in a mist. The
lowlands seemed green and warm and welcoming from this height and Shokan felt
an urge to return. But there was no returning. Imperial Guards would be waiting
below and had no doubt taken possession of the Shonto fief. There was only the
mountains and whatever lay on the other side, if he were fortunate enough to
see the western slopes.
Unlike his retainers
Shokan carried no weight but his sword, and even so he did not go as lightly as
the mountain people who bore the heaviest burdens. The lord had watched with
fascination as the mountain people made up their loads, rigging these to be
carried by a single strap across the forehead. The smallest mountain dweller bore
twice what the largest lowlanders could carry, and with ease. Altitude was said
to rob a man of his breath and Shokan did not doubt it now.
Before the sun was high
they had come down around the peak to the south and here they dug down through
the snow bank of the trench that formed on either side of the gulley, leaving a
wide gap between the snow and the rock. Water ran in the bottom of the trench
now and water skins were filled. A brief but slippery scramble took them up to
a ledge as wide as a man was tall. The sun had melted whatever snow had lain
here and the rock was dry and almost warm to the touch.
There was no talk. The
mountain people seemed little
inclined to chat as they
went, and the lowlanders needed every bit of breath just to keep the pace. The
height may have had something to do with this silence, for though the ledge
only sloped up slightly the floor of the gulley widened and sloped away so that
they were higher with each step. The lowlanders crowded the rock wall and tried
to keep their gaze fixed ahead, which meant all but a few missed an astonishing
vista.
The ledge narrowed here
and there, enough to make the passage of certain sections a test of nerve.
Shokan knew that Shonto guards would go into battle, no matter what the odds,
without hesitation, but heights were a different matter. Slipping off a ledge
was hardly an honorable end. Of course, none wished to be seen as cowardly
before their fellows or the son of their liege-lord, so much effort went into
disguising fears. Still, Shokan was sure that he had seen men famed for their
prowess on the battlefield traverse the more difficult sections with far less
confidence than some of their younger and less fearsome companions. It almost
made him smile.
Where the ledge narrowed
to nothing, wooden walkways appeared to bridge the gaps and these were
constructed in so flimsy a manner that all the lowlanders said a prayer for the
protection of their souls before crossing. Shokan wondered how they bore the
weight of snow or if they were reconstructed each spring. So poorly engineered
did these walkways appear, the fact that they had no railings went almost
unnoticed. To everyone’s surprise they did not collapse.
By late afternoon the
long snake of humanity had wound its way around to the south, and the ledge
ended in a saddle between two peaks. They began to descend again, at first on
soft snow and then, as they came into the shadow of the southern peak, on
hardened crust.
Steps were cut again and
the party slowed accordingly. The valley widened and the west-moving sun found
its way down to them again, making the snow heavy. In compensation, trees began
to appear with greater and greater frequency, raising hopes for fires that
evening.
A stream appeared out of
nowhere and wound its way down the valley. Looking into the running water,
Shokan could see rocks and earth and realized the depth of snow was much less
than he had expected.
Suddenly the mountain
people came to a halt on a smatt bench and with smiles and nods and gestures
made it clear that this was as far as they would go that day. As camp was made,
Shokan tried to estimate numbers. His retainers numbered thirty three hundred,
remarkable when one considered the losses they had suffered to the snow slides.
There were easily that number of mountain people, whom his own men had begun to
call “dwellers” or even “the Shuyuns” which they
thought funny. Close to eight thousand people.
Shokan hoped he would be
able to describe this to his father one day. Eight thousand people over the
most impossible terrain and they had covered at least twelve rih, maybe more.
It was astonishing—it was more than astonishing; it was impossible!
The dwellers surprised
the lowlanders again by starting the tiniest twig fires to brew cha and do some
meager cooking. These they fed constantly with dried grasses and moss and dead
needles from trees. They had reacted with horror when the Shonto men had begun
to cut down trees for proper fires and Shokan had quickly ordered this
stopped.
The lord had to admit
that despite the fact that a terrible war was perhaps already under way across
the mountains he found his own situation fascinating. Almost nothing was known
about these people, and here they were, chatting away cheerfully beside him.
There was so little room
in the encampment that everyone was in the closest proximity. Shonto’s
men had, naturally, kept a suitable distance from their lord so that he might
have a semblance of privacy, and this area had quickly been filled with the
dwellers, who did not seem to have much concern for rank unless one were a
wizened old man in rather bedraggled furs.
Shokan’s guards
were not terribly comfortable with this, but the lord reasoned that they were
entirely at the mercy of these people who could easily have murdered him before
now if that was their intention. The lord resolved not to worry though it was
obvious that his guard could not reach the same resolution, for they watched
the dwellers near their lord and exchanged the darkest looks.
Using his hands and an
art for pantomime that would have given Lady Nishima cause for pride, Shokan
tried
to discover the words for
common things—fire, trail, food, drink. It was more difficult than he
might have expected and caused much laughter.
The greatest reaction
came when the lord tried to learn the words for man and woman. He was so
obviously surprised at discovering the boy who carried his belongings was in
fact a young woman that he thought the laughter would never stop. And the poor
woman, it seemed, would be teased forever, but she took it well enough and
didn’t seem to hold him responsible for his own ignorance.
Darkness came with a
suddenness that was almost startling. Despite attempts to stay awake and pry as
many words as possible from his fireside companions, Shokan fell asleep. The
last thing he heard was the dwellers singing softly in high, thin
voices—a sound both eerie and oddly comforting.
It was much later, in the
middle of the night, that Shokan awoke with a start. He took a moment to sort
out his memory of the evening from his dream and then convinced himself what
had startled him to consciousness had been part of a dream, nothing more.
Laying back down, the lord tried to banish the feeling he was left with, but
with little success. In his dream the dwellers’ song had been a Botahist
chant, translated into the mountain tongue and modified to suit the
dwellers’ ideas of music. It was strangely disturbing to him and he lay
awake for some time, unable to shake the emotions the dream had
evoked—unable to shiver away the feeling of cold.
Morning arrived long
before the light. They were on the west side of a mountain now and the sun
would not find them until past midday. Shokan had begun to believe that the
dwellers were people of infinite patience, but as preparations were made to set
out this was proven wrong. “Ketah,” he learned, was the word for hurry. If Shuyun had been the refrain of the
previous day, ketah had taken its place. The highly
trained fighters of the Shonto guard were bullied and badgered and hurried
until Shokan feared there would be an incident, but frayed tempers were kept in
check and in remarkable time the company was on the move again.
Shokan took his place
behind Quinta-la, the woman he
had caused so much
embarrassment the night before. A small scene with his guards had ensued when
Shokan insisted on carrying some of his own belongings, but he had prevailed
and now carried a load, dweller style, which he was certain would soon
disconnect his neck from his shoulders. Before him walked a much smaller woman
carrying three times his own load; her step was light and sure. It made him
smile.
If Nishi-sum had been
able to bear three times as much as he, there would have been nothing to do but
throw himself on his sword—a warrior had a certain pride. But the fact
that this child could carry more than he could ever hope to bear caused him
nothing but amusement and delight.
I have been transported
to a strange world, he thought, like the stories read to me as a child.
The work of carrying a
load and matching the pace of his guides soon warmed Shokan and hunger replaced
the feeling of cold, for they had started out having taken neither drink nor
food. There was no indication that the dwellers planned to stop for a morning meal
and inns seemed sadly few.
The lord wondered idly if
his retainers suffered the soreness of leg that he felt. It was obvious that
Quinta-la knew no such discomfort. And this made him smile also.
There was perhaps one
thing that saved the lowlanders that morning—they were taller than the
mountain people, so the steps that were cut in the hard snow seemed quite close
together to them. Even this small step down soon had thighs burning from the
effort for every step down meant taking the extra weight of the carried load.
Fatigue caused a few slips, but none of these became disasters. By noon the
leaders of the party had reached the snow line and soon only the deepest
shadows still sheltered patches of white—the oddest effect; white
shadows. The ground, however, was wet from days of snow-melt and this offered
its own hazards to footing. Sometime after midday the sun worked its way down
among the peaks, warming the walkers and illuminating the view. Shokan was
impressed with the size of the valley—broad and long and green.
Still-frozen lakes like pieces of jade strung together on a bubbling stream lay
in the valley bottom.
As the party made its way
down, the trees grew larger and less twisted. The scent of pine on the breeze
was strong.
The way became a road of
rock suddenly, wide slabs of stone set as though they had once been a perfect
avenue but shifted by frost and time and neglect. Shokan pointed at this and
made the gesture that he believed meant a question, but all he received in
reply was a string of unknown sounds and a smile. He looked at his guard
captain who had come up beside him.
The captain shrugged.
“It is either a giant’s road or a natural formation, Sire, and I
must admit I prefer neither explanation over the other.”
And this delighted the
lord also—he realized he preferred it to be a mystery. They walked on
with ease along this broad avenue.
What the lord had
believed was mist ahead he was becoming convinced was actually smoke. Gaining
the attention of Quinta-la, he pointed ahead. She spoke one of the dozen words
Shokan knew—the one he believed meant fire.
“Well, yes,”
he said, “but does that fire signify anything? Food, perhaps?”
The young woman broke
into her childlike smile and rattled on in her own tongue, gesturing off at the
distance as she did so.
“Ah, I suspected as
much,” Shokan said, as though he had understood every word. “Will
there be baths at this inn as well as fine meals?”
Quinta-la answered
without a second’s hesitation.
They carried on this
preposterous conversation for some time, talking in turn, as though there were
perfect communication. Both laughing and gesturing like children.
Shokan did not see the
faces of his men nearby, or he chose to ignore them, but they kept glancing at
him as though he had taken leave of his senses. Only the guard captain found
the exchange amusing, and he was careful not to show he was listening.
The inn turned out to be
a small village, though anyone from the Empire would have had a different image
in mind if given the word village as a description. It sat upon what amounted
to a hill on the north side of the
valley and was almost one
rambling building made of a gray-white stone and roofed with a simple dark
tile. Stone walkways and walls connected all the various wings and alleys, and
courtyards filled in the spaces that were left. Shokan could not guess how many
people lived in this place, but shutters opened and smiling faces appeared at
windows to watch the arrival of the lowlanders. It was almost as if it happened
all the time.
Thirty-eight
When faced with an overwhelming force
there is only one possible response: limit your opponent’s ability to
bring such power to bear. Make them place pieces that will hamper their own
attack and you will have enlisted their pieces in your own defence. Position
becomes the essence of survival, the only hope for winning.
Writings of the Gü Master Sow
Shuyun rode along the
rise in the late afternoon. The shadows of the plum trees stretched across the
ground, twisted into impossibly elongated shapes. The blossoms had not yet
begun to fall, but there was a dusting of white on the ground—a sign of
what was to come.
To the monk’s right
lay the sea that had been created by Lord Taiki’s dam; its surface
rippled like the scales of a dragon. It was impressive in its size. Shuyun
stood in his stirrups for a better view. To the east he could not see the shore
that lay somewhere beyond the old canal banks, but then there had been
extensive areas of marsh there—lands that resisted draining.
If not for the odd tree
growing out of its surface and the top of a meandering stone wall, it would
have appeared a natural lake—one that had known these shores for a
thousand years, not mere days. Too new for dragons to have taken up residence,
Shuyun thought. But even so it seemed a likely dragon pond. Crows screamed over
the bloated form of a dead horse lying half submerged in the middle of the
sea—a result of the Khan’s attempt to march his army through the
waters.
In many places the water
would only be inches deep,
but the soil underneath
was so soft it would turn to impassible mud with the least agitation.
Extricating horses and men had taken an afternoon, and more animals than the
one Shuyun could see had broken legs.
So the Khan had done as
was expected, skirted the sea to the west through the hills. As Shuyun topped a
slight rise he could see, in the distance, the van of the barbarian army making
its camp for the night. The gold banners of the great Khan himself fluttered in
the Plum Blossom Wind. Shuyun often wondered about this mysterious barbarian,
wondered what Hitara could have told him of this man if Shuyun had ever caught
up with the monk in the streets of Rhojo-ma. Shuyun shook his
head—Brother Hitara was himself a great mystery.
The men the monk could
see were only the tip of the army of the desert. The largest part of the
Khan’s force would be spending the night on the road that wound through
the hills. It would not be a comfortable night despite clear skies and the
promise of warm breezes. Lord Shonto’s archers controlled much of the
forest that bordered the road and even in the dark an army of one hundred
thousand would be an easy target. There would be no fires for the barbarian
warriors that night nor much rest either.
Shuyun’s guard
whispered among themselves, and the monk realized they thought he came too
close to the army of the desert. He stopped for a last look at the scene,
offering a prayer to Botahara to protect the souls of the men who would soon be
lost here.
A soft zephyr brought the
scent of plum blossoms to the monk and the sigh of wind in the trees. The
sounds and the perfume reminded him of Lady Nishima, and he felt his memory
stir. With an effort he forced his mind back to the present.
Much of Lord
Shonto’s plan had resulted from an observation Shuyun had made over
cha—a quote from the gü Master, Soto—and Shuyun felt the
weight of that.
A council had been called
to decide how best to take advantage of the change in geography they had
initiated. The argument had gone thus: the barbarian force was virtually
limitless; to pass the sea that had been created by the new dam the army would
have to march to the west through forested hills; the way through the hills was
narrow and winding; if
barbarian patrols discovered an ambush in the hills the Khan could muster
unlimited numbers of men to destroy it; if the barbarian patrols simply
disappeared in the hills, the Khan’s response would again be to send in
large forces; a serious defense of the road through the hills was possible but
the result inevitable, and the cost in lives would be great. Therefore, what
was the purpose of the exercise?
The resulting decisions
were largely dependent on timing for their success, timing and several tenets
of the gü board. Once a player is certain he perceives his
opponent’s plan, does he continue to search for other threats?
Shuyun turned his horse
around. The sun would make its daily plunge into the mountains soon, and he had
several rih to ride to the boat Shonto was using as his command position. The
plan was set, the forces had been committed days ago. There was nothing to do
but wait.
A single encounter with a
barbarian patrol in the darkness would put the entire exercise at risk.
Fortunately, the softness of the ground allowed horses to pass in relative
silence and barbarian patrols were either few or concentrated elsewhere.
Jaku worried that they
would not arrive at the canal with enough men to perform the task entrusted to
them— it would be easy to lose half the company in such darkness. Even
recent breaks in the cloud cover which had begun to provide some starlight did
nothing to relieve the Guard Commander’s growing pessimism. To his right
Jaku could make out Lord Komawara riding easily, setting the pace. Perhaps it
was this that soured the general’s mood—command of the company had
been given to Komawara Samyamu, not Jaku Katta.
Even in this low light
Jaku could see they were skirting the northern edge of the small sea that had
been created—putting them uncomfortably in barbarian controlled lands.
The Khan’s army was camped on the road through the hills where they
awaited morning. When the sun rose, the barbarian army would hurl their massive
numbers against the makeshift defenses around the newly built dam. It was the
prayer of the men of Wa that the Khan believed he knew his enemy’s
intentions and saw no traps nor surprises.
The plan, as it had
developed, was simple. A false ambush had been set on the road through the
hills and this had been discovered by a barbarian patrol. A significant
skirmish ensued, resulting in the ambush failing, though at some loss to both
sides. A spirited defense of the road through the hills had then been staged by
Shonto’s forces, led by General Hojo. Two days it had taken the barbarian
army to force its way through to within striking distance of the dam. And now
almost the entire barbarian army was stretched along the single narrow road,
unable to move quickly either forward or back.
The supply train for that
army, however, was borne by rafts moored against the canal bank to the north of
the sea, waiting for the army to open the canal. Of course, the barbarian
chieftains had not been foolish enough to leave the supply train
untended—five thousand barbarian warriors stood guard—but it was
perhaps the smallest guard such a valuable objective would ever have.
Shonto had gambled,
leaving Komawara and Jaku hidden north of the lake with a force of eighteen
hundred men, hoping they would not be discovered, hoping the barbarians would
do exactly what they had done with their supply train.
Komawara’s force
had waited in utter silence for several days until a single rider had come from
General Hojo bearing the orders to attack. The general had fought a wily battle
on the road through the hills, offering enough resistance to convince the
barbarian it was a true defense but keeping losses to a minimum. And now the
barbarian army was strung out along a twelve rih road with their command
virtually isolated at the southern end. A small force under the command of
Rohku Saicha would fall upon the northern end of the barbarian force at dawn,
their objective to cut off all assistance to the supply rafts. Jaku admired the
plan and had made some suggestions himself though it had been Shonto who had
outlined the original idea to his staff. No one could say that the Shonto were
timid! It was a bold plan in conception and required execution in the same
manner. So why put this bumbling child in charge of the most crucial element?
Jaku worked to control the anger caused by this slight. The coming fight would
require absolute focus. They skirted the perimeter of a wood now, staying on
the edge of the shadow,
giving the company as much camouflage as possible while providing enough light
to find the way. Earlier a soft rain had fallen and found its way under
Jaku’s armor—just enough water to make him cold and
uncomfortable—and the light breeze was not helping matters. The general
kept working his left arm as he rode, keeping it limber and warm, knowing that
being wet coupled with a cool breeze could slow his muscles considerably. He
was surprised others did not do the same.
Lord Komawara pulled up
his mount to be sure the entire company was collected and then sent two riders
ahead. An open meadow about half a rih across stretched out before them. Low
walls of stone divided the area with a pattern of erratic dark lines, creating
a hundred fields, irregular in both shape and size.
The two riders crossed
the open area, losing shape as they went until they became a single, black
shadow moving over the starlit field. No one spoke while waiting, but the
sounds of horses shifting and rolling bits broke the stillness. One of
Jaku’s guards dismounted to tighten his girth—the thud of a knee
against a belly and a sharp exhalation of breath.
The black shape of the
two riders appeared again, returning, moving over the dark landscape that
played tricks on the eyes. The black shape divided and became two riders who
approached Komawara and spoke so quietly that Jaku could not hear the words.
The young lord nodded and
then turned to Jaku. “We move, General,” Komawara whispered.
“Please signal
your guards.“
Beyond the field lay the
last hill before the canal. A stand of ginkyo coming into leaf whispered with
the sound of wind among the branches. The plan was already agreed to, though
men would be sent out to survey the barbarian position to be sure it had not
substantially altered. They came into the shadow of the hill and Komawara
dismounted, crouching down on his heels without word or signal. His own men
followed this example and after hesitating, Jaku did the same, his guards
copying their commander.
In name they were
Imperial Guards, but it was to Jaku Katta they owed their allegiance. Rumors
that Jaku defied
the Emperor to be on the
canal with Shonto or that their commander was no longer in favor at court meant
little to them. Without question, they would follow Jaku into battle and lay
down their lives for him. Jaku Katta was the great warrior of his time and to
fight at his side meant more to these men than the favor of a thousand
Emperors. None of them doubted that after tonight Lord Komawara would defer
command of any future raids to General Jaku. He would see the Black Tiger in
his true element.
Komawara signaled and
eight men rode off into the night.
As the sound of horses
moving over soft ground died, the company fell silent. The voice of the breeze
in the ginkyo sounded like a complex form of music, varying its tempo, falling
to whispers, then rising to crescendos, the pitch and timbre altering with a
subtlety no instrument would ever duplicate. One could listen for hours and
never hear the same pattern repeated.
Having made himself aware
of what constellations rose and set closest to sunrise, Jaku watched the stars
against the horizon. The rotation of the heavens seemed to have slowed that
evening, for the stars appeared to hang utterly still with only the blowing
clouds giving an illusion of motion.
The riders began to
reappear in pairs, whispering with Komawara as soon as they arrived. Jaku
desperately wanted to know what was being said and felt that as a general of
some reputation he should be kept informed, but he was certainly too proud to
ask.
The star Jaku had picked
as the signal to move touched the earth at a distant point, and the general
stopped himself as he started to rise and signal his men. Komawara made no
indication of being ready to move. The last riders arrived just as Jaku was
losing patience. Komawara rose to talk with these men, nodding and asking the
occasional question.
He turned and signaled to
Jaku who did not respond well to being treated like a retainer whether this
country boy was a peer of the Empire or not. As a professional soldier Jaku
knew that a battle was no place to discuss such things, so he crossed to where
Komawara stood, holding his face-mask open.
“The barbarian
defenses are unchanged, General Jaku.” Komawara said, his voice far
calmer than the guardsman expected. “There is movement in the barbarian
camp, but I am prepared to follow the plan as we discussed it: surprise appears
to still ride in our company.” Komawara smiled. “The novelty of
limitless supplies of firewood does not seem to have worn off—there are
more than enough fires for our needs. Is your company ready, general?”
Jaku nodded.
Komawara clamped his
face-mask closed and tightened the cord on his helmet. Riders mounted horses
and the company split into two: Jaku leading his guards north and Komawara turning
south. A hint of gray appeared over the ginkyo wood as the men of Wa rode off.
Komawara kept his horse
at a canter, fighting a strong desire to race ahead—Shuyun would be
pleased to learn that he was gaining patience. Eighteen hundred men attacking
five thousand was not much to the lord’s liking, but he knew that there
were several factors in their favor. The men guarding the supply rafts were cut
off from the body of the barbarian army and in unfamiliar lands, which must
weigh upon them to some degree. The hope was that a surprise raid at dawn would
disguise the number of attackers and perhaps send the barbarians into a panic.
Even if they recovered from this fairly quickly, much damage would already be
done.
They skirted the wood,
keeping in its shadow. Komawara glanced up at the sky with concern. Darkness
would begin to draw back soon—not too soon he hoped or the impact of
their attack would be lost. They began to round the southern end of the hill
then, and the lord increased his pace slightly without meaning to. In a moment
they would be in sight of the barbarian position. Komawara loosened his sword
in its sheath.
Another tenth of a rih.
There was gray in the sky now, and Komawara could make out objects at some
distance if not in detail. As they passed a large willow, the fires of the
barbarian encampment appeared suddenly. Drawing his sword with some care for
its edge, Komawara spurred his horse into a canter. It was only a matter of
time now. Sentries would cer-
tainly hear them even if
they had been staring at a fire and ruined their night sight.
Even as this thought
passed through the lord’s mind, a shout sounded in the camp and was
quickly taken up by others. Komawara heard his voice screaming, as
bloodcurdling as any dream he’d had of barbarians attacking, and his
company joined in the cry, trying to make nine hundred sound like thousands.
Aiming for the southern
end of the barbarian position, the lord could see men milling around, though
what they did was not discernible. Few will be armored, he found himself
thinking. His company began to split as the bowmen who would stay outside the
camp and send their arrows into the enemy ahead of Komawara’s attack
moved left. A third group would try to fire or otherwise destroy the supply
rafts.
Although there was some
attempt at a low wall of logs and dirt on the perimeter of the barbarian
position, it was sparsely manned and Lord Komawara’s mount cleared this
as though not carrying a rider in full armor.
His personal guard had
come abreast of him now, determined not to let their lord be the first to throw
himself against the barbarian defense. The light was growing rapidly, and
Komawara could see barbarian warriors struggling to push rafts away from the
bank while others prepared to defend them. Almost none had made it to horse and
those that had were without saddles.
Picking a swordsman on
foot, Komawara spurred his horse to ride the man down. The barbarian stood his
ground and raised his sword and just as Komawara was about to turn aside to
spare his mount and engage the man, the barbarian’s nerve broke and he
turned and ran. A single stroke brought the man down and Komawara rode on.
It was the lord’s
intention to push into the barbarian camp until resistance stopped them,
creating as much panic as possible among the greatest numbers. If the gods
smiled on them, the separate attacks on the encampment would roll the ends of
the barbarian position up before them until they met in the middle, sending the
panicked tribesmen running toward the cover of the ginkyo wood. An arrow lodged
in the lacing of Komawara’s shoulder piece and he found himself hoping it
was not from his
own men. Although some
stood and fought, the raid was having its desired effect—many more were
running, abandoning the rafts as they headed away from the river, nonswimmers
to a man.
Whistling-arrows were
falling among the barbarians ahead of Komawara now, adding their eerie screams
to the din. A half-dressed rider made for the lord suddenly, sword and helmet
glinting in the dim light. The darkness on the man’s hand and arm turned
to red as he came
closer.
They clashed with an
impact that shocked the lord, but his larger horse sent the other staggering.
The barbarian’s blade had severed Komawara’s reins, but he had been
born in Seh and his horse responded to pressure from his knees as quickly as to
its bit. Before the other could collect his horse under him, Komawara struck,
aiming at the man’s wrist and then watching the horror on the
barbarian’s face as he realized this was a feint. The sword Toshaki had
given him cut true to its reputation and severed the man’s leg above the
knee, the point cutting into the horse’s side. The man’s mount
jumped sideways and threw him half off, so that he clung to the mane. It was an
ugly stroke, aimed only to maim, for Komawara would not risk ruining his edge
on the man’s helmet. The barbarian fell under the hooves of his own horse
and the lord of Seh passed by toward another, a foot-soldier with a lance. One
of the Hajiwara men took this man before Komawara had time to raise his sword.
Fighting went on
everywhere around him, but the lord found himself, for the moment, unopposed.
He stood up in his stirrups, surveying the scene. Rafts burned behind him and
on others he could see the supplies going into the water. It was a rout of some
proportion, he realized with satisfaction. Clouds of smoke billowed up to the
north and he thought he could see black-armored riders in the melee ahead.
Quickly collecting the
riders around him, Komawara threw himself against the barbarians again.
Daylight was full when he realized that beyond the knot of barbarian warriors
before them Imperial Guards did their work.
Behind his face-mask, Jaku
Katta was grinning broadly when Lord Komawara appeared before him, the stump of
an arrow in his shoulder piece. The two commanders
pulled up their mounts in
the midst of chaos. A riderless horse galloped between them and disappeared
into the melee. Resistance had been broken.
Komawara waved his sword
toward the base of the hill behind which they had hidden that morning.
“They will collect their forces there,” he shouted over the noise.
“The barbarians will soon realize how few we are. Gather every man you
can and we’ll carry the fight to them once more.” He gestured now
to the rafts that his men swarmed over. The barbarians had managed to cut loose
more rafts than he had hoped and these floated slowly in the current. Others
had simply been abandoned at their moorings and not yet dealt with by his men.
“We need more time to complete this.”
A shout went up then and
Komawara realized it came from the barbarians gathering under the ginkyos.
“There,
Sire.” One of Komawara’s guard pointed to the south. A host of mounted
barbarians were rounding the base of the hill, banners waving.
Komawara looked back at
the work progressing on the rafts.
“It is a patrol
only,” Jaku said quickly, “no more than a hundred men.” He
pointed his sword toward the barbarians at the hill’s base. “They
hope it is reinforcements.”
“Sound the
call,” Komawara shouted to his guard. He looked back at Jaku. “What
have your losses been?”
Jaku waited as three long
notes from a conch echoed across the field. “I cannot say, Lord
Komawara.”
The lord looked around
the field, strewn with both barbarians and men of Wa. “Nor can I,
General.”
Men began to ride to
Komawara’s banner, and the lord wheeled his horse to face them. “Corporal,
your company will join General Jaku in an assault on the forces gathering
there.” He pointed toward the men at the base of the hill.
‘ ’General
Jaku…“ A shout from the barbarian horse patrol, echoed by the men
who were forming ranks, cut off the lord’s words. The sound of galloping
horses came to them. Komawara shouted as he turned his horse. ”General
Jaku, engage the barbarians who are reforming their ranks. My company will
prevent these horsemen from joining them.‘’
Komawara spurred his
horse and waved his men to a gallop, aiming to intercept the horsemen before
they reached the others. Banners waved and pipes shrilled. The shout from the
men of Wa caused a visible hesitation on the part of the barbarians struggling
to prepare an assault of their own. Most were without horse and armor, though
they outnumbered the riders of Wa almost three times.
Jaku Katta quickly
marshaled his own men and the company given him by Komawara and sounded the
charge. It was his intention to drive directly through the center of the enemy,
thwarting any attempts to fight in an organized fashion. If the barbarian
formed solid ranks, the advantage of being on horseback would be seriously
reduced.
The initial charge broke
the front of the barbarian warriors, but in the ensuing fighting the tribesmen
showed greater resolve and their superior numbers began to tell. A sword blow
to a foreleg brought Jaku’s horse down and the kick boxer jumped clear.
On his feet immediately, Jaku found himself surrounded by barbarians. He jumped
over a stroke aimed at his leg by the same man who had taken down his horse and
dispatched the man as he spun toward the attackers at his back. This display of
skill caused a second of hesitation and Jaku used this to cut down two
near-boys and jump clear of the circle. Without men on all sides the fight
would be different though Jaku was not sure how long he could maintain this
situation. He parried a blow and kicked the man under the chin, engaging
another as he did so, but each time a barbarian fell another took his place. An
Imperial Guard on horseback was desperately cutting his way toward his
commander, but just when Jaku was convinced he would win through, an arrow took
the guard through the face mask. He slumped over the neck of his mount which bolted
into the fray.
It is an honorable end,
Jaku told himself, deserving of a song. Pressed on all sides again, Jaku knew
he was fighting to stay alive from minute to minute. A rider in darkest blue
drove his horse into the barbarian warriors at Jaku’s back sending them
sprawling, and before the barbarian could recover the Guard Commander vaulted
onto the rider’s horse. The two men fought their way
toward a group of
Imperial Guards on horseback, hard pressed on all sides.
Komawara spotted an
officer and gestured to him as he continued to fight. A moment later the clear
note of a conch lifted over the battle. It was the men of Wa who would retreat
now.
Joining the Imperial
Guards, Jaku grabbed the reins of a riderless horse and managed to calm it
enough that he could mount, barely touching the ground as he moved from one
horse to the other. The men of Wa began to fight their way free of the battle,
one knot of riders joining another, then another until they gathered enough
force to push toward clear ground.
Once free of the
fighting, Komawara turned his mount to assess the situation. Most of the
barbarians still fought on foot. In their midst a few riders swung their last
sword strokes. An urge to attempt a rescue was swallowed down
quickly—Komawara had an entire company to consider.
The men of Wa who
destroyed the supply rafts had been caught by the barbarian assault and boarded
rafts, pushing out into the canal where they tried to protect themselves from
arrows while poling the rafts toward the dam. There is nothing to be done for
them, Komawara realized. Their situation is probably better than ours.
Jaku stopped beside him.
Komawara opened his face-mask and let it hang, conserving the energy it took to
hold it. “We ride north and west, General. If we can make the hills, we
may be able to rejoin the main army. Our work is done here.” He pointed
with his sword. Perhaps a third of the barbarian supply rafts had been fired or
their cargo turned into the canal.
Jaku looked at Komawara,
his gray eyes striking behind the black lacquered face-mask. It appeared he was
about to speak, but Komawara nodded to him. “Gather your company,
General. We must be far ahead when these barbarians recapture their
horses.”
Calling over an officer,
Komawara turned and spoke to him. The conch sounded again and the banner of the
Komawara House was raised aloft on a lance where it fluttered in the breeze.
“We must ride,
General. Any wounded who cannot
keep the pace are to be
left behind without horse.“ The young lord wheeled his mount and set off
at a slow canter. To the west the ginkyo wood was already alive with crows and
blackbirds.
Thirty-nine
Colonel Jaku Tadamoto
considered the idea offortune as his sampan swept through the
Imperial Capital. Fortune, both good and ///, seemed to be holding
sway in his life just when he thought he had taken control of it. Were he a
more devout Botahist, Tadamoto would never view his life in such terms. Rather
than fortune he would believe in karma, and would think the sense that one was in control of
one’s life was merely part of the illusion. But he had not been a devout
follower of the Perfect Master since his childhood, so he was beginning to
believe in fortune, both good and ill.
The young guard officer
pulled aside the curtain and contemplated the world beyond. The city lay silent
in the darkness, almost peaceful—although, as acting Commander of the
Imperial Guard, he knew that was without question an illusion.
He let the curtain fall
back into place. It would be foolish to risk being seen; for all he knew Lady
Fortune might not be smiling on him at that moment and some informer of the
Emperor’s, returning home after an evening of drink, might chance to see
him. That would be ill fortune indeed.
One could never be sure
of the favor of Lady Fortune. She was more fickle than any woman, more volatile
than the Emperor. Tadamoto believed it unwise to rely on her.
Fortune had certainly
favored Tadamoto that evening but, at the same time, it had been the worst
possible fortune for the man he journeyed to meet. No, perhaps that was untrue.
The guards who found the man could have reported their discovery through
official channels and the Son of Heaven would have been informed. That would
have been much worse.
As a retainer of Lord
Shonto, this man was the object
of an Imperial
search—Shonto himself had defied Imperial orders and betrayed his duty as
Governor of Seh. He was a declared rebel now, a general in charge of a growing
and illegal army. All of the rebel lord’s senior retainers had
disappeared like phantoms before the Emperor’s guard could reach them.
Only one had been apprehended, and that was due to fortune only: misfortune.
This unfortunate man had his river junk go aground on a shifting sand bar
outside the Capital. A boat bearing Imperial Guards had stopped to offer
assistance and the response of the crew had raised suspicions. A subsequent
search led to the man’s discovery. Good fortune for Tada-moto, ill for
Shonto’s retainer.
Some important questions
plagued the colonel; did what
appeared to be fortune have significance? Were there powers beyond that moved
the pieces on the board to some end Tadamoto could not discern? If so, what was
the meaning of this ‘discovery ?’ and what was Tadamoto’s
part to play?
He pulled the curtain
back and watched the city slipping past. If all was controlled by some unseen
power, did it matter what choices he made? Did he, in fact, choose any of his
actions?
“I waste my
time,” he whispered to the night. Who can know the truth of this? Perhaps
there is no such thing as fortune but only coincidence. Either way I must
blunder along not knowing, doing what my instincts tell me is correct, for now
that the Empire is thrown into chaos the intellect is giving way to instinct.
Instinct had brought him
here. Fortune or coincidence would dictate the results.
The sampan glided to a
silent halt beside stone steps and boatmen stepped ashore to hold the craft in
place. A man appeared at the top of the stair and whispered. One of
Tadamoto’s guards leaned close to the curtain. “The way is clear,
Colonel.”
Tadamoto moved quickly,
coming ashore with a grace that would have seemed more appropriate to his
famous brother. Light duty armor had been chosen by the colonel for this
meeting, not because there was any foreseeable danger, but the helmet visor
shaded his eyes well. Tadamoto’s green eyes made him immediately
recognizable
and there were times when
that was not desirable. Even on a night this dark he was not willing to take
chances. He crossed the stone quay to a small guard house. The doors opened
immediately and Tadamoto found himself facing a bowing officer of the Imperial
Guard.
“Captain.”
Tadamoto nodded. “You have spoken with him?”
“Only in an attempt
to establish his identity beyond doubt, Colonel.” He paused, then almost
smiled. “He asked for a chair. We have treated him according to your
orders.”
“How many men know
of our guest?”
Doing a quick mental
tally, the captain, a man twenty years older than his acting commander,
answered formally. “Nine, Colonel Jaku. We have kept him well
hidden.”
“None of these men
can leave this compound. Keep them to themselves until I order otherwise. I
will speak with him.”
They climbed a set of
stone stairs and walked down a dimly lit hallway. Outside a heavy wooden door
stood two guards. They bowed when the officers approached and at a signal from
the captain one unbolted the door.
As he stepped into the
room, Tadamoto held up a hand to the captain. “I will speak with him
alone, Captain, thank you.”
A single lamp set on a
low table illuminated the tiny room. The floor was covered with grass mats and
in one corner bedding had been neatly folded. An expensive hat sitting on the
table cast a shadow like a boat under sail. On a wooden arm chair sat a large
man, well dressed, calmly regarding his visitor and making no effort to rise.
Tadamoto nodded.
“Tanaka.”
The man shrugged and
opened his hands as if to say, / would
deny it, but what good would that do met
Tadamoto continued to
regard the man. He realized that if he sat he would be staring up at his
prisoner, as though he sat at the foot of a throne. Sly old fox, he thought.
Stepping back, he leaned against the door frame. The older man did not seem to
be made at all uncomfortable by this examination; he sat calmly returning the
colonel’s gaze. The younger man reached up and removed his helmet,
tucking it under his arm.
so
“You are a
merchant,” Tadamoto said suddenly, I have come to offer an
exchange.“
The man nodded.
“You have captured my attention,
Colonel Jaku.“
The green eyes, Tadamoto
thought. The guardsman nodded. “I wish to be told everything you know
about the barbarians; this Khan and his army.”
“You spoke of an
exchange, Colonel?” Tanaka said
dryly.
“The Emperor does
not know you have been found. I will not hide you from the Son of Heaven, for
it would mean my life if your capture became known. When I report your capture,
the Son of Heaven will want to know everything about your lord’s
intentions and his holdings. You will be required to divulge these things. In
return I will protect you—the Emperor, as you know, is neither patient
nor refined in his methods. If you fall into the Emperor’s hands, I think
you will answer all these questions even if you don’t wish to, and the
process will be far less pleasant than the one I propose.”
Tanaka nodded sadly.
“You ask me to betray my liege-lord and his House with an impressive
casualness, Colonel.”
Tadamoto walked across
the bare room, looking down at the floor. When he returned to the door, he put
his back against the jamb again. “Let us be open, Tanaka.” He
paused, choosing his words. “Civil war has all but been declared. If the
Yamaku win this war, your lord’s holdings will mean nothing—there
will be no Shonto to inherit them. If Lord Shonto wins, all of his holdings
will be returned to him. Either way your betrayal will hardly matter. If I can
give this information to my Emperor, he will be satisfied, at least for a
while, and it is unlikely he will want to question you himself.” Tadamoto
kicked at the floor. “For myself, I need to know what transpires in the north.
This Khan, does he truly pursue Lord Shonto down the great canal?”
Tanaka regarded the young
man for a moment. “And if you are told that he does and that the Empire
is threatened and you also learn, if you don’t already know, that the
Emperor has played a part in bringing this about, what will you do with this
knowledge, Colonel Tadamoto?”
Tadamoto stopped kicking
at the mat and looked up. The merchant was obviously less afraid than Tadamoto
had anticipated. He is used to trading and knowing the value of what he offers,
the guardsman thought. And then Tadamoto realized the truth. Tanaka believed
Tadamoto kept him hidden so that he could acquire the Shonto wealth for
himself. “I am not certain. Be assured, however, that my loyalty is to my
Emperor.‘’
“That is why you
have me hidden from his view and why you have offered me this exchange?”
Tadamoto looked away for
a moment. “If this Khan comes to take the throne, I must convince the
Emperor to prepare for that war and forget this feud with the Shonto. But I
must have proof.”
“You have your own
sources, I am sure. What do they tell you?”
“I ask this
question of you, merchant, in fair exchange.” And then he added, “I
tell you in truth that I do not share my Emperor’s hatred of your
lord’s House.”
“Perhaps, Colonel, I should be the one
offering the exchange.” Tanaka leaned forward in his chair, putting his
palms together. “My liege-lord cannot hope to defeat the barbarian
without an army. You raise an army to defend the Yamaku against the Shonto, but
the threat comes from beyond our borders. The man who controls the Imperial
Army will decide if Wa stands or falls.” Tanaka looked up at the younger
man; it was an appeal. “As you are the man raising this force and the
acting commander of the Emperor’s Guard, you are the man most able to
seize control of the forming army. Would you not rather have the histories say
that Jaku Tadamoto saved the Empire than Jaku Tadamoto followed his Emperor,
loyally, in Wa’s destruction.”
“Treason, in either
act or word,” Tadamoto said coolly, “is a serious crime in our
Empire and I view it as such. You are aware of the penalty.”
“Treason…”
Tanaka said, ignoring the threat. “It was treason to pay gold to the
barbarians to raid into our Empire, Colonel Jaku.”
Tadamoto turned slowly,
trying not to show any response to this last remark. Raising his hand to knock
on the door, he said, “All of the Shonto holdings. I will
And I must know
have paper and brush
brought to you. Shonto’s intentions.“
“I am only a
vassal-merchant, Colonel, do you really believe I am party to the plans of Lord
Shonto Motoru?”
“You have known him
longer than anyone. He calls you sum—I know this.”
Tanaka seemed to struggle
for a moment before speaking. “You have a reputation as a historian, Colonel,
so you are aware that the throne of Wa has been within reach of the Shonto many
times… yet they have always refused it. Imperial dynasties come and go,
the Shonto have seen many. If one wishes, without doubt, to eliminate
one’s House, ascend the Dragon Throne. Every Imperial Family falls within
a few generations.”
Tadamoto raised his hand
to knock again. “All of his holdings, to start with.”
“I will need a
table and another lamp.”
Tadamoto nodded toward
the table at Tanaka’s feet.
Holding his hand up the
older man said, “This high, and a second lamp.”
Tadamoto rapped on the
door which was immediately opened by the guard. The colonel stopped as he was
about to step out. “If you will not assist me, merchant, I cannot help
you.”
Forty
Despite the season and
weather, the entire situation seemed very familiar. Lord Komawara walked his
horse through the forest in the hills west of the man-made sea. Unlike his time
in the Jai Lung Hills, the day was warm and filled with the sounds and scents
of spring.
War seemed of no concern
to the animals of the hills. Birds sang their mating songs and hawks and
falcons hunted without regard for the long line of warriors that snaked through
the trees.
Thirteen hundred men had
survived the attack on the barbarian supply rafts and the several skirmishes
that followed. Rohku Saicha must have performed his task admirably, bottling up
the enemy army on the road, for no barbarians came to the rescue, allowing
Komawara and his force to escape. Pursuit by barbarian warriors from the supply
rafts had been tentative at best; they were not willing to risk the rest of
their supply train by leaving it undefended. Jaku and Komawara had easily
beaten back these attempts and then had led their men into the hills.
Lord Shonto’s
archers had controlled the hills since the barbarian army had started down the
road, and though many of the bowman were gone now the barbarians were still
quite reluctant to venture far from their road.
From out of the foliage
ahead one of Komawara’s several guides appeared, trotting at the pace
they never seemed to vary. The lord was sure these men could run like that all
day without signs of strain. The man stopped, leaning on his bow, waiting for
Komawara to approach. A huntsman by trade, he was typical of his type, tall,
lean, and sinewy. There was an air of the forest creature about
this man. Even now the
lord realized that the guide had stopped where anyone but Komawara would find
him hard to see among trees and bushes.
Bowing quickly the man
almost whispered, “There is a glade with a stream and new spring grass
less than a rih distant. It will be a good place to refresh the horses.”
Looking around with the air of a wary animal he went on. “There are signs
of barbarian patrols coming into the forest ahead. They are small in number,
however. If we see them, we will make them believe Lord Shonto’s bowmen
are still here in force.” A smile flashed and was gone. “Tomorrow
we will be through the hills, but the danger will be greater then, for a time.
The barbarians control the lands immediately beyond the hills, now. We will
need to have rested horses to travel quickly. If Botahara smiles upon us, we
will be back with Lord Shonto’s fleet in three days.” The smile
flashed again.
“What of Captain
Rohku?” Komawara asked. “Is
there no sign of
him?“
The man looked down as he
shook his head. “None yet, Sire, though there is no reason we should
cross the captain’s track. The hills,” he waved at the trees,
“spread over many rih and it is no doubt Captain Rohku’s intention to
avoid detection.”
Komawara nodded.
“Lead us to the glade, then. Our horses are in need.”
They pressed on. Komawara
called a retainer forward and sent him to check on the wounded—so many
had been victims of their injuries since the retreat. A second man he sent down
the column to inform Jaku Katta of their pending rest. The Guard Commander
stayed close to his men and showed great concern for the injured. It gained him
much respect and loyalty.
Despite the losses
Komawara did not think they had spent lives unwisely in their raid on the
supply rafts. It had been impossible to destroy the entire train with such a
small force, for there had been many more rafts than Komawara had believed
possible. Still, they had acquitted themselves well. Even Jaku Katta had paid
him a compliment when the attack was over, not something Komawara had expected.
After Komawara’s
force had reached the relative security of the hills, he had listened with some
surprise to the reports of the men who had destroyed rafts. Much that the rafts
carried was not grown in the desert: grains, rice, corrapepper, dried fish.
Many of these foods could have originated only on the islands of the southern
barbarians, which unsettled Komawara. Despite the common pejorative, these two
races had nothing in common. Komawara would have guessed them barely aware of
each other’s existence—two non-seafaring peoples separated by a
wide ocean. Impressive what gold and the ships of pirates could
obtain—if, indeed, it had been pirates. He remembered Lord Kintari.
The sound of running
water mixed with the sound of the Plum Blossom Wind, wafting through the trees.
The forest was more than half pine here, mixed with plane trees and slip maple.
The scent of the trees was strong. Unfolding leaves waved in the soft breeze,
dappling the sunlight where it touched the forest floor. The paper white of
birch trees appeared and beyond them Komawara could see the sun green of spring
grass. It was a bigger pasture than Komawara expected and spoke of itinerant
herdsmen; there was likely a hut concealed nearby.
The huntsman stopped at
the edge of the glade until he received a signal that the lord never heard.
“It is secure here, Lord Komawara. There is grass like this on either
side of the brook, both up and down stream. It will mean spreading your company
out but there is pasture enough for each horse.”
“The woods are free
of barbarians, you are certain?”
The huntsman nodded.
“Then we will do as
you suggest. The animals need to graze or they will never manage this last
sprint you speak of.‘’ He turned and gave the command.
One of the Hajiwara men
who had taken service with Komawara took his lord’s horse and led it off
to drink and feed. Komawara walked across soft grass to the stream and bent
stiffly to drink and fill his water skin before the creek was muddied by
horses. He jumped heavily to the other bank, feeling the weight of his armor as
he landed.
Finding a fallen tree on
the far side of the glade, Kp-
mawara sat and pulled his
helmet off. He ran a hand through his hair, much of which had grown back since
Shuyun’s ministrations in the desert. Sweat and the weight of his helmet
plastered it tightly to his brow and the lord suddenly longed for a bath.
The coolness of the air
and the warmth of the sun were like the differing flavors of a complex wine,
opposing but complementary. Slipping down to the ground, Komawara leaned back against
the log, closing his eyes against the brightness of the sky.
He was not sure how long
he rested like that, nor if he even slept for a second, but suddenly he was
aware that the sun no longer warmed him. A cloud, Komawara thought, but then
the sound of a man clearing his throat reached him. His eyes flicked open
almost involuntarily. “General Jaku.”
The guardsman bowed.
“Excuse me for interrupting you, Lord Komawara.”
“Do not apologize,
General.” Komawara struggled into a more upright position. “I managed
to fill my wa-terskin before the hordes, General Jaku, please.” He
proffered the water to the guard.
Jaku nodded and accepted
the water. Returning the skin to Komawara, the guardsman sat down on the log
and followed the lord’s example, pulling off his helmet. “Three
days, I have been informed? Do you think Lord Shonto will have moved his fleet
again?”
The lord pulled a burr
off the lacing of his armor and rolled the spines gently between his forefinger
and thumb. “It seems most likely, General. The barbarians move slowly,
but Lord Shonto will not risk his army. It may be the Empire’s only
hope.”
“It is sadly
true,” Jaku observed dryly. “Though the Emperor raises an army, it
is impossible to predict what he will do with it—and I know the
Emperor.” Jaku produced a square of cotton and wiped his face and neck
with it.
The same huntsman
Komawara had spoken to earlier appeared out of the trees twenty paces off,
looked around and then spotted the lord. Trotting over, he dropped to his knees
and bowed so as not to stand above the seated peer. When he spoke, the
man’s voice quavered slightly.
“Sire, we have
discovered… something of great concern.” He gestured to the forest
behind him, words failing him. “Close by.”
Komawara glanced at Jaku,
questions unspoken. Signaling to his guard, the lord waved the huntsman on and
he and Jaku fell in behind. Walking through the spring woods filled with the
sounds of birds Komawara felt suddenly cold. He did not know what had been
found, but the huntsman’s reaction was not reassuring.
As the tracker had said,
it was not far. The perfume of the spring forest was replaced by a sudden
stench and flies buzzed up, agitated by the presence of people. The huntsman
stopped, saying nothing. At his feet lay a corpse, belly down, stripped naked,
its head severed. Stubs of three broken arrows protruded from the throat and
shoulder.
“There are
more,” the huntsman said, making a sign to Botahara.
“Who?”
Komawara whispered. Shrugging the huntsman stepped away, covering his mouth and
nose. “Not barbarians, certainly.”
Twenty feet away lay two
men who had been felled and mutilated also. The grass and bushes nearby had
been well trampled, perhaps by a struggle. A horse without saddle or bridle was
found, its head twisted at an improbable angle.
Several of the
huntsman’s company could be seen searching the bush, stopping now and
then as they discovered another corpse.
“Captain
Rohku’s company,” Jaku said quietly to Komawara, “or some of
it.”
Komawara nodded.
“No doubt you are correct. This man wore armor often.” The lord
pointed to familiar marks on the man’s shoulders. He waved the huntsman
over. “Hide men behind us. Be certain we are not pursued.”
The huntsman nodded.
“What shall we do for these?” He waved at the ground around him.
Komawara turned in a slow
circle, examining the area. “Leave them to the forest.”
“Sire,” the
man started to protest but was silenced by a cold stare.
“There will be many
more like these before this war is over, and we will not be able to perform
ceremonies for one in a thousand.” He looked down. “May Bota-hara
have mercy on their souls.”
Forty-one
Though he waited to speak
with the Emperor of all of Wa, Jaku Tadamoto had not yet decided what he would
say to the Son of Heaven. Perhaps the glimpse he had caught of a woman leaving
the wing of the Emperor’s apartments had unsettled Tadamoto more than he
realized, though he was not at all sure it had been Osha. The woman had
appeared briefly down a long hall, her hair in an elaborate style, ornate robes
of canary yellow—a color Osha despised and the Emperor loved. But she had
moved with such ease…
Tadamoto felt like he was
drowning in deep sadness, unable to focus his will sufficiently to stroke to
the surface. Things of the greatest import hardly drew his attention. What
would be said and left unsaid in this audience with the Emperor was crucial, he
knew, yet that knowledge did not seem to galvanize his energies. Despondency
was what Tadamoto felt, and his famed intellect did not seem able to exert
control over his other faculties.
Through the screens
Tadamoto could hear the Emperor’s voice as he spoke to some official.
From where Tadamoto waited, he heard brief silences in which, presumably, the
official spoke and this made Tadamoto wonder if he was equally quiet when
addressing the Emperor. It was a strange thing to listen to, as though half of
the dialogue was silence.
Tadamoto turned a scroll
he carried, examining it carefully as though he would suddenly be able to
assess its impact in the meeting to come. Would the Son of Heaven respond as
the young officer hoped? If the Emperor’s greed was caught by the
information in the scroll, he might forget to ask when the Imperial Guard had
found Lord Shonto’s vassal-merchant—if the answer was not
already known. Why have I
played this foolish game with this merchant? Tadamoto asked himself.
The Emperor’s voice
had not responded to the silence now for several minutes, and Tadamoto made a
last attempt to focus his will. A secretary appeared and bowed to the guard
officer, saying nothing. Rising, Tadamoto followed the old man through a bare
anteroom. Double screens opened onto a terrace tiled with small stones and
shards of porcelain forming a lotus blossom pattern. Beyond was the view north
across the Dragon Pond toward the Mountain of the Pure Spirit.
Kneeling before the
screens, Tadamoto waited to be announced. It was done so quietly that the
officer did not hear. The Emperor’s mood must be dark.
At a signal, Tadamoto
moved forward on his knees across grass mats that had been laid over the
stones. On a small dais at one end of the terrace the Emperor sat under a silk
awning. To his left the view stretched out toward the far mountains and to his
right stood a small ornamental cherry, ancient despite its size and famous for
the perfection of its shape. The Emperor tapped the tip of his sword on the
edge of the dais, staring at neither view nor blossom—he scowled openly
and his eyes were not focused on anything another could see.
Tadamoto touched his
forehead to the mat.
“Be at your ease,
Colonel,” the Emperor said, irritation lodged in his tone like a thorn.
Tadamoto returned to a
kneeling position feeling anything but at ease.
“I am told the
raising of our army proceeds apace, Colonel.” The Emperor gave a slight
nod.
Tadamoto bowed in return.
“The reports of Lord Shonto’s force would indicate he has fewer
than twenty-five thousand men, Sire. Our force will equal that very soon.”
The Emperor nodded. He
still tapped the dais with his sword. “Once Motoru reaches the inner
provinces it is impossible to say who will join him. We must be prepared to
face all manner of treachery, Colonel, or we will not even have the luxury of
time to regret our mistakes.”
“Recruitment
continues, Emperor. I’m confident we will raise an army of adequate
numbers.”
“And no
experience!” the Emperor shot back.
Tadamoto froze for a
second. “We are training now, Sire,” he said quietly.
“At least our army
will be no less battle ready than Shonto’s.”
Tadamoto pressed his eyes
closed for an instant, then glanced out over the Dragon Pond and back to the
mats in front of him.
The Emperor fixed the
young scholar with a hard stare. “You have a scroll for me, I see.”
Tadamoto nodded.
“Not more news of
pending disaster, I trust?”
Tadamoto lifted the
scroll with both hands. “A complete, detailed list of all of the Shonto
House holdings and properties.”
The Emperor stopped
tapping the dais.
“We have taken the
Shonto vassal-merchant into our custody,” Tadamoto said evenly.
“Tanaka?” the
Emperor said with more than a trace of disbelief.
Tadamoto gave a half bow,
keeping his eyes cast down. Leaning forward he set the scroll on the edge of
the dais though the Emperor almost snatched it from his hands.
Breaking the seal with a
thumbnail, the Emperor unrolled the paper and held it up to the light so that
it hid his reaction. When he appeared again, his face was creased with delight.
“This rebel general was once a very wealthy lord.” He waved a
finger at the scroll. “Astonishing that his merchant could hide so much
wealth!” He let the itemization fall back into his lap. “You are to
be complimented, Tadamoto-sum. I will see that you are given,” he paused
to think, “a fortieth of the Shonto wealth as a reward. But what else has
this merchant said? What of Shonto’s plans?”
Tadamoto nodded, as though
acknowledging the question though he was trying desperately to gather his
thoughts. “I—I am honored by your generosity, Emperor.” He
bowed low. “It is difficult to be sure what Tanaka knows about his
lord’s intentions, Sire. I have spoken with him now on several occasions
and I am not convinced Shonto has been as open with Tanaka as we had
believed.”
The Emperor set the
scroll aside and reached for his
sword. “Perhaps a
less gentle method of inquiry would produce the results we require,
Colonel.”
“I… I hesitate
to do so, Sire. I would rather gain his confidence and convince him with
arguments.” An idea. “After the war is over, Tanaka will have no
liege-lord. He would make a valuable addition to your staff, Sire.”
Tadamoto gestured toward the scroll. “Imagine what such a man could do to
increase the Imperial fortunes.”
The Emperor raised an
eyebrow at this. “Is this possible? A Shonto retainer?”
“This list is an
example, Sire—which, by the way, was done entirely from memory. Tanaka
agreed to create this itemization after I had convinced him that such an act
would not affect Lord Shonto, no matter what the outcome of the civil war. He
is not a warrior, Sire. One can appeal to his intellect and see some result. It
is also well known that he enjoys the trappings of wealth himself. Many a lord
would be happy to live in this vassal-merchant’s home. When there is no
Shonto House,” Tadamoto shrugged, “where will Tanaka’s
loyalty lie?”
The Emperor looked out
toward the Mountain of Divine Inspiration, lost in thought. “If you can
win his willing service, Tadamoto-sum, I will double your reward, and more. But
we cannot let him hide behind this.” The Emperor gestured to the scroll.
“We desperately need to know what Motoru plans. Be certain this merchant
is hiding nothing.”
Tadamoto bowed.
Wealth… Tadamoto thought, enormous wealth… on the eve of civil war.
The irony threatened to make him laugh. “I will spare no effort, Sire, be
assured.”
The Emperor favored him
with a controlled smile. “Is there more that I should hear, Tadamoto-sum,
or will we stop now, while the gods smile upon us?‘’
Tadamoto hesitated for a
second and saw the Emperor’s face darken as he did so. “I have had
reports from the north, Sire. Lord Shonto dammed the canal and flooded a large
plain north of Fuimo. A barbarian force was certainly following close behind
the men of Seh at that time.”
The Emperor stared hard
at Tadamoto for a moment and then rose suddenly, causing the younger man to
flinch
visibly. Crossing the
terrace, the Emperor descended a set of stairs. When all but his head had
descended out of sight, the Emperor turned and nodded toward Tadamoto to rise
and follow.
Waiting on another
terrace, a level below, the Emperor stared off to the north and when Tadamoto
caught him he set off again, Tadamoto in his wake. They descended another
flight of stairs which put them on the lawn that ran down to the edge of the
Dragon Pond. The Emperor walked toward the eastern wall of the Palace where a
complex hedge-maze stood, planted generations past and renewed and altered over
the centuries.
The Emperor stopped
before the entrance to the maze, waving Tadamoto ahead with his sword.
“Colonel.”
Tadamoto stepped into the
maze, not sure what was required of him, his mouth drying quickly. He walked
down the path, the fall of the Emperor’s step close behind. The maze
branched both left and right almost immediately and the guardsman continued
straight, not knowing if he should have chosen one of the other paths.
“Have you been through the puzzle before, Colonel?” Tadamoto shook
his head, but before he could speak the Emperor went on.
“It is a most
ingenious maze. Unlike others of the type it does not give up its secret
easily. In fact, few find their way to the center. To unexpectedly arrive back
at the beginning is the common experience or at one of the several gates which
lead out. Turn right, Colonel.”
Tadamoto obeyed, walking
slowly and fighting the urge to look back at the Emperor.
“From whom did you
receive this information about the barbarian army, Colonel?”
“Spies working in
the north, Sire.”
“Ah. Stop where you are and look
carefully around you.”
Tadamoto did as he was
told. The stone pathway was somewhat wider than a man was tall, bounded on both
sides by high, dense foliage. There was a blind-end visible ahead and a
branch-left perhaps six paces away. Turning further, Tadamoto found the Emperor
watching him, all traces of his earlier lightness of spirit gone. Reaching
right with his sword the Emperor thrust the tip of the scabbard into the hedge.
Looking at the spot the
Emperor indicated, the guard realized that there was something out of place
there and a more careful inspection revealed a low, impossibly narrow passage,
well camouflaged.
“A gardener’s
secret,” the Emperor said quietly. “You will have to push your way
in.”
Tadamoto parted the
branches with care and bent low to enter. It was surprisingly dark in the
passageway, the density of the growth admitting little light. Sounds of the
Emperor parting the branches behind kept Tadamoto moving despite the tightness
of the tunnel. Sunlight appeared ahead and the officer pushed through into
another stone pathway running between the hedges.
“Turn left,”
the Emperor said before he had emerged from the passage.
Tadamoto set out again at
the same pace and again the Emperor’s footsteps followed. Another
gardener’s tunnel, and then left, then right and again right. They were
at the center of the maze. The hedges formed a circle a dozen paces across and
in the center of this lay a round, jade pool, flashes of gold and crimson
sunfish like visions of flame in the depths of a mirror.
The Emperor sat on a
stone bench carved with Imperial Dragons, his sword across his knees. Tadamoto
hastened to kneel, the stones digging into his knees.
The Emperor stared into
the green water of the quiet pool. “You see, Colonel Jaku, uncounted
people have tried to unravel this puzzle but, in truth, only a few have ever
managed to stand where you are now and look into the Jade Mirror. Ministers, princes,
court ladies, great lords, famed generals… so many have failed. Yet the
humble gardeners of the palace all have been here, often. They know how to go
directly to the heart of the puzzle.” The Emperor pointed the tip of his
scabbard at the young officer. “It is the secret of all great men,
Tadamoto-sum.
“If there is a
barbarian army, I believe it is in league with Shonto or is of little
consequence and Shonto draws it along behind him as an excuse to invade the
inner provinces. This half-breed Khan cannot threaten the Empire of Wa with a
ragtag army of hunters and herdboys. You have had your confidence in this
matter shaken by your
brother. This impairs
your effectiveness as a counselor to the Emperor.
“Cut through to the
heart of the matter, Colonel, so you can set it aside. We have war in
sight—it gathers on the northern horizon like a winter storm. Your entire
focus will be called for.” The Emperor stood and walked to the opening in
the hedge. “The place where you sit, Colonel is so difficult to reach
most believe it impossible. Wander without focus for even a short time and you
will find yourself on the outside. May the gods guide vou. Colonel Jaku.
Forty-two
Rohku Tadamori was
growing used to being referred to as captain though he had now twice been
confused with his father and that he would never grow used to. There was a vast
difference between a mere captain and the Captain of Lord Shonto’s
Personal Guard—and only a true provincial would not be aware of the
distinction. Still, he was proud of his new rank as he was of his
father’s status. His dream of the Rohku family achieving fame for their
service to the Shonto did not seem as remote as it once had, especially now
with war at hand.
The young officer rode
along the canal bank through a grove of flowering plum trees. The spring winds
were just now starting to coax the petals of the plum blossoms free, carrying
them aloft and scattering them across the green countryside. The wakes of the
passing river boats disturbed the petals as they landed on the canal and the
Plum Blossom Winds turned them into sails, stranding them on the western bank.
Behind Rohku Tadamori
rode a small company and the young captain realized that he had achieved a
certain level of recognition since he suddenly warranted a guard. He shook his
head. Perhaps now that war was upon them, he would have a chance to prove
himself in battle as his father had. A few days earlier Rohku Saicha had led an
attack on the barbarians in the hills. Despite his recent recognition Tadamori
was not senior enough to know any details of his father’s duty—that
would come with time. Worrying was something that Tadamori had been taught not
to indulge in, but his father’s company had not returned and those who
knew had begun to whisper. He focused his thoughts elsewhere.
Functioning in the
capacity that had somehow become his own, Rohku Tadamori had been sent south
down the
canal as a lookout. The
boats had grown so numerous that it was becoming impossible to pass to the
front of the fleet by sampan in any reasonable time, so he had chosen to ride.
Perhaps the fact that it was a perfect spring day and he preferred horses to
boats had entered into the decision also.
Although the Grand Canal
ran virtually straight throughout most of its sections, the area it passed through
now was strewn with outcroppings of gray stone, making a straight line
impossible. So the ancient engineers had routed the waterway among them as
though providing travelers with the most aesthetic views had suddenly become
their purpose. This allowed Rohku to go across country, cutting off great loops
of the canal and saving much time and distance.
Rohku and his guard had
not passed half the ships in the great flotilla so far and yet they had been on
horseback half a day. A small stream met the canal and Tadamori dismounted to
let his horse drink. Others did the same. There was no sense of urgency in this
assignment, and though his men did not know what his orders were they had soon
realized that he did not rush. Conversation had started among the riders,
uncommon among Shonto’s guard, who took their duty very seriously. A
beautiful day such as this even lightened the spirits of the warriors.
“There is a mess
for you,” one of the guards said, pointing down the canal.
Around one of the giant
rock towers came an ornate river boat, fighting not only the current of the
canal but also the current of events. Barges from the south-going flotilla
pulled up to the bank to let the river boat pass. Rohku could not distinguish
the crests on the banners, but the color was impossible to
mistake—Imperial Crimson. Prince Wakaro had arrived, not appearing out of
the mists as had Jaku Katta, but in the full light of a fine spring day,
forcing his way north against a torrent of refugees swept before the coming
war.
Even at this distance
Rohku could see the people on the bank and on barges bowing as the
Prince’s boat passed. Rohku ran up to the top of the bank and watched for
a moment, then trotted back down and mounted his horse. There was nothing more
he needed to see.
Turning quickly, Rohku
spurred up the bank followed by his guard. At the top he paused to get his
bearings in the strange countryside and then set off across the country at a
canter. Lord Shonto would want to know this immediately.
Although official
greetings had been sent and the Prince had made it known that he wished to have
Lord Shonto attend him immediately, still nothing of significance had occurred.
The Prince’s flotilla carrying personal staff, his small court, and an
honor guard of black uniformed Imperial Guards sat moored to the east bank of
the canal while Shonto’s own vast flotilla passed by on its way toward
the inner provinces.
On the bank opposite the
Prince’s retinue, a silk pavilion had been erected surrounded by a fence
of banners laced to bamboo frames. The Emperor’s banner, the five-clawed
dragon on crimson, wafted from a staff before the enclosure and beside it
Prince Wakaro’s own banner of dragon and crane, also on crimson, though
bordered in gold. Shonto’s blue banner waved there, also, as did the
Flying Horse of the Province of Seh. Armored men in Shonto blue stood guard and
there was a ring of several hundred yards which only specific Shonto retainers
were allowed to enter.
On the bank before the
pavilion a dock had been built so that people of rank might disembark from
boats with some semblance of dignity. A sampan of the most common variety
wobbled down the canal to the stroke of its single oar. Aboard this craft were
three guards in armor with blue lacing and an old man, formally dressed,
sitting with one hand in his lap while the other sleeve of his robe creased and
rippled in the breeze.
The sampan made a careful
line to the elaborate barge that bore die Imperial Prince. Steward Kamu was
left waiting on the boarding platform for some minutes, but eventually an
Imperial Guard officer came to the head of the stairs and bowed.
“The Prince will
speak with you now, Steward Kamu,” the officer said.
They still bow, they
continue to use my title, they are not as confident as they pretend, Kamu thought.
With some care he ascended the stairs to the main deck and
then a second stairway to
an upper level. There, on the stern, protected by a yellow awning, sat the
Imperial Prince, Yamaku Wakaro, listening to a lovely young woman who played
the melody of a spring dance on the harp.
Kneeling immediately,
Kamu waited, listening. The woman was not the equal of Lady Nishima, in either
beauty or in the skill of her playing, but she was certainly more than
competent and the composition was well matched to the day.
The Prince did not seem
to notice the presence of Lord Shonto’s representative but concentrated
his attentions on the young musician. Sitting on cushions around the stern of
the boat sat several richly dressed men and women of similar age to the Prince.
None were immediately recognizable to Kamu, but he was well informed of who
fluttered about the flame of the Imperial Prince and though they were not
individuals entirely without virtue, there was not one among them who it could
be said was marked for great things. Another Imperial dynasty that had achieved
mediocrity in three generations.
A second song was called
for and plum wine was served. Kamu knelt unmoving on the hard deck controlling
his not insignificant temper. Occasionally he glanced up at the Prince. He
decided His Imperial Highness favored his mother in appearance, round of
feature, yet fair. Large, wide-set eyes with long lashes drew the attention and
would, no doubt, be the talk of the young women at court. The Prince kept
teasing the corner of a long, spindly mustache. Like his mother, the Prince had
a shock of white hair on his left temple, distorting the symmetry of his face.
Finally, after the second
song and some idle conversation and laughter, Kamu was summoned forward. Bored
with their charade, the old man thought.
Bowing, the steward
waited with every indication of infinite patience.
“Steward
Kamu,” Prince Wakaro said, his voice slightly nasal. “I trust you
have come to arrange the surrender of Lord Shonto and to pass the control of
this upstart army over to my Guard Captain.”
Kamu gave a half bow as
though of compliance. “The edicts you bear from the Son of Heaven would
certainly
not be ignored, Sire. As
we are at war, however, Lord Shonto is anxious to give a full report of the
military situation before the Prince takes command of the army.“ Kamu
bowed again.
“Tell your lord
that the military situation is no longer his concern. I am more interested in
his compliance with direct orders from the Emperor.‘’
Kamu nodded to the
pavilion on the opposite bank. “Lord Shonto is a general of great skill,
Sire. Given your experience in these areas, it might be prudent to speak with
him, Prince.”
Wakaro raised an eyebrow,
a flash of anger was replaced by a smirk. His followers became very quiet.
“Your insolence has earned you a particularly small, dark cell for the
brief period remaining to you, Steward.”
Kamu’s deferential
manner did not change. “Certainly, Sire, this will be as you wish, but
this must wait until after your meeting with my lord.”
“There will be no
meeting with your lord, you old fool!” the prince exploded, slamming his
armrest.
Kamu nodded. He shares
his father’s temper if little else. “Perhaps, Sire, I might suggest
that you look behind you,” Kamu said softly.
Wakaro’s eyes
widened at this and his flash of temper seemed to burn down to coals. Others of
his party glanced aft and Kamu heard them curse under their breath. Hearing this
the Prince turned. On the deck of the boat behind, formerly awash in the
black-laced armor of Imperial Guards, stood men in armor of blue. As the
Imperial Prince turned, they bowed and then returned to position as if they
were his own guard.
Wakaro turned and
regarded Kamu. Before he could respond to what he had seen, the old steward
spoke quietly.
“As we are at war,
my lord is concerned with the Prince’s safety. He has provided you with
his own personal guard. I trust the hour of the dog will not be an inconvenient
time for this meeting?”
“To threaten the
son of the Emperor of Wa is a crime that will not be forgiven,” the
Prince said, his voice not sure enough to bear the weight of the threat.
Kamu could not help
himself. He shrugged. “There is no threat, Sire. Only concern that you
are fully aware of
the situation you
inherit.“ Without waiting to be dismissed, Kamu bowed low, rose in the
Prince’s presence, and walked with great dignity to the stairs and then
down to his waiting boat.
The sampan carrying
Prince Wakaro crossed to the small dock where it was met by Shonto’s
steward, who bowed low, greeting the Prince with proper formality. Accompanying
the Emperor’s son was the senior officer of his guard and another young
man of similar age to his royal highness. They ascended the bank to the
enclosure between rows of bowing, blue-armored guards. Under the awning of the
pavilion sat Lord Shonto and his senior military advisor, General Hojo
Masakado.
All bowed accordingly as
the Prince approached. A small dais had been provided for Wakaro and cushions
set for his counselors. Taking his place, the son of the Emperor sat and glared
at Shonto with undisguised anger.
“Do not wait for me
to speak,” the Prince said quickly. “Despite this dais and the
formal homage, there is no question of who controls this situation. Enjoy it
while you may,” he added, the Yamaku temper flaring briefly.
Shonto favored the Prince
with a smile of great warmth. “I apologize most humbly, Sire. If we were
not at war, I would never have presumed to use such measures.”
“I am not aware of
any declaration of war, and I receive news from the Island Palace daily.
Refusal to comply with the Imperial Edicts will be considered an act of
treason, Governor.” He spat the word out.
“It does not show great wisdom to erode your already tenuous
situation.”
Shonto spoke quietly.
“Refusal to learn what is known of the enemy you will face when you take
control of the army could not be considered great wisdom either, Sire.”
Shonto smiled again. “As die Empire is under great threat, I did not feel
such a mistake could be allowed.”
The Prince eyed Shonto.
“What will you have me do?”
Shonto favored the Prince
with the look a tolerant parent gives an unreasonable child—amusement and
affection mixed with sadness brought about by the knowledge
that children will insist
on learning difficult lessons for themselves, though their conclusions will
hardly be startling. “The barbarian force is not far behind, not as far
as we would like it to be, at least. If you can be ready at sunrise tomorrow,
General Hojo will accompany you personally so that you might view this force
and make your own assessment and plans.” He nodded to Kamu who reached
behind him for a scroll. He laid this within reach of the Prince’s guard.
“This is an
accurate assessment of the barbarian force. General Hojo will certainly be able
to answer any questions you might have as he is familiar with every aspect of
our efforts and has recently engaged the vanguard of the barbarian army in a
significant skirmish.”
Silence followed. The
Prince finally nodded, moving his head as though he suffered from great
exhaustion. “As I have little choice, I will go view this great barbarian
army. May I assume my guard captain will be allowed to accompany me?”
“Of course, Sire,”
Shonto answered. “Take the advisors deemed necessary, by all means. I
personally will be interested in the opinions of the Prince and his staff when
they return.”
Shonto nodded to Kamu who
gave unseen signals and wine appeared. “Excuse me for not asking,
Prince,” Shonto said, lifting his cup. “The Emperor is well?”
Forty-three
Upon first awakening, for the briefest of
moments, one believes in the dream.
Brother Hutto Seventieth Primate of Wa
Prince Wakaro wore the
black-laced armor of an Imperial Guard officer, though under a surcoat bearing
twin silver dragons and a trim of crimson. A dark bay stallion was the
Prince’s favored horse, and though it was a powerful animal General Hojo
suspected that it had been chosen to complement the Prince’s attire.
And the silver-trimmed
black saddle and bridle… ! These earned many a glance from the other
riders who favored tack that showed signs of use. Such a saddle and bridle
would be a prize to attract a barbarian’s attention!
Hojo turned back to the
scene that stretched out before them. It had taken some time to find an
appropriate place from which to view the passing barbarian army. Lord Shonto
had insisted that the Prince should never be at risk—not an easy
requirement to fullfil in such times— but this hill was as secure as
could be found. Unfortunately, what it gained in security it lost in proximity.
Far off to the west the
Grand Canal wound across the landscape, shining like a bronze ribbon in the late
afternoon light. Rafts were being pulled along this ribbon of molten metal,
their dark shapes distorted by their own shadows. Along either bank moved the
army of the desert, like an enormous herd of unknown animals wandering in
search of new feeding grounds.
Prince Wakaro said
nothing though he repeatedly glanced over at the captain of his guard as if he
tried to
read the officer’s
response. It was a small, but telling, gesture.
“It is possible to
go some short distance closer, Prince, if this would help in the estimation of
the army’s size,” Hojo offered calmly. He was not seeing the
barbarian army for the first time. He had fought them, in fact. To the general
they were only men, not some ominous, unknown entity. They fought and made
mistakes, felt fear, and even bled, just like any other men he had known.
The Prince looked over to
his captain who shook his head. “We have seen all we require,
General.” He looked over at the western horizon. “It will be dark
soon enough. Perhaps we should return.”
General Hojo nodded,
signaled his guard, and turned back the way they had come. That will take some
of the arrogance out of the whelp, the old fighter thought—and to think
this boy’s father began all of this; paid gold to this Khan to help bring
down the Shonto House. Has this young Prince wondered why he was sent to Seh?
Let him ponder that, Hojo told himself. If nothing else can shake his imperial
confidence, that should.
It was a curious aspect
of the natural world and Lord Shonto had often wondered about it. The willow
trees that lined the canal bank had branches that hung down close to the water,
like green robes swaying in the breeze. Yet, from even a short distance, it
appeared that all of these branches stopped the same distance short of the
water, as though a gardener had trimmed them with great care. Surely it is only
an illusion, the lord thought, but it appears to be so. Tree after tree all
with their long, flowing wands grown to the same length.
The canal bank slipped
past, the spring winds still hurrying the river boats south. A haze of petals
floated on the waters among the reflections of passing clouds, and other petals
took to the wind like a flight of butterflies. Spring in Wa was disappointing
no one, at least as far as weather was concerned. Shonto sat on the upper deck
of his barge, watching the scene pass.
Unlike his Spiritual
Advisor the lord did not wait well, but one did not hurry an Imperial Prince
nor demand that they arrive at an appointed hour—by definition, the
appointed hour was the
precise time the Imperial party made its appearance.
It was surprising enough
that Wakaro came to Shonto, for a Prince need never wait upon another. There
was little doubt that this act was a message—the sight of the barbarian
army was a convincing argument—but what the Prince would be willing to do
in the coming war remained a question.
“Sire,” Kamu
appeared at the stairway, “the Prince comes.”
Shonto nodded. It had
been decided that the lord would meet the Prince as an equal, not kneeling at
the stairhead as the Prince came aboard—and this, too, was a message. The
Yamaku prepared for war against the Shonto, had tried to do away with the
Shonto House altogether; there were certain truths that each House would have
to live with now. One was that the Shonto would no longer recognize the Yamaku
claim to the Dragon Throne. This did not mean that Shonto would treat the son
of his enemy with disrespect, but he would not credit him the full regard
reserved for the son of a legitimate sovereign.
An elegant white boat
shot past, controlled by skilled oarsmen. It turned easily and brought up
beside the platform at the bottom of the boarding stairs. They were not within
Shonto’s sight, but he could hear voices and footsteps on the stairs.
Two attendants and two
Imperial Guards preceded the Prince onto the upper deck and knelt to either
side while their master ascended the stairs. Everyone on the deck, with the
exception of Lord Shonto, bowed low.
The Prince wore a robe
the color of the summer sky embroidered with a pattern of plum trees in
blossom. In his sash he carried a sword in a black leather scabbard adorned
with the dragon and crane. Crossing the open deck, Wakaro nodded to Shonto and
took the cushion to the lord’s left. Shonto returned the nod and gestured
for a cushion to be set for the Prince’s Guard Captain. Kamu and General
Hojo approached and took places on their lord’s right.
“Have you traveled
the canal before, Prince Wakaro?” Shonto asked, not waiting for the
Prince to open the conversation.
“Not so far north,
Lord Shonto,” he waved a hand
toward the shore.
“It passes through some of the most beautiful scenes in the Empire, I am
certain.”
Shonto nodded, looking
out over the landscape. “I agree. Years ago I traveled south from Seh. It
has changed little.” Shonto looked down in slight discomfort.
“Though we will not say that after the barbarians have passed.” The
lord looked up at the young man before him, his question unspoken: Now that you have seen the truth of the world, young
Sire, what have you to say?
Wakaro could not meet the
lord’s gaze for more than a second. “I now realize, Lord Shonto,
why you so… strongly advised that I increase my understanding of the
military situation. Let us say no more about it.” The Prince rubbed his
palms together in a slow circular motion. “I have read your report, as
has my Guard Captain. Though I have not received thorough training in the arts
of war, I realize that this Khan and his followers are a great threat to the
Empire and to our Emperor. My Guard Captain concurs with your staff’s
estimate of the army’s size. There is no doubt that the resources of the
entire Empire must be utilized to combat this threat.” He looked up now,
regarding Shonto with the look of one who has resolved to tell another the hard
truth.
“I am not certain
that the Emperor can be convinced of this threat, Lord Shonto.” He looked
out over the canal, brushing back a wisp of white hair. “The Emperor
believes that you proceed south with the intention of overthrowing the Yamaku
House.” The Prince shrugged. “I cannot say what your intentions
are, Lord Shonto, but certainly the choice you have made to retreat south with
so small a force and allow the Empire time to raise an army of defense was the
wise choice. Though I am certain it was a difficult decision.”
The Prince shifted on his
cushion. “It is my shame to admit that my assessment of what happens here
will hold little sway over the actions of the Emperor.” He paused for a
second and Shonto wondered if this was pain the young man felt, but the
Prince’s face showed little sign of emotion. “It is likely,”
Wakaro said at last, “that any report I send will be disregarded. Many an
Imperial Prince has plotted to overthrow his father. The Emperor will believe
that I have joined you, Lord Shonto, unaware that I am loyal to him, despite
all.” The Prince paused
again, looking down at
his hands. “I am unsure how to proceed…”
Shonto nodded. “It
is a difficult situation, Prince Wakaro. My own staff have discussed it
endlessly. Allow me to say that the Shonto interest is the safety of Wa,
nothing more. As you can see I have already sacrificed everything to that end. Rebel General I am named, yet the subject of every Shonto council
is: how can the Empire be preserved?
“The Emperor must
raise an army. It is the only answer. I have gathered as many men as we will
likely see, yet the total of our forces is not a third of the barbarian army.
As we speak, an army is being raised in the Capital, though it is not an army
for the defense of Wa. What will happen when we reach the inner provinces and
the scale of the barbarian invasion is seen?” Shonto regarded his young
companion. “I fear it will be too late, Prince Wakaro. We must have a
plan—now—a plan and an army large enough to meet this threat from
the desert.”
The Prince nodded slowly,
looking down at the wooden deck. “I can send a message to my father
describing what I have seen and urge him to send officers he trusts to assess
the situation for themselves. I can also travel south by fast boat and speak to
the Emperor, though I may find retirement to a well-guarded estate as my
reward. But even so, I would do this. As you have, Lord Shonto, so would I risk
all to preserve the Empire.”
“I think a message
to the Emperor is appropriate,” Shonto said quietly. “Even if it
does not change the Emperor’s mind, it must cast some doubt on the
counsel he has received. As you say, it may be unwise to travel to the Capital
yourself, especially as you have orders to take control of my army and send me
south under guard.” Shonto looked over at General Hojo as though
remembering an earlier discussion. “General Hojo’s report could be
sent along with your letter though I think it may be wise to say nothing of the
size of our own army. Let the Emperor wonder how many men we have
gathered— perhaps he will raise a larger army if he is unsure.”
A silence fell for a
moment. Along the shore refugees appeared again and after a morning of seeing
very few it was a doubly sad sight. The Prince brushed back the
strand of white hair
again, without thinking. “Then, for now, I will accompany your flotilla
and offer what assistance I can. If you will allow it, I will fly my banner
beside your own, Lord Shonto. When we reach the inner provinces, perhaps I will
be the bridge between the Shonto and the Emperor.‘’
Shonto bowed to the young
Prince who rose suddenly. “Please excuse me, I will write to the Emperor
immediately. Will you see that this letter goes to the Palace?”
“Certainly, Prince
Wakaro. I thank you for your counsel. Perhaps there is hope yet, if the Yamaku
and the Shonto can join to defend Wa…”
The Prince gave a half
bow and, followed by his retinue, descended the stairs to the lower deck.
As the white boat passed,
the Prince nodded toward Shonto and then the oarsmen dug in and sent their
craft shooting ahead leaving a whirl of white petals spinning in their wake.
Kamu bowed to his lord,
his face drawn and serious. “I have received word from Brother Shuyun,
Sire. He has spoken to the Brothers at the nearby monastery and there is no
doubt—plague has broken out among the refugees. The numbers are small and
it is hoped the Brothers isolated them quickly enough to stop the disease from
spreading. I have given permission to use one barge to transport the victims.
The Botanist monks will man it and tend the sick.” Kamu made a sign to
Botahara— uncharacteristic for him. “May Botahara protect us all.
We need do nothing more for now, but if the disease spreads among the
population moving south we will have a calamity, for the Brothers may not be
able to deal with the thousands who would become ill. Brother Shuyun has
suggested that Senior Brother Sotura could be asked to oversee this
problem.”
Shonto nodded, thinking
for a moment. “Brother Shuyun has taken no risk of infection
himself?”
“I spoke to
Shuyun-sum of your concern in this matter, Sire, and he assured me that he
would employ all necessary precautions.”
Shonto sat turning his
cup slowly and looking out at the people moving along the canal bank. “We
cannot afford to assign many river craft to transporting the sick.” He
shook his head. “Have Brother Sotura take charge of
this matter. If the
plague finds its way out among these people,“ he waved a hand at the
canal bank, ”thousands may die before the Botahist monks are able to
control the disease. We would have been better to leave them in their homes,
barbarian army or no.“
Shonto turned back to
Kamu. “Once this becomes known among the refugees, there will be a panic
that will itself cost lives. We have no more men to police the
travelers.” He looked down into his cup. “Let us see what happens.
If the diseased are isolated, the problem may grow no worse.‘’
A silence fell over the
men on the deck for a moment. Memories of the plague years were still strong
among the people of Wa. No family had been untouched by the wave of death that
swept through Wa. And then the Imperial family had become ill and the war
began. It was all too familiar.
“Excuse me for
asking, Lord Shonto,” General Hojo said, interrupting everyone’s
thoughts. “I do not understand why my lord did not allow the young Prince
to speak directly to the Emperor? The fact that the Prince would take such a
risk would light his story with a flame of truth. Men often will take great
risks when they believe they are the bearers of an important truth, as though
the purity of their knowledge will somehow shield them from the malice and
ignorance of others. The Emperor may have been given pause to think.”
Shonto nodded. “It
is possible, one can never know what will impress the Son of Heaven. But if the
Emperor did not believe his son… ?” Shonto signaled a servant for
wine. “If the son stays with us, what will Akantsu think? That I have
offered the Prince the hand of my daughter and the throne of Wa—two
things of inestimable value, neither of which the Emperor will ever offer. If
the Emperor loses a civil war, a Prince who is wed to a daughter of the Shonto,
a bearer of the Fanisan blood, would be the most likely to ascend the Dragon
Throne. There is more to overthrowing an Emperor than winning a war. One must
have a suitable claimant or even the winning side can faction.” Shonto
smiled. “The more threatened the Emperor feels, the larger will his army
become.”
The lord shrugged.
“And who can say, perhaps the
Prince’s letter
will make the Emperor wonder. If the Son of Heaven sends officers north to
assess the barbarian army, they will see what the Prince has seen.“
“The board,”
Hojo said, dryly, “has become too complex.”
Lifting the wine cup that
was set before him, Shonto raised an eyebrow. “For the time being,
General.” He drank, then set the cup on a small table. “The
exchange of pieces begins soon.‘’
Returning to the flotilla
had become more difficult than Komawara had expected. They had met a barbarian
patrol as they emerged from the hills and somehow one of the tribesmen had
escaped. After that they had been hunted by barbarian companies and forced to
fight more than one running battle. Of the eighteen hundred men that had
attacked the supply rafts only a thousand remained. There had been no further
signs of the company led by Rohku Saicha and Komawara was not sure if this was
propitious or cause for sadness.
“Sire,” a
guard interrupted Komawara’s train of thought. The lord sat with his back
against a tree, looking out over a field surrounded by tree-clad hills. Grazing
horses were guarded here, and Komawara thought how lucky the animals
were—his company had not eaten since morning the previous day and his
stomach occasionally complained loudly.
“Sire, the guides
have found the flotilla. We may reach it by late afternoon.”
Komawara nodded, it was
all the reaction he felt he had energy for at the moment. “The scouting
parties?”
“They report that
the barbarian patrols keep their distance from Lord Shonto’s fleet, Sire,
we have not seen sign of them all this morning.” The man paused and then
said with some pride, “The patrols the men of Seh ride keep the tribesmen
wary.”
Komawara nodded.
“Tell General Jaku that we must ride again. Has our position been
reported to Lord Shonto?”
The guard shook his head.
“Send someone ahead
to inform Kamu-sum of our position.” Komawara heaved himself up with some
effort.
“The patrols have
one other thing to report, Lord Komawara.”
The lord had begun to
turn away but stopped.
“It appears that a
large party is separating from the main body of the barbarian army.”
“How large?”
“Perhaps
twenty-five thousand men.”
Komawara nodded, looking
down at the ground for a moment. “Six men will carry this news directly
to Lord Shonto. Give them our strongest horses and remounts also. Tell them to
ride their horses to death if need be. Lord Shonto must know of this
immediately.”
Komawara signaled for his
horse. The barbarians cannot let Lord Shonto continue to deprive their army of
food—not after what my party has done. This smaller force will set out to
catch our own army and engage it or drive us south at such speed that we cannot
continue to empty the lands before us. This Khan has finally awakened.
Forty-four
Fourth Moon floated free
of the tree, sloughing off a robe of copper and wrapping itself in pure
silver-white. Ladies Nishima, Kitsura, and Okara sat on cushions laid out on a
carpet spread over the quarterdeck. So bright was the moonlight that the pink
of the cherry blossoms and the white of the plum could be distinguished as the
trees slipped past, their blossom laden shapes hanging like clouds over the
dark canal bank.
At the request of Lady
Okara, Nishima had played her harp, a subtle melody known as “The
Lovers’ Parting,” though in the southern provinces it went by the
name “Traveling the Spring River.”
This done they had begun
a poem-series, each composing a verse in turn. Nishima had been given the honor
of both the first and last verses in recognition of her poetic skills.
“Fourth moon,
Ten thousand broken hearts Line the banks
of the spring canal Strewn among the plum petals. “
And then Lady Okara had
taken the wine cup that went to the composer of the next verse.
“Blossoms as white as lintel vine
Drift south against flowing waters. How do we return to houses Their gateways
crumbled?”
The cup passed to
Kitsura.
‘ ’Last autumn’s leaves
And spring flowers
Are whirled up into clouds
On the backs of cool winds
Like the lifting of one’s heart.
“
The cup returned to
Nishima who took the required sip and then sat holding the cool porcelain in
her lap, thinking.
‘ ’A flight of cranes
Passes in silence
Along the river among the clouds.
Ten thousand hearts rise up,
Taking flight toward an unseen lake
At the foot of an unnamed mountain.
“
When the poem was
finished, the three women sat in silence contemplating the moon and the passing
scene. After a suitable time had passed, Kitsura raised her flute and played a
soft air that spoke to the mood like a well-chosen quotation. When she was finished,
a bamboo flute answered from the canal bank, the unseen player offering a
melody none had heard before but which matched the music of Kitsura perfectly.
“That was a spirit
speaking to us, I am certain,” Lady Okara whispered, and the other women
nodded.
Conversation ceased for
some time and then Lady Nishima rose, her smile failing even as it formed.
“It pains me to leave your delightful company,” she said,
“but I must sleep or I will be of no use to my uncle. It has been a
perfect evening, Oka-sum, cousin.” A half bow and she retreated toward
the companionway.
Kitsura started another
song but could not keep her focus and stopped. “I fear this war has
affected my cousin in ways that are difficult to understand. Her artist’s
spirit is too open and in times such as these…” She did not finish.
Lady Okara nodded.
“May she never learn to wall her spirit off from the world—though
it causes her heart to break a thousand times.”
The fires of a refugee
camp appeared on the bank for
the next half a rih and
then there was only the landscape lit by moonlight, the calyptas and willows,
in full leaf now, silhouetted against the stars. Intent on not disturbing the
women who sat contemplating the moon, the watch changed in near silence.
“I have heard no
word of the company sent to raid the barbarians’ supply train,”
Kitsura said suddenly, and though it was entirely out of place to discuss such
things at a viewing of the moon, such breaches of etiquette were becoming more
and more common.
“Yes, and I am
concerned,” Okara answered, not seeming to notice or perhaps care that it
was not a suitable topic for the occasion.
“Lord Komawara has
grown very grim, don’t you think? Far more than even the senior members
of Lord Shonto’s staff—though of course they have seen war before. Still…”
Lady Okara sat quietly
for a second. “There is much that has happened to our young lord of Seh.
It gives me sorrow to see him change in this manner, but I would expect little
else. He has lost the estates the Komawara have held for generations, Seh is
occupied by barbarians who no doubt burned the beautiful city of Rhojo-ma. And
though Lord Komawara has regained the respect of the men of his own province,
the months of ridicule have not been forgotten, and… there are other
things as well.”
“Other things,
Oka-sum?” Kitsura asked.
Shrugging, the artist
pulled her over-robe closer. “Please, say nothing of this, but I believe
Samyamu-sum has been spurned, Kitsu-sum, and after all that has befallen him
Lord Komawara feels there is nothing left to him. Such a feeling can lead to
terrible recklessness, I fear.”
“Spurned,”
Kitsura said in a whisper, her interest obvious. “Who do you
think?”
Okara shrugged, not
meeting the other woman’s gaze. “I thought it might be the Lady
Kitsura…”
Kitsura gave a small
laugh. “Certainly not. There were, however, several lovely young women
who frequented the Governor’s Palace in Seh. There is no shortage of
possibilities. Do you think it was because Lord Komawara’s views were
thought to be so peculiar?”
Okara shrugged again.
“Perhaps.”
“Huh,”
Kitsura touched her fingers to her chin in contemplation that looked almost
like prayer. “All the other men I am aware of are smitten with
Nishi-sum…” The young woman sat up. “You don’t think it
was Nishima-sum, do you? She certainly said nothing to me.”
“I do not know,
Kitsu-sum. I only mention it as a possibility. I know nothing for
certain.”
Kitsura rubbed her hands
together, imitating a character in a play. “I must find some way to have
Nishi-sum tell me,” Kitsura said, obviously already plotting. “Poor
Lord Komawara. My lovely cousin will break ten thousand hearts before she
settles.”
“I must say,”
Lady Okara spoke sharply, “this rivalry between yourself and Lady Nishima
is something you will both regret.”
Kitsura stared dumbly.
She had never heard Lady Okara say anything that was not entirely pleasant.
What rivalry? she thought. With my dearest cousin?
Nishima lay in her cabin
awash in the moonlight filtering through the open window. She had changed out
of the elaborate robes she had worn against the cool evening and a maid had
laid out her bedding. Although Nishima had been able to participate in the
viewing with some focus, this had suddenly disappeared and she had excused
herself before the others guessed the turmoil that possessed her.
It had been several days
since Nishima had spoken to Shuyun, had not even seen him except once at a
distance. The monk was avoiding her, there was no doubt, and this caused her
great anxiety.
In a sense Nishima felt
she was engaged in a struggle for this young man’s spirit—a
lifetime of Botahist training and doctrine on one side and whatever charms Lady
Nishima had to offer on the other. And the longer he was away from her the more
likely it became that training and comfortable habit would be victorious. Even
now she was certain the monks had won their pupil back, even if they did not
know that they were in danger of losing him.
Nishima was surprised at
how little guilt she felt from playing the temptress—drawing the devoted
away from
the path of the spirit.
It made her question her own goodness. Certainly nothing could be more improper
than this affair she was engaged in, yet her heart did not care and it was her
heart that had taken control.
The pain she felt at this
thought was almost physical, so deep inside that she could not find its center.
For some time she lay in this state and then forced herself to follow o ie of
the several exercises that Brother Satake had taught tv “^rce her spirit away from such turmoil. And
this finally brought a fitful sleep.
A stair creaking brought
the young woman awake as surely as the sound of someone entering one’s
room. After the noise of the telltale stair tread Nishima heard nothing at all
and knew that the only person who could move that silently was Shuyun. She sat
up, wrapping the quilt around her, every sense alert, but there was no other
sound and her door did not ease open as she hoped.
For several minutes the
young woman sat, struggling with her fears and desires. Then the need to know
what transpired in the heart of this young monk won out and she almost jumped
up, throwing a robe over her thin sleeping garment, forgetting a sash.
She opened her door a
crack and watched the corridor and the stairs that led to the deck, dimly lit
by a shaded, bronze lamp: nothing stirred. Though she did not have the skill of
Shuyun, Nishima did have Brother Satake’s training and her motions exhibited
the harmony of movement and balance that allowed the Botanist-trained to move
with almost no sound.
At Shuyun’s door
she paused to listen, but when she heard nothing she pushed it open and stepped
quickly out of the light of the corridor. Shuyun sat up in the bedding spread
over the straw mats, the moon lighting the planes of his cheek and brow.
“Lady
Nishima?”
His voice was a whisper,
but even so it carried tones of formality and distance. Nishima felt her heart
sink. A pace from the bed she knelt and found she could not speak.
“Lady Nishima, is
something wrong?” Shuyun asked.
Distance, words as cool as the spring
river. I cannot
win him with weakness, she thought, I must be strong. I must find the aspects
of myself that drew him before.
Despite her resolve her
voice was small and shook slightly. “I had not seen you in some time,
Shuyun-sum…” Words ceased there and finally she could only shrug
and fight tears. It was as she had feared—habit and training and doctrine
had argued in her absence. ‘t could she do now?
Shuyun stared at her and
though it may have a merely a trick of the light, his
face, normally devoid of emotion, seemed to mirror her own confusion and
sadness.
“I do not
understand the ways of the heart, Lady Nish-inm,” he said quietly, his
voice utterly calm.
Shaking her head, Nishima
heard herself whisper, “No one does.” A second of silence and then
with difficulty, “I only know that my heart is breaking.”
Shuyun’s lack of
experience would no longer stop him from offering comfort to a woman whose
heart was breaking. Nishima felt his arms encircle her and she pulled him
close, burying her face in his bare shoulder. Neither moved for some time, as
though afraid motion or words would somehow signal acceptance of the changes
they both sensed coming.
“I have a memory
from my childhood,” Nishima whispered, “perhaps my earliest memory.
I was crying, I can’t remember why, and my mother held me as you do
now.”
“My first memory is
singing a child’s chant with my fellow neophytes. I have no memory of my
family.”
“Were you that
young, then, when you came to the Brothers?”
Shuyun shook his head.
“When you are very young, the teachers have you perform exercises where
you imagine your mother’s face changing—from round to sharp, or
long to round. Soon you can no longer remember her true appearance. It is the
first lesson that we live in the illusion.”
“It seems a
terrible thing to do to a child,” Nishima whispered.
“Perhaps.”
Shuyun put his mouth close to her ear. “There is something you must
know.” Pulling away
slowly, he held up a
hand. “Place your palm against mine.”
Nishima did so.
“Push.”
Beginning slowly Nishima
applied pressure, controlling her breathing, feeling the slight tingle of
“inner force” through her hand. Shuyun stared at her with great
earnestness all the while. Suddenly Nishima found her hand being forced back,
not quickly but steadily. Only when this steady pressure had stopped pushing
her back did Nishima realize that there was moonlight falling between
Shuyun’s hand and her own. She faltered and withdrew her hand, staring
openly.
“Brother Satake did
not tell me of this,” Nishima whispered. “I… would not have
thought it possible.”
Shuyun shook his head.
“There is no record of such a thing being done before,” Shuyun
said, his voice so filled with awe that Nishima found herself moving away as
though the monk was suddenly something to be wary of.
“Are you the
Teacher, then?” she whispered.
Shuyun shook his head,
almost a tremor, and shrugged, looking down at his hands. “I do not know.
Certainly this confusion I feel is not the Enlightenment the Brothers
describe.” He met Nishima’s gaze and she felt he asked her,
silently, to reach out to him, and despite her discomfort and questions about
the nature of this man she could not refuse.
Gently, Nishima pulled
the quilt aside and slipped into the bed beside Shuyun. They lay in the
moonlight, close, in each other’s arms—too much to be said, neither
able to find words to begin.
The sounds of the boat
swaying and rocking through the waters were all around them and the moonlight
arced slowly across the cabin. The entire effect was one of strangeness—a
room that moved and hissed and burbled, cool pure light illuminating the cabin,
bright enough to cast shadows. It was as though they had been transported to
some other realm where the laws and forces of nature were unknown.
Nishima felt
Shuyun’s finger trace the shape of her ear, his touch so light. Down the
curve of her neck and she realized she was holding her breath. Out along her
shoul-
der, pulling her robe
back. She felt the soft silk slide across her breast and then the soft warmth
of Shuyun’s skin against her own.
Brave heart, Nishima thought, what beauty we have found.
Lord Shonto Shokan awoke
in a small gray room, a thin line of daylight finding its way through a crack
in the window shutter. Early, he thought, it must be very early. The furs he
slept under kept him warm, but the stone walls drew all the heat out of the air
and the lord’s breath was visible. He rolled over again and was startled
by pain in his back and neck. Carrying a load, dweller style, had asked much of
him.
A night’s sleep
uninterrupted by the cold: Shokan had to admit that he was not meant to live high
in the mountains. He could not bear the cold.
Unwilling to face the air
in the room and unable to think of a pressing reason to rise, Shokan lay in his
furs wondering about the people who had found him—rescued him was perhaps
more accurate.
In some ways they were
not unlike the people of Wa, the lowlanders. The mountain dwellers’ dress
and habits differed, there was no question, but there was a familiar focus of
duty among these people which reminded Shokan of the retainers on the Shonto
fief.
There appeared to be no
aristocracy here, though the elders were accorded a level of respect that was
impressive. But even their lives did not compare with that of a pampered member
of Wa’s peerage—his life, for instance.
If Shokan were to
characterize the greatest difference between the mountain dwellers and his own
people, it was in the dwellers’ seemingly consistent ability to find
delight in virtually everything. More than innocence, this was a quality of joy
and spontaneity that was seldom seen in the Empire of Wa—a world
smothered with rigidly structured etiquette, formality, and ceremony. Even his
stepsister, Nishima, who flouted the rules of her station almost without
regard—and with impressive impunityi— did not share the spirit he witnessed in the
dwellers. He realized he was somewhat jealous.
The door opened a crack
and Shokan was not sure whose face appeared in the dark hall beyond. The door
was pushed open by a foot and Quinta-la appeared. In her hands she bore a
covered wooden tray and the smell of food permeated the cold air. She set this
on what appeared to be a low, round stool and went directly to the window,
speaking as she went. There was no way to be certain, but Shokan had the
distinct impression that this young woman was scolding him. Unfastening the
latches she flung the shutters open and sunshine flooded the room, warm
sunshine, and the young lord was not sure that the outside air was not warmer
also.
Quinta-la squatted down
on her heels and gestured to the food and smiled.
Shokan said the word he
hoped meant “eat” and received a delighted smile and a torrent of
dweller language, not a single word of which he recognized.
When he had eaten, every
bite watched with apparent interest, Quinta-la rose and gestured to the door,
speaking as she did so.
“I would love to
stroll in the sunshine in your lovely company, Quinta-la,” Shokan
responded, “but it is improper for you to be here and certainly very
improper that I should dress in your presence, so…”He waved her
out, smiling so that she would not take offense, and when this did not work he
rose, wrapped in a fur, and guided her out the door which caused much laughter,
but then many things he did made her laugh.
Dressing quickly the lord
went out into the hall where Quinta-la crouched down against the wall.
“Ketah,” she
said and jumped up, waving down the corridor. She walked beside him, her pace
forcing Shokan to hurry, yet, except for the speed at which she walked, she
showed little sign of being rushed. She smiled at Shokan when he looked at her
and seemed to be walking quickly out of excitement or perhaps sheer pleasure,
but not because there was pressure to be somewhere.
They left the building by
a very substantial wooden door and crossed a stone courtyard to ascend a set of
narrow stairs. In the shade between the building and the high wall the air was
frigid and occasional patches of ice appeared on the stone treads.
tiATHERER OF CLOUDS
As they reached the top
of the stairs, and another of what seemed to be an endless number of courtyards
and terraces, a shout went up and in seconds a swarm of children appeared,
converging from all directions. Round faced, with perfect, white smiles they
were a contrast to the quiet, decorous children Shokan was used to
encountering. They ran in circles around the stranger and his tiny guide or
pranced along beside Quinta-la tagging on to her hands and clothing, laughing
and jabbering and letting go the occasional shriek, apparently for sheer joy.
They crossed yet another
stone terrace toward a wide set of steps, just high enough that Shokan could
not see what lay at the next level. As they came closer to the stairs, the
children became more subdued and then fell completely silent. A few at a time
they began to drop behind so that the adults reached the foot of the stairs
alone. There Quinta-la stopped also, her face uncommonly serious.
Shokan looked back and
the children stood watching him, big eyes unreadable to his outsider
perception, their smiles gone. Quinta-la nodded, the strange gesture of the
head falling forward then jerking up. Waving her hand at the steps, she tried a
reassuring smile though it was so forced it did anything but reassure.
I have no sword, Shokan
thought. He had left it in his chambers out of respect and trust for the people
who had saved him, for they did not carry swords in their own village. It is a
groundless fear, he told himself, a thought without honor. The dwellers are not
treacherous.
As there seemed to be
little choice, he bowed and turned up the stairs, watched intently by his
strangely mute audience.
Though he was not certain
what he had been expecting, what greeted him at the top of the stairs did not
fullfil those expectations. A round terrace surrounded by a waist-high stone
wall. In its center a stunted tree lifted twisted branches against the
background of white mountains and the broad valley.
The scene was so dramatic
that Shokan almost did not notice the tiny figure sitting on a stone bench,
looking out across the valley. A woman dressed in long robes of dark colors
belted with a faded purple sash. She turned
as Shokan stood regarding
her, unsure what to do. A gesture, not unfriendly, to join her.
If this woman was not the
sister of the old man Shokan had met when the mountain dwellers first
approached him, then the lord would feel his powers of observation had deserted
him entirely. Tiny and wrinkled, her face looked out from the folds of a rough
woolen scarf of faded blue.
“You,” she
said in a thin but surprisingly deep voice, “are Lord Shonto?”
Shokan hid his surprise,
for she was the first dweller he had encountered who spoke his language, and
almost without accent it seemed. “I am.” He bowed.
She motioned for him to
sit and he took the other end of the bench to the one she occupied, her knees
drawn up in a posture much like a young girl’s. “I expected you to
be older,” she said.
“I am Lord Shonto
Shokan. Perhaps you mistake me for my father, Lord Shonto Motoru?”
“You are the
son?” she said. “I expected you to be younger.”
The lord smiled. “I
was not told your name or title; excuse me, I do not know how to address
you.”
“Alinka-sa,”
she offered. “I am,” she paused. “I do not know your
word… an old-one.”
“Elder,”
Shokan offered.
She gave the
dwellers’ peculiar nod. “Elder. I am, perhaps, the elder. I am the voice of my people.”
“You speak my
language very well.”
She shrugged, offering no
explanation. “May I ask what led you to be in the pass before the snows
had melted?”
“We were attempting
to make our way to Chiba, the province on the western side of the
mountains.”
Alinka-sa did not hide
her look of displeasure at this answer. A few seconds of silence followed and
then Shokan went on.
“There are events
in the Empire that led us to attempt this crossing of the mountains too early.
There is a war beginning or perhaps it has already begun. It will take place
beyond the mountains.” He nodded west.
Silence followed while
this was considered. Unlike the
rest of her people, there
was no sense of lightness in Alinka-sa. Hers seemed a personality devoid of
humor or joy.
“Why does the
Emperor allow the army of the Alat-an, the desert tribes, to move south on the
canal?”
“It is a long
story, Alinka-sa.”
She looked at him
sharply. “Perhaps there are things even a lord of Wa does not understand.
The Shonto name is ancient and honored, but my people saved you and all of your
company: your debt is great, Shokan-li. How it will be paid is yet to be
decided. What part you play in the events of the world will become part of the
decision. ‘’
“You will not allow
us to continue through the mountains?” Shokan did not hide his shock as
well as he hoped.
“What will become
of you, Shokan-li, has not been decided. The world beyond our valley is large.
Some play parts larger than others. Perhaps you should pass through the
mountains to the battle beyond. But it is also possible that you should stay
with us, preserving the Shonto House through a time of great turmoil. This
cannot be decided easily.”
Shokan nodded. “You
are a Seer, then?” It might explain why Quinta-la and the children were
afraid of her.
“I do not
understand this word,” she said bluntly.
Questioning an elder, the
lord was beginning to suspect, was not acceptable. “The situation in the Empire,
Alinka-sa, is difficult to explain and much that I would tell you is conjecture
only.” He took a long breath. “It began this summer past when my
father was appointed Imperial Governor of the province of Seh…”
There seemed to be
nothing else to do, so Shokan began the tale. Slowly at first, and then the
words began to flow more easily. He told her of the Emperor’s plot and
what he thought it meant, the coins Tanaka had found, his own time in Seh. The
sun had traveled a good distance across the sky before he was done. During the
entire telling, Alinka-sa did not ask a single question. Occasionally her
eyebrows would rise or she would give the dwellers’ nod of the head, but
she never interrupted Shokan’s story.
Even when he finally
finished, the old woman did not speak but stared off across the green valley
floor.
“The tree with the
fan-leaf, what is it called?” she asked suddenly.
“Ginkyo?”
She nodded. “Alinka
means ginkyo in my tongue. This tree does not grow in the mountains and is
something of a legend among my people. They believe that the leaves are quite
large and that the ladies of Wa simply pluck a leaf from the tree whenever they
need a fan. Though I often told my people the truth of this, after some
discussion they decided that, in this matter, I was not well informed.”
She gave the tiniest smile. “My mother was like you—she became lost
in the mountains and was saved by the people of this village. When my father
died, my mother went back to Itsa and we lived for some time in Wa before
returning here.”
She looked over at
Shokan, meeting his gaze. “For this reason I know your language and
something of your ways, strange as they are to us. Some of your story was known
to me, though much was new. Great tragedy is about to shake Wa and this saddens
me.” Alinka-sa looked away again.
“Tell me of this
monk who serves your father,” she said, not looking at Shokan.
The lord hesitated before
speaking. “The people who brought us here used his name
often—Shuyun. Why was that.”
Obviously controlling her
annoyance Alinka-sa answered. “Shu-yung, it is a word in our language: it
means bearer, those who carry. To the ear of an outsider the word meaning to
bear would be indistinguishable from the word meaning bearer. Tell me of
him.”
“I have never met
Brother Shuyun, in truth. It is said that he is very advanced in the skills of
the Botahist monks. Both my father and my sister have written of him in very
flattering terms. That is all I know.”
She nodded. “My
people will guide you through the mountains. You will leave at sunrise.”
Alinka-sa rose to her feet with an ease that one would not expect in one so
aged. Standing, she was eye to eye with the young lord.
“But why have you
decided this? I am grateful, certainly but what has made your decision?”
Very gently she reached
out and touched his cheek. “Quinta-la will accompany you to the lowlands.
May Botahara go with you.” She turned and crossed the terrace,
disappearing down the steps.
Forty-five
The sky was as confused
as a lover’s heart. Clouds torn and buffeted by conflicting winds rolled
overhead, moving against a background of higher clouds, striated like sand
revealed by the tide.
It had rained earlier
that day and threatened to do so again. The wind was steady from the east
though it had blown from every point of the compass that morning, making the
rivermen curse under their breaths.
Shuyun knelt before his
liege-lord, waiting. They sat on the deck of Lord Shonto’s barge which
was moving south at its best speed. Dipping his brush in ink, Lord Shonto added
three characters to the letter and then waved for his secretary who had
servants remove the writing table and all of its contents. Turning to his
Spiritual Advisor, the! lord smiled.
“You have heard the
news of Lord Komawara, Shuyun-sum?”
“I have, Sire.
Botahara protects us.”
Shonto nodded. “It
is good that He does. Perhaps you do not know that Rohku Saicha has returned to
us also, though his losses were even more severe than those of Lord Komawara
and General Jaku.” Shonto hesitated and his face showed a trace of the
strain he no doubt felt.
“The Khan has done
the correct thing. Driving us south will give him the possibility of food by
summer. If he is wise enough to put the peasants he captures to work rather
than to the sword, his army will not starve.” Shonto pulled an armrest
closer. “This smaller barbarian army will soon be beyond assistance from
the larger army… If our own force were not so small, it would be an
opportunity.” He fell silent, lost in the great game of gü that he played.
Shuyun sat quietly
waiting. The monk was aware that
he felt a growing sense
of disquiet as he sat before his liege-lord—the father of the woman with
whom he had so recently spent the night. Not that Nishima was not of an age to
make her own decisions in such matters, but Shuyun could not believe that Lord
Shonto would be pleased by such an alliance.
I am torn in every
direction, the monk thought. There was a part of him that felt closer to Shonto
and the lord’s purposes as he moved further from the faith of his own Order. As though the concerns of the world became more real as the ways of the spirit became more confusing.
Yet he was a Botahist monk still and he had spent the night in the embrace of
his liege-lord’s daughter—certainly an act that would shock anyone
who lived in the Empire of Wa. Although Shonto did not pry into Lady
Nishima’s affairs unduly, was it possible that the lord was unaware of
what was taking place? Shuyun thought it unlikely and thus the discomfort.
Shonto focused on his
Spiritual Advisor suddenly. “You have a report for me, Shuyun-sum?”
The monk nodded, pushing
his feelings into one corner of his being. “It appears that we have
isolated the plague for now, Sire, though I think we will see other cases yet.
The refugees are frightened, but this has resulted in them moving south more
quickly—a good thing. We have placed the barge for the sick at the front
of the fleet and it flies a plague banner. All the Imperial Guards in the
Empire could not clear the canal more quickly than the sight of that terrible
flag. There has been only one more death, may Botahara protect her soul.”
The monk made a sign. “I pray that the situation does not grow worse,
Sire. Brother Sotura is a man of great skill—he has the present situation
well in hand.”
Shonto nodded. “I
wish to be kept informed of this matter. If plague finds root in our army, it
will not matter if the Khan is followed by one man or one hundred
thousand—our army will be reduced to ghosts.” Shonto waved at the
mouth of a small creek hung with willows. “Master Myochin will no doubt
hear of our approach. He will not be pleased at the prospect of leaving his
home.” Shonto shook his head. “We all hope for peace in our old
age… It will be some time before we see peace again, Shuyun-sum. Even if
this Khan can defeat
the armies of Wa, holding
the Empire will be another matter entirely. Children born today may find their
way into this war before it is over, though I pray it will not
Forty-six
The Stone Ship appeared
to float in its own reflection in the middle of the Lake of the Autumn Crane on
the western edge of the Imperial Palace. It was largely carved of marble though
jade had also been employed by the ancient artisans—uncommon materials
for a ship. In truth, it was no boat at all but a small island of stone blocks
carved to form an elaborate, somewhat fantastic ship though to a small scale.
Over the centuries the
Stone Ship had been the favorite retreat of many an Emperor or Empress and had
only fallen into disfavor with the recent dynasty. It remained, however, an
ideal place to find peace and to carry on conversations that one did not want
overheard. Perhaps it was this that had brought the Emperor out to the Stone
Ship.
An awning of spring green
had been spread for the Son of Heaven and he sat on silk cushions attended by
only a single secretary who stood on the bow, signaling the shore for anything
Akantsu requested, occasionally scurrying back to the stern at a nod from the
Emperor. So that the Son of Heaven could spend a few hours in this blessed
isolation an entire retinue of officials and servants and secretaries waited on
the shore, kneeling patiently—only the most senior members involved in
conversation. To maintain this company a kitchen had been constructed behind a
screen of willow trees, and runners stood ready to hurry to the Palace to
retrieve anything or anyone the Emperor might request.
Swallows and kingfishers
crossed the lake, weaving intricate patterns, and ducks cut vees into its calm
surface. Jaku Tadamoto watched three swallows chasing a downy white feather,
one picking it out of the air and rushing off, then dropping it for the others
to dive at. This may
have been a struggle for
possession of nest material, but it looked for all the world like a game, and
the acrobatics of the players were impressive.
Tadamoto was being
sculled across the Lake of the Autumn Crane’s calm waters in one of the
elegant craft used by officials of the Island Palace. As was often the case,
the young colonel came to his audience with the Emperor carrying written
reports and scrolls, not all of which bore good news.
As well as official
writings Tadamoto also carried, hidden in his sleeve, a letter from Osha. It
was a conciliatory letter, full of apologies for offenses she had not
committed, washed in sadness, her pain tearing at his heart. They must not give
up, she had written, their love would survive if only they believed it would.
So he tried to believe.
Tadamoto also tried to
push this letter out of his mind as it would undoubtedly affect his ability to
serve his Emperor—something that could not be allowed now that civil war
was all but upon them.
The sampan came alongside
a stone dock built in the shape of the platform one found at the foot of a
ship’s ladder. Tadamoto mounted the steps to the “deck” where
the secretary greeted him with a low bow. Crossing to the quarterdeck on his
knees, Tadamoto bowed at the foot of the stairs and waited to be acknowledged.
The Emperor pored over a
long scroll, completely absorbed. The ruler’s robe of yellow embroidered
with a flight of cranes among clouds created a disturbing contrast. Although
his garb was perfectly appropriate for the season—light of
spirit—the Emperor’s face was drawn and pale like that of a man who
had not known a night of peace in many, many days. Tadamoto kept his eyes cast
down, concentrating on the wood-grain that had been carved into the planks of
the stone deck.
Letting his arms drop,
the Emperor laid the scroll across his legs. “Colonel.”
Tadamoto bowed again.
“Let us begin with
your news. My patience has worn away to nothing and pleasantries have become
most unpleasant. What do we know today?”
Tadamoto unrolled a small
scroll—notes for this audience. “Shonto’s flotilla is three
days north of Denji
Gorge, Sire, and has
increased its speed considerably in the last few days. The first refugees have
crossed the border of our own province and they will begin to arrive in the
Capital in numbers within a few days. I have detailed officials and guards to
deal with this influx.
“Our own army has
reached twenty-five thousand in number, Sire, and will be thirty thousand
before the next moon.” Tadamoto lowered the scroll. “I have reports
here, Emperor, if you wish to read them.” He tapped the pile of rolled
paper. “I estimate that Lord Shonto could be within the border of Dentou
within fourteen days if he continues to travel at his present speed. There has
been a report that Shonto’s fleet is preceded by a barge flying the
plague banner. This report has not been substantiated and even if it proves
true it would appear to be a ruse to keep the canal open before Shonto’s
fleet. Nonetheless the rumor precedes the flotilla like a bow wave.”
The Emperor shook his
head. “Shonto would think of such a thing. It is entirely without honor
but effective, no doubt.‘’ The Emperor lifted the scroll he had
been reading. ”I have received my own reports. Prince Wak-aro has sent
this, a complete report of the military situation prepared by Shonto’s
staff. My son claims to have seen a barbarian army of one hundred thousand and
it is accompanied by a letter written by the captain of the Prince’s
guard—a man we selected together, Colonel. He, too, claims to have seen
this army. The Emperor set the scroll aside. “My son is not a warrior and
easily duped, but from the captain of his guard I expected more. It is most
curious.”
Tadamoto nodded.
“Excuse me, Sire…”
“Speak, Colonel, this is no time to be shy.”
“At your suggestion, I sent the most
reliable men I have north to assess this situation. According to their
count—they saw the barbarian army with their own eyes— the force
pursuing Shonto is no more than thirty thousand and perhaps less.
Shonto’s own army appears to number between twenty and twenty-five
thousand, a significant number of these being Imperial Guards. Alongside the
shinta blossom fly the banners of both Prince Wakaro and my brother Katta. It
grieves me to bring you this news, Emperor.”
The Emperor looked toward
the white walls of the Island Palace as though he meditated upon their form.
But his breathing did not exhibit the controlled rhythm of meditation and his
hands would not lie still on his knees. “Betrayed,” the Emperor
almost whispered, “betrayed by my own son and by the man I treated as a
son.” Picking up his sword, he laid it gently across his knees. “Is
this army in league with Motoru, do you think?”
‘ ’My own men
believe there have been real battles with the barbarians though reports that
Lord Shonto scorched the earth as he passed south appear to be unfounded. They
saw no evidence of this. So it seems unlikely. There truly is a barbarian
invasion but not the hordes some would like us to believe.“
“Two invading
armies, one on the heels of the other.” The Emperor toyed with his sword.
“Betrayed by my own son,” he said again, his voice filled with
disbelief and pain.
The son you sent north to share in the
fate of Lord Shonto,
Tadamoto thought.
Forty-seven
The barges almost never
stopped now and though it meant the countryside was left untouched by the
devastation formerly wrought upon it, it also meant that Shi-meko could not get
off the boat to walk on the bank. This made it very easy to avoid Sister Morima
and all of the influences from her former life. But she was shut up on the ship
among people who were very different from her—the three ladies from the
Capital and their attendants. It was difficult for her.
The Plum Blossom Winds
filled the air with clouds of petals from the plum groves planted along the
canal. When a gust came, standing on the deck of the boat was like being in a
warm snowstorm, so thick were the petals in the air. The canal was almost a
white waterway and the decks of the ships were constantly needing to be swept
clear, for a rain shower would render a petal-covered deck dangerously slick.
Shimeko had given up
brushing the petals from her robe despite the fact that on the deep blue they
were very apparent. The robe had been a gift from Lady Nishima, one of the
lady’s own, no doubt, and though it was a cast-off it had obviously been
worn infrequently for the silk was as new as the day it had come from the loom.
Having seen the size of Lady Nishima’s wardrobe, Shimeko was not
surprised that signs of wear would not be found on the lady’s
clothing—and Lady Nishima often complained that she had left the Capital
with hardly anything to wear!
Shimeko smiled. Such a
statement would have offended the former nun only a few weeks before, but now
it only made her shake her head and laugh. The Lady Nishima Fanisan Shonto was
difficult to dislike and, despite having been raised in the greatest luxury,
could not
be said to have been
spoiled by it. She was a Lady of a great House, there was no doubt, but Lady
Nishima was a person of substance and accomplishment and depth. Shimeko could
not dislike her.
Shimeko turned away from
the rail, leaning there with the breeze at her back. Pulling her shawl down
onto her shoulders, she enjoyed the feeling of the wind blowing through her
hair; though it was still short by the standards of lay-women, it was longer
than Shimeko had ever known it.
The decision Shimeko made
was a difficult one. Although she had found Lady Nishima admirable in many
ways, there was this other matter which the former nun found very disturbing.
Shimeko was almost certain that Lady Nishima had more than once spent the
entire night alone with Brother Shuyun.
The young woman looked
off at the white-capped mountains rising along the western horizon. Having
little experience of the world, she did not know how such news would be
received by the population at large. What would Lord Shonto think of such a
thing? Sister Morima always claimed that the Brothers were entirely corrupt,
but Shimeko never suspected she had meant corrupt in ways such as this. And
Brother Shuyun! To think that many of the Sisters hoped he was the Teacher who was
spoken of. A vision of the Faceless Lovers carved into the cliff of Denji Gorge
came to her. This was the subject of Lady Nishima’s curiosity. Shimeko
brushed petals from her robe unconsciously. Was it possible that this sculpture
was not a heresy? Was Lady Nishima aware of things that Shimeko was not?
Sister Morima had also
claimed there were things written in the Sacred Scrolls of the Perfect Master
that were not included in any copies of these texts—things the
Brotherhood wished to keep hidden. Botahara had taken a bride, everyone knew
that, but when had he attained Enlightenment? That was the question that had
once caused a war. The bride was not spoken of in the writings of Botahara and
his disciples only mentioned her in passing. Shimeko shook her head. Despite
having left the Sisterhood and rejected its doctrine, she still found Lady
Nishima’s relations with Shuyun disturbing and a part of her feared this
might be jealousy.
There had been a night
when Shimeko had heard Lady Nishima cry out and though the former nun would
admit she knew little of such things, a cry of ecstasy was difficult to
mistake. Her own body had responded to this sound in a manner that was
surprising and her imagination had… well, it had not been under her
control.
A servant appeared at the
head of the companionway and, seeing Shimeko at the rail, crossed to her.
“Lady Nishima
awaits you, Shimeko-sum,” the woman said.
The young woman replaced
her shawl, nodded her thanks, and proceeded to the stairs, controlling her
nervousness with care.
Bowing at the door to
Lady Nishima’s cabin, she entered at a smile from her mistress.
“Shimeko-sum, it is
a pleasure to see you.” Nishima gestured to a cushion. “You are
well, I trust.”
“I am well, Lady
Nishima. It is kind of you to ask.”
“Are the petals on
the wind not a most impressive sight today?”
Shimeko nodded. “I
have just come from the deck.” And then she realized that not only were
her robes covered in petals, but it appeared a small snowstorm had focused its
efforts around her. “Please excuse me, Lady Nishima.” She was
obviously dismayed. “And all over your gift to me.”
Laughing with great
delight, Nishima reached out and touched Shimeko’s hand. “These
blossoms complement the robe beautifully. As for this,” she waved her
hand at the petals on the mat, “I would like nothing better than to have
my chambers covered in plum blossoms, like the floor of a grove. Would that not
be charming?” She
laughed again.
Shimeko smiled, not quite
reassured.
“I was told,
Shimeko-sum, that there was some matter you wished to speak of?”
Nodding, the former nun
gathered her courage. “It is not my intention to appear ungrateful for
your favor, Lady Nishima; serving the Shonto House has been a great honor.
There appears to be a matter that has arisen which is more suited to my
particular skills. I have come to ask if I may be released from your service so
that I might
tend to the sick aboard
the plague ship.“ She bowed when she finished and kept her eyes fixed on
the floor.
For a moment Nishima did
not respond but only looked at the woman who had come to be a trusted
secretary. “I regret to hear that you wish to leave, Shimeko-sum, for
your skills are far beyond those of anyone who has served me in the same
capacity. Will the Brothers allow you to assist them? Is there not a certain
antagonism to the Sisterhood, not to mention great secrecy about the ways of
healing?”
“As you say, Lady
Nishima, the two Botahist Orders are not allies, but I am no longer a Sister
and Brother Shuyun has said that the Brothers’ need is great. I may
assist and learn little or nothing of their secrets, I am sure.”
“And you would be
in no danger from this illness?”
“Certainly not,
Lady Nishima. I am no longer a Sister, but I have not forgotten all that I
learned. It is also true that the Brothers could cure me if I were to become
ill—though I assure you this is next to impossible.” She paused and
then said quietly. “Your concern touches me.”
Nishima arranged the hem
of her robes. “When you first came to me, you spoke of a desire to serve
the Shonto Spiritual Advisor, Brother Shuyun. If you go to care for the sick,
you will be more removed from Brother Shuyun than you are presently. Does this
not concern you?”
Shimeko nodded
reflexively. “I do not know, Lady Nishima, I… There are sick who I
may offer help to. In a time such as this, it seems that I must do what I am
able.” She shrugged.
“I see. Have the
Brothers agreed to accept your assistance, Shimeko-sum?”
The young woman shook her
head.
“If they agree to
allow you to assist them, I will release you upon one condition—you will
send messages to assure me that you are well.”
Shimeko bowed.
“Certainly, my lady.”
Nishima forced a smile.
“You are no doubt anxious to proceed with this matter. Please inform me
of the Brothers’ decision. Certainly you are welcome to stay with me if
this plan is untenable.”
“I thank you, my
lady.” She met Nishima’s eye for the briefest second. “It has
been an honor to serve you.”
With that she bowed and
retreated to the door, receiving a last reassuring smile from the young
aristocrat as she went. Shimeko was surprised at the feeling of emptiness this
decision left. She had almost embarrassed herself in conversation with Lady
Nishima, so touched was she by the woman’s concern.
My life will become quite
simple again, she thought. I will tend the sick, I will eat and I will sleep.
There will not be the turmoil and confusion of my present position. No Sisters
will come to me with demands that I can not fullfil and I will not have my
heart torn by growing loyalties and attachments that I am not suited to.
Forty-eight
For those that had
journeyed north in Lord Shonto’s fleet, Denji Gorge was remembered not
for its unique beauty but for the days when no one had been certain what would
befall those traveling with Seh’s Imperial Governor.
The country surrounding
the gorge itself had changed so much in the intervening months that it was like
returning to another time. Over the Imperial Guard Keep at the gorge’s
northern end flew the Emperor’s banner, and the locks were administered
by Imperial Functionaries and guarded by black-clad Imperial Guards. Nowhere
could one find signs of the Hajiwara presence. The armor with green lacing had
disappeared—unless one looked very carefully at the men who formed Lord
Ko-mawara’s guard. There, among the armor of night blue, one could find a
trim of green on the occasional shoulder piece or sleeve.
All of the earthworks and
fortifications constructed over the years had been dismantled and several of
the larger manor houses that had been protected by moats were in the process of
converting these to decorative ponds or filling them in altogether.
Arrayed along the stone
quay of the northern locks were several rows of kneeling guards in purple-laced
armor, hands on their thighs, faces and posture rigid. As Lord Shonto’s
boat bumped up against die quay, the warriors bowed low. Out from among this
group emerged a youth of such small stature that it brought a smile to the lips
of all who had not previously encountered the Lord Butto Joda.
“I greet you, Lord
Butto,” Shonto said from the deck. “It is a great honor to be met
by such an esteemed company.”
Lord Butto gave a half
bow. “The honor is mine entirely, Lord Shonto. I bring greetings from my
father who asks that you forgive him for not meeting you himself.”
“Lord Butto does me
great honor. I trust that he is well.”
Butto Joda gave a half
nod and a smile, acknowledging the question but giving no specific
answer—the senior lord of the Butto had not been well for many years.
Steps were set out and
Shonto and several of his advisors disembarked.
“Certainly you
remember Lord Komawara, General Hojo, and Steward Kamu?”
“I could not forget
those who fought so valiantly beside the Butto. I am forever in your
debt,” he said bowing. “And Brother Shuyun, he travels with you
also?”
“Brother Shuyun
monitors the progress of the ship bearing the sick through the locks. We are
taking care that there is no transfer of disease.”
The young lord nodded.
“I am less concerned knowing this.”
Jaku Katta was delivered
to the quay at that moment, his sampan coming alongside the stone wall. The
Imperial Guards on the quay bowed low in unison.
“General
Jaku,” Lord Butto greeted him with a great smile. “I see that my
concerns regarding who would control the locks were groundless.” He
looked around. “There seems to be no delegation from the Imperial
Governor of Itsa. New to his position, perhaps the worthy Governor has not yet
learned proper protocol for such occasions.”
The smiles were polite.
The Governor of Itsa was no doubt under orders to detain Shonto but had not the
troops to do so. Ignoring the flotilla’s passing was the only choice left
to the poor man, and his situation was made worse by the fact that Imperial
Guard on the canal were loyal to Jaku Katta. An appeal to the larger Houses of
Itsa for assistance would have been futile as the most powerful family in the
province was the Butto—sworn ally of Lord Shonto.
The group walked slowly
along the quay in the direction of the gorge, the line of Butto guards bowing
in turn as the party passed. On a lookout that had recently been a Hajiwara
military position, mats and cushions had been
spread. Calypta and
willow trees coming newly into leaf shaded the lookout from the early afternoon
sun so that no awning or pavilion was necessary.
The great gorge stretched
out to the south, the surface broken by the breeze and sparkling in the spring
sunlight. Off the gravel bar below the fane of the lost Brothers, river craft
of every type and size swung to anchors, so close together that fouling of
rodes and lines must have been constant.
Along the eastern cliff
more boats huddled, mooring to unseen irregularities in the rock face and
countless more sailed back and forth or drifted free, unable to find anchorage
or moorings. Smoke rose from many of the craft and a ragged camp had been
erected on the gravel bar itself, shelters of all shapes and colors arranged in
random patterns.
In contrast to this chaos
of refugee craft, a line of ships in formation passed down the middle of the
gorge, the foremost boats almost at the southern locks—Lord
Shon-to’s flotilla continuing south.
A meal was served by
Butto attendants and plum wine, a gift from Lord Shonto, was poured for the
young lord and his guests.
“It is unfortunate
that Prince Wakaro was unable to join us,” Shonto said to Lord Butto.
Setting his wine cup
down, the young lord nodded. “Most unfortunate. I had the honor of
entertaining the Prince on his journey north. He was most kind.”
Lifting his cup to
Komawara and Jaku in turn, Butto Joda said, “I have heard tales of your
recent exploits, Lord Komawara, General. It was a bold stroke—a frontal
attack on the barbarians’ supply train.” He gave a half bow.
“Your reputations have become great. I consider it an honor to join you
in your struggle.‘’ He bowed also to Hojo.
“This barbarian
force,” the young lord continued, “has divided, I am told, and a
part of it is now in close pursuit?”
Shonto nodded at Hojo.
General Hojo bowed.
“There is a force of about twenty-five thousand not far behind and they
come slightly closer each day—the number of refugee craft fleeing south
is slowing our progress.” Hojo stroked the
gray hair of his beard,
staring out over the gorge. “This is becoming a cause of some
concern.”
Butto Joda nodded.
“I have considered this situation myself. I have taken the liberty of
allowing no boats to pass through the southern locks for six days past. River
craft accumulate in the gorge at an alarming rate, but the canal south is now
open for many rih. In a letter, Lord Shonto suggested that we prepare this set
of locks so that, once your fleet has passed, it would take engineers of great
skill to restore them to use. These measures, General Hojo, should improve the
speed at which you travel and, at the same time, impede the progress of your
pursuers.” He held up his cup. “This is excellent wine. Does it
come from Seh?”
Shimeko had slept three
nights on the deck to be away from the endless coughing and the odors of the
sick. Although she had often treated the sick before, she had been too young to
minister to those stricken by the plague during the previous outbreak. It was a
frightening disease, so she spent as much time out in the fresh air as her
duties would allow.
Upwind, and not far off,
a small boat sailed a parallel course and aboard it, standing at the rail as
she did herself, Shimeko could see Initiate Brother Shuyun. The distance was
such that, had they attempted to speak, they could not have heard each other over
the wind and boat sounds nor could the other’s expression be seen. To the
former nun this distance seemed great—as great as the distance between
her present life and her days as a Bo-tahist nun. Did she still hope he was the
Teacher and would help her find tranquillity of purpose again?
She looked off to the
south where the locks awaited them. She was a healer now and though it was a
simple life, as she had hoped, the confusion she had felt in Lady
Nishima’s service had not disappeared.
Earlier the plague ship
had passed the fane of the Brothers of the Eightfold Path—the Faceless
Lovers. It had been difficult to view the figures, for she did not want to be
seen looking at something so unseemly. Even so, she had managed a glance or
two. Thoughts of Lady Nishima with Brother Shuyun would not leave her in peace.
* * *
The wind moved the pine
branches in slow circles, constantly spoiling Rohku Tadamori’s view of
the advancing army. The young guard officer had abandoned his blue-laced armor
in favor of the brown and green garb of the huntsmen and this clothing helped
to camouflage him where he lay. The forest floor was cooled by occasional rain
and the consistent wind out of the east, and Tadamori found that his muscles
were growing stiff.
The small army, as it was becoming known, traveled at a pace that
was impressive. Even those born of the desert could learn the handling of
rafts, and the crude sails the pirates had fabricated from bamboo cloth were
surprisingly efficient with such a fair wind. Horsemen still rode along the
bank but they led strings of the barbarian ponies which were able to cover much
more ground without riders. Constant changing of mounts for the riders was
required, but this was not difficult.
There was no doubt in
Tadamori’s mind that the small army was gaining on Lord Shonto’s
flotilla. Occasional refugees were being overtaken by the barbarians now, and
the Shonto guard did not like to contemplate what might happen to
them—especially the women.
The huntsman who was
Tadamori’s companion touched his arm and cocked his head toward the
passing army. Among the hundreds of rafts one came into view bearing banners,
some gold and crimson. Tadamori and his companion had hidden themselves atop a
hill overlooking the canal from the west, but they were still half a rih from
the bank—close enough to assess the army but not able to see who its
leaders might be.
The question in the minds
of the two men of Wa was: does the Khan lead this expeditionary force? If the
great chieftain had taken it upon himself to pursue the retreating army, then
Lord Shonto might consider a battle. It was believed likely that the Khan was
the only force that held the various tribes together. Brother Shuyun’s
barbarian servant was utterly convinced that without the Khan the natural
rivalry between the tribes would soon lead to the dissolution of the great army
if not an outright war between the factions.
Rohku reached up and
stopped the branch from blocking his view. It was difficult to say. Almost
certainly that
was the Khan’s
banner, but then the Emperor’s banner was seen over all of Wa, above
Imperial Keeps and palaces of government. This might be the banner of the
desert chieftain, but the Khan himself might be here only in spirit. It would
be the worst foolishness for the men of Wa to destroy their army fighting this
force and find the Khan was not present. Foolish indeed.
It had been seven years
since the Supreme Master had set foot on the land of Wa. Normally his arrival
was heralded by celebration and ceremony and pilgrims would come from across
the Empire just to kneel outside the temple grounds in which he resided. On
this journey, however, the Supreme Master came quietly, if not quite secretly.
His ship arrived in Yankura without gaining any notice, and the head of the
Botahist Brotherhood boarded a smaller boat that bore him swiftly to the Jade
Temple.
Peering out a slit
between the curtains the Supreme Master watched the activity of the Floating
City. The canals and docks and quays teemed with people in motion, for Yankura
was the center of shipping and commerce in the Empire of Wa and it appeared
never to rest. Such lack of tranquillity, the monk thought, how can they live
such lives? Even more to the point, how did Brother Hutto live in the midst pf
this? It was not conducive to the contemplation of Botahara’s words,
there was no doubt of that.
Botahara’s words
were more on the Supreme Master’s mind recently—His true words. The
blossoming of the Udumbara, the missing scrolls—these matters disturbed
even his sleep. And now news of this barbarian invasion. He had returned to Wa
as soon as word had arrived on the first ship of spring.
There was about to be war
with an army that did not even know the words of the Perfect Master, a dynasty
might fall, civil war was almost certain, and the Shonto House seemed likely to
finally suffer the fate that overtook all other Houses—extinction.
Small river craft of all
description lay alongside the quay, loading cargo from the great stone
warehouses. In the midst of this a ragged child wriggled out of an open port
and was spotted by a river man who sent up a shout. Jumping to the next boat,
the child was barely able to
r
grab the rail. Shouts
echoed the alarm as the child pulled himself up onto the deck. Scrambling over
stacked boxes, he leaped an open hatch and dodged a burly sailor. Holding
something in his robe, he made another impossible jump to the quay where it
seemed certain he would disappear into the clutter and the uncaring crowd.
The Supreme Master
watched in fascination. Suddenly a man appeared from behind a pile of sacks and
the child ran into him head-on, allowing one of his pursuers to grab him by the
hair. A wild struggle ensued until the much larger man landed a blow that drove
the child to his knees, and a series of punches and kicks left the child an
unmoving pile of rags on the stones.
The scene was lost to
view then and the Supreme Master slumped back against the cushions, fixed in
his mind was the image of triumph on the man’s face as he beat the child
to the ground. And this is
what I have come to,
the old monk thought, a
brutal, violent land.
The Lake of the Seven
Masters was not large enough to develop much swell except in storm winds; still
it was not as calm as a canal, and Lady Nishima steadied herself by clutching
the frame of the port. The fane of the Brothers of the Eightfold Path was
quickly falling astern. Nishima could see the cliff that appeared almost to
have been carved with shadows and light—carved into the form of a man and
woman in the act of love.
She moved away from the
port and returned to kneeling on the carpet. After a moment, she lay down and
cradled her head on her arm, pressing her eyes closed, the image returning as
she did so. The boat rocked her as she lay there, making her feel like a child,
though she knew the ache she felt was not the ache of a child.
Forty-nine
I aku Tadamoto, followed
by officers and engineers, 9 strode along the top of the
earthworks. Stopping suddenly, he let his eye follow the line of the newly
built defenses which ran between two steep hills broken only in its center by
the Grand Canal. The earthworks swept up at each end following the curve of the
hills and provided a surprising degree of symmetry to the entire composition.
Only a day north and west
of the Imperial Capital, the position had been chosen after long deliberation.
Tada-moto’s eye examined the plain that stretched out for several rih
north of the hills. It was there that the battle would take place—the
fortifications were only built to ensure that.
Despite all the
discussion that had led to this decision Tadamoto was not entirely convinced
this was the best course. The Emperor wanted to be certain that Shonto could
not reach the Capital where there was every possibility that the population
would rise up to support him. It was also true that the Imperial Capital would
be a difficult, if not impossible, position to defend. After all, the Capital
was not a fortified city but an enormous sprawl without continuous walls or
towers and festooned with gates and canals.
And so Tadamoto had been
sent north of the city to create these defenses. But who would the battle be
with? That was the question in the young colonel’s mind. There were two
armies hurrying south on the canal—one appearing to pursue the other.
Once they encountered the Imperial Army, what would occur? The situation was so
confused and unclear that anything the Emperor did was undoubtedly a gamble.
What if Shonto had
agreements with this Khan the Em-
peror had thought was his
own toy? Would the rebel army suddenly join the army of the desert, creating a
force double the size of the army Tadamoto had raised?
Recent reports indicated
that Shonto was rushing down the canal as fast as an army could be moved. This,
despite the fact that his own letters claimed he did everything to slow the
barbarians’ advance so that the Emperor could raise an army. What was
Shonto thinking?
Turning south, Jaku
looked out over the encampment that was slowly filling with the newly recruited
troops. Beyond that lay the commandeered mansion that would be the residence of
the Son of Heaven. As he trusted no one and felt everyone to be less capable
than himself, the Emperor had made it known that he would assume command of the
Imperial Army himself. There was no doubt that the Yamaku would survive or fall
according to the decisions made on this field, and the Emperor did not intend
to let another take control of his fate.
Tadamoto continued toward
the canal. A continuous flow of refugees passed by, both day and night,
swelling the population of the Capital and straining the ability of the city to
support such an influx. Crime was growing at alarming rates and the Imperial
Guard were hard pressed to deal with this, preparing for war as they were.
A messenger approached
Tadamoto’s guard and was allowed through. He bowed and knelt before his
commander. Tadamoto nodded for the man to speak.
“We have brought
the merchant, Colonel Jaku, as you requested. He is under guard in your
quarters.”
Somehow the capture of
Shonto’s vassal-merchant had been kept a secret and even now
Tanaka’s name was never used. Merchants
were as common as street women and a reference to one meant nothing. Tadamoto
was not sure what part Tanaka might play in events, if any, but it seemed
prudent to have the old man present. He was someone Shonto respected and there
were few of whom that could be said.
A hundred paces more brought
Tadamoto to the canal bank. Although most of the flowers had been swept from
the trees this far south, farther north the Plum Blossom Wind was still
blowing, for the boats of refugees were decorated with white and the canal
still bore petals south toward the sea.
Turning in a slow circle,
Tadamoto surveyed the scene one last time. When his gaze fell on the mansion
where the Emperor would dwell, the question that had bothered him all morning
flared up: who from the Imperial Court would accompany the Son of Heaven? He
whispered a silent prayer. Let the gods spare Osha that indignity— that
she be brought along like a common camp woman.
Fifty
Here, above the clouds
Mountain paths
Lead always to the unexpected.
Rush ahead
And see it with the eyes of a child
Lord Shonto Shokan
They had ascended and
descended so often that Shokan no longer knew how high in the mountains they
were. The type of vegetation that grew seemed to be an indicator but was
affected by too many other factors to be relied upon entirely.
The lord lay in the
darkness, looking up at the stars. The world he traveled in was so strange that
he was surprised to see constellations he recognized floating
overhead—the Two Sisters were peaking over the shoulder of a mountain
now.
It was not as cold as
usual, which might be a sign that they were at a lower elevation. Whatever the
reason he was thankful for it.
A few feet away Quinta-la
slept, wrapped in a fur. Since they had left the village in the valley she had
refused to teach him new words in her language but insisted he teach her words
in his own tongue. He was not sure what had led to her decision to learn the
tongue of the lowlanders, but she approached this task with an earnestness that
Shokan could not help but find charming— almost comic. Even so, Quinta-la
was learning at a pace that surprised the men from the Empire.
Closing his eyes, Shokan
felt sleep hovering close by. Earlier in the evening he had bathed in a hot
spring—an experience almost worth the days of walking. It had been
a large pool, one of
several etched out into the rock by ten thousand years of moving water. The
dwellers had a different sense of propriety—the women bathed with the men
and no one seemed to care.
Quinta-la had slipped
into the pool beside him and continued her language inquiry without being
self-conscious about the naturalness of their state. Shokan smiled. He had
fallen into the strange world of a story; at least for now.
The litter was lifted
carefully over the river boat’s rail and set gently on the deck where it
was secured against movement. Sister Sutso stood by, her hand to her mouth.
Stepping forward, she opened the curtain a hand’s width and was surprised
to find the Prioress awake, her lively eyes turned to a half-open curtain on
the litter’s opposite side.
“Excuse me,
Prioress,” Sutso said pulling the curtain closed. “I did not mean
to intrude. Excuse me.”
The dry voice filtered
through the curtain. “How far to the river, child?”
“Perhaps seven rih,
Prioress,” the senior nun’s secretary answered. “This creek
is quite narrow and not straight. We will be some time,”
“It is a day to be
enjoyed, Sister Sutso. A shame the trees have lost their blossoms, but the new
leaves are beautiful, are they not?” Before Sutso could agree, the
Prioress went on. “Have you heard the most recent news?”
Sutso shook her head. The
Prioress took delight in surprising her and usually succeeded. “I have
not, Prioress.”
“He arrived in
Yankura, three days ago; the Brotherhood’s Supreme Master. We cannot
tarry. Are Sister Gatsa and her companions content with our pilgrimage?”
“They speak of
little else, Prioress.” The faction lead by Sister Gatsa had been told
that the Prioress was on a pilgrimage to Monarta. The fact that the Prioress
had sent a message to the Brotherhood demanding that they open the grounds to
the Sisters had caused a hum of discussion—so much so in fact that no one
had yet
thought to wonder if
Monarta was their true destination.
The Prioress did not
speak for a moment, but Sutso was used to this and waited. One could never be
sure when the Prioress slept and when she was awake.
“War could sweep
away the prize for which we have lived all these lives. That fool of an Emperor
has gone off with his toy army?”
“He has,
Prioress.”
“May the hand of
Botahara guide us. Pray for fair winds, Sutso-sum, the currents are against
us.”
The officer was awakened
in the night and found he was dizzy and disoriented when he sat up. Imperial
Guards, he seemed to remember gambling and Imperial Guards… and rice
wine. His men—the men Lord Butto had left at the northern end of Denji
Gorge to be certain the locks were filled—were billeted in the Imperial
Guard Keep. Not perhaps the best idea.
“Captain?”
The voice came from outside the door to his tiny room.
“What is it?”
he said, unable to sound civil.
“Barbarians,
Captain. Many barbarians—they are only tworihoff.”
The officer was on his
feet. “Botahara save us! Alert the Imperial Guards.”
“The Guards will
muster immediately, Captain. Your armor is being readied. I have a lamp.”
The Captain opened his
door a crack and a lamp was passed in. He began pulling on the clothing that
would go under his armor. “What hour?”
“The owl,
Captain.”
“Huh. And we hoped
these barbarians did not even know of Denji Gorge.”
A clatter in the hall
announced the arrival of his armour, and he threw open the door to his
attendants. He could hear men shouting now, the sound of men running.
It could not be a large
barbarian force, or Lord Shon-to’s patrols would have known of it, he
reasoned. They would not allow functioning locks to fall into barbarian hands,
of that he was certain.
* * *
Shimeko had taken up
chanting again, not because she had found her faith but because the chant was
like a curtain between one’s heart and the world. The smell of smoldering
maji was thick in the converted hold of the ship. Maji cleansed the air and
inhibited the spread of disease, but it stung the eyes despite its
health-giving properties. She lifted the head of a young man and fed him his
drug cake a small piece at a time. He was the only soldier on board, a cavalry
man in Lord Shonto’s army.
“You must make the
effort to chew, Inara-sum,” Shimeko chided him. “Come, just a
little.”
The young man made a tiny
nod and moved his jaw in a feeble effort. He was racked by the cough that marked
the disease then, and Shimeko had to wait some time for him to recover enough
to take a sip of water and then she fed him another piece of drug
cake—the Brothers’ great secret.
“That is better,
Inara-sum. You will be well before you know it if you make an effort.”
He shook his head a
little. “You would be less concerned, honored Sister,” he whispered
hoarsely, “if you had seen the army that pursues us.”
“I do not want to
hear this talk. All of your focus must be given to becoming well. Let Lord
Shonto and his able staff worry about barbarian armies. You fight your own
battle.”
The young man nodded
weakly.
Most of the sick were
slowly recovering, but this boy-man was getting weaker and this concerned the
former nun greatly. Of all the patients on the ship this man was without doubt
the most devout follower of Botahara and he was the only one who did not seem
to respond to the Brother’s ministrations. It was as if he was resisting
the treatment in some way.
Shimeko was chilled by
the conversations she had overheard between this young man and the
Brothers-talk of completion and rebirth. This obsession with the size of the
barbarian army also unsettled her. It had obviously had a great impact on his
young mind. He is choosing to
die, Shimeko
thought. Her recent crisis of faith made this realization extremely disturbing.
Completing her rounds,
Shimeko bowed to Brother So-tura and made her way up to the deck. It was a dark
night, thin clouds covering the stars. She took many lungfuls of the clear air
and walked to the rail, leaning over it and staring down into the black water.
They were back in the canal now, south of Denji Gorge. The fleet proceeded at a
faster pace, for the canal was almost free of the boats of the refugees which
had been detained in Denji Gorge until Shonto’s fleet passed.
The evening was warm,
full of the scents of spring, the sounds. Had she heard a nightingale earlier?
“Do you fare well,
Shimeko-sum?” a whisper came to her out of the dark. A woman’s
voice.
The quiet swirl of an oar
in the water. There in the dark, the shape of a boat and someone sitting to
paired oars.
“Morima-sum?
”
“Yes. I have come
to be sure these fool monks have not let you become ill.”
Shimeko had to stay
absolutely still to hear—even the noise of her robe moving would mask the
words. “I remain well, but you should not come so close, Sister. It is
unwise.”
Shimeko was not sure if
she heard a chuckle or if it was merely the bubble of oars in the water.
“You have left your Teacher to come serve the sick, Shimeko-sum, or
perhaps it was his bidding?”
The younger woman felt
herself relax a little in resignation. It was as Morima said, they would never
let her be.
“What is it you
wish to know, Morima-sum?”
The sound of oars,
unmistakable this time.
“I wish to know
what is truth and what is merely a fabric of lies, Aco… Shimeko-sum. But
the Sisters have other concerns. They wish to know if this young monk is the
one so many await. Recently rumors have been whispered—Lady Nishima…
she is an attractive woman.” A pause. “You were her secretary,
Shimeko-sum.”
The former nun resisted
the urge to hang her head in her hands. She shook her head in the darkness. A woman’s cry of ecstasy…
“Shimeko-sum?”
She said nothing. The
swirl of oars holding a boat in position. Again. And yet again.
“May you find
tranquillity of purpose, my young seeker,” the voice whispered and the
dark form disappeared into the shadow of the canal bank.
Fifty-one
The river boats of
Shonto’s fleet passed slowly by on the constant east wind and on almost
every craft warriors lined the rail, bowing low to their liege-lord. Shonto sat
on a wooden dock under a blue silk awning and though his retainers bowed as
they passed, the lord was hidden from sight behind screens of bamboo and Shonto
banners.
Aboard the passing ships
there was an uncommon silence, almost funereal in its pervasiveness and
emotional weight. News had spread very quickly.
Kneeling before Shonto
were the lord’s senior advisors, several ranking officers, and sundry
allies. Dressed in robes of blue over which he wore a surcoat in the same colour bearing only the shinta blossom in a circle, Shonto was an imposing figure. A
powerful man in more than just position.
As was the lord’s
custom, he allowed the silence to last longer than one would expect, like a
Botahist Master who gave his students time to attain the proper state of
tranquillity so that they would be better prepared to learn. The lord’s
retainers were used to this and all others present
remained respectfully quiet and still.
“General
Hojo,” Shonto said at last, “could you explain the
situation.”
The senior general bowed
and composed himself before addressing the council. “It was artfully
done, Sire. Our own patrols monitored the progress of the small barbarian army
which made its way down the canal and the western bank, but the companies that
took the locks at Denji Gorge were from the main barbarian
to be filled in with
stone by workers from Lord B fief and this task was to be watched over by Im
Guards and Butto House Guards. The attacking barl forces were large and
unexpected. We do not kno tails, but the locks and positions of defense at
eith< of the gorge are in barbarian hands; losses are unki This gives the
Khan access to large numbers of river for many of the refugees had not yet
locked out i gorge. We expect the small barbarian army to in< its speed as a
result.“
The banners fluttered in
a small gust and conver
waited until this noise
stopped. Both Jaku Katta and
Butto sat calmly, showing
no sign that it had beer
troops guarding the
locks. Shonto sat quietly for |
ment, watching a hawk
soar high over the canal.
“It appears that we
have few courses left open
If we turn and fight the
small army pursuing us,
were we to win, our own
force would be reducec
stantially. Yet if we
continue south, we must m&
Imperial Army. Commanded
by whom?“ Obvious
lord was thinking aloud
and no one attempted to an
Shonto put his fingertips
together, staring at nol
“No matter who
commands the- Emperor’s fore
would prefer to meet them
with an army at my back
than as a ragtag company
of survivors.“ He turn<
Jaku Katta.
“General Jaku, who do you imagine
command the
Emperor’s army?“
Jaku bowed and returned
to a sitting position, h on his thighs. “There are several generals who
se the Yamaku in the Interim Wars who could be ci from retirement, Lord Shonto.
At least three are we commanders and still young enough to wage such a <
paign, but none of these are favored by the Emperor, own brother, Tadamoto-sum,
is the acting commandi the Guard, but he has no experience in warfare. I i
given this much thought, Sire, and I believe that the peror will act as his own
commander of forces. The of Heaven trusts few and of the few he trusts he do
their abilities.” Jaku bowed again.
Shnnto nnHrlpH “Huh
T havp alinwp.H mvsp.lf tn ‘t
the armies must be joined
or the barbarians cannot be defeated. The armies cannot stand alone, no matter
what the cost.“ Looking around the gathering, Shonto said, ”I will
hear other opinions of this matter.“
Lord Komawara bowed.
“If the barbarians are to be defeated, I agree, Sire. Our army must be
kept whole until we meet the Emperor’s force. The Son of” Heaven
must realize what we face. He will certainly fall without our support. All possibilities
will be open for discussion then.“
Shonto nodded to the
young lord. The fact that Komawara had actually spoken first was not lost on
the others.
“It is impossible
to know what will happen when we meet the Emperor, if indeed it is the Emperor,
Sire,” Kamu said. “I would prefer not to leave a matter of such
import so open to the whims of fate and situation. Can we not approach the
Emperor now? If he realizes he will lose his throne without our support, as
Lord Komawara has said, the Emperor should welcome discussion.”
“I agree with
Steward Kamu, Lord Shonto,” Lord Butto said. “We should not wait to
begin discussions with the Son of Heaven. We are in a position of power—
the Emperor cannot continue to sit on his throne without our help.”
Jaku Katta shook his
head. “Excuse me for saying so, but I have had quiet contact with the
Palace. The Emperor believes the entire barbarian army is represented by the
mere fraction—the small army—that pursues us. The Son of Heaven
will not be willing to listen until he realizes the true peril. To approach the
Palace now would be to no avail.”
General Hojo stroked his
beard as he did when lost in thought. His bow was barely perfunctory, though no
one appeared to notice. “The suggestion that Prince Wakaro approach his
father comes to mind again. Perhaps the Prince could be an envoy in his
father’s court.”
Shonto frowned. “I
suspect that having received no response from the Emperor to his letters has
led the Prince to reconsider his offer. Even a son of the Emperor can lose
favor at court. Certainly we could send the Prince to the Capital, but I
believe it would be a course
of futility. The Prince
may serve a purpose among us yet. We should keep him close.
“It is only a
matter of days until we arrive in the Capital. If we are to have another course,
we must decide now. Consider this. Our enemy is showing himself more
resourceful than we had previously thought possible. After the clumsy attack on
Rhojo-ma I did not consider him a general of note. But now… This
barbarian chieftain has stopped our destruction of crops which will allow him
to feed his army, and he has seized the locks at Denji Gorge from formidable
warriors. As Soto wrote: we cannot rely on this Khan to make a mistake. If we
do not raise a force of sufficient size to challenge this desert army, then
retreat may be our only recourse. It is not beyond question that we would allow
this Khan to take the Imperial Capital—and then he will sit upon the
throne he so desires.”
Fifty-two
The boat that bore the
Emperor to war had sails of crimson silk, a hull ornate with carvings and gilt,
a dragon’s head on its prow, and sixty men to man the oars should the Son
of Heaven lose the favor of the Wind Goddess. On the decks beautiful women
played music while other women of equal beauty danced, their long sleeves
swaying with the intricate movements of their hands. The Emperor did not go to
war as did other men.
Tadamoto waited at the
dock that had been prepared for the Emperor’s arrival. Banners rustled in
the wind, and guards knelt in curving rows forming the shape of a dragon fan.
The petals of fresh flowers had been strewn across new mats laid out on the
dock, and a guard stood at the end of this fragrant path holding a gray
stallion of famous lineage.
An Emperor who rode a
horse rather than a sedan chair, who led his own army, turned his back on the
religion of Botahara, and in whose hand a sword was more than a sign of office.
Tadamoto shook his head—he served an Emperor who would go down in history
as defying the pattern, there was no doubt.
Shonto’s army was
only days away, certainly less than seven, moving by both day and night and
reportedly burning any craft that hindered its progress. With the rebel
lord’s army came Tadamoto’s elder brother and this must lead to a
reckoning that the young colonel could not think about with ease. Tadamoto had
begun to sleep poorly and felt the effects of this more each day.
A sudden strengthening of
the wind caused the Emperor’s boat to heel slightly and pick up speed, a
white wave appearing at the bow as though the dragon on the prow rode forward
on a cloud. Willow trees billowed in
the breeze, hissing like
angry old women waving their arms at truant children.
Straining to overcome the
distance, Tadamoto searched the deck of the Emperor’s boat for a familiar
form—seeking among the flowing silk robes of the dancers, among those who
watched. He could not find her there and he was both disappointed and relieved.
If Osha was in the Emperor’s retinue, then there would be a chance for
her and Tadamoto to speak—with the first battle just over the horizon he
would welcome such an opportunity—but he neither wanted her in danger nor
in the Emperor’s company.
With sails dropping and
sailors swarming to smother them, the boat fetched the dock just as she lost
all way, as perfectly executed as one could imagine. Like everyone within
sight, Tadamoto bowed his head to the ground. The Emperor showed no sign of
disembarking, however, at least not until the melody and dance was complete.
All waited.
At last the performance
ended and the Emperor rose and made his way among the bowing retainers to the
stairs. As he stepped onto the dock, the Emperor spoke Tadamoto’s name
and gestured for the colonel to walk with him.
“Shonto’s
army has reached Chin-ja?”
Tadamoto nodded.
“It has, Emperor. They progress at speed.”
“And this rumor is
unquestionably true, then?”
Tadamoto lowered his
voice. “The Prince’s banner flies beside the shinta blossom.”
Saying this he cast the briefest glance over his shoulder at the women on the
Emperor’s boat.
“We both have known
betrayal, Tadamoto-sum. It is a great sadness.” They walked a few steps
further, the Emperor lost in thought. “You will be the new Commander of
my Guard, Colonel Jaku,” the Emperor said suddenly. “May you erase
the shame your brother has brought to your name.”
Tadamoto bowed. “I
shall strive to be worthy of this honor, Sire.”
“See that you
do.” They approached the guard holding the Emperor’s horse.
“Ride with me, Colonel, I wish to inspect our defenses.”
Fifty-three
After days of haste Lord
Shonto’s flotilla lay against the bank, only the current moving the
hulls, causing them to tug lightly on their lines. The lengthening day had worn
on to dusk, the sun setting behind the western mountains—the colors of an
autumn hillside washed into the sky.
Shonto and Nishima walked
along the bank, followed at a discreet distance by guards. In the near distance
other men in Shonto blue had established a perimeter, keeping the refugees and
the curious at bay.
“Are you concerned
about the safety of Master My-ochin, Uncle?” Nishima asked. Lord Shonto
seemed withdrawn, quieter than usual. He had sent a party to the home of his
former gü Master, who lived nearby, and they had returned without the old
man. Myochin Ekun the legendary master of the board, blind from birth yet six
times champion of Wa.
Shonto waved to the small
creek mouth that opened across the canal. “I have left guards and archers
in the woods. Eku-sum’s home is difficult to find. There is no path to
lead one there and the barbarians keep most of their force on the canal’s
opposite side. If there is trouble, my guards will hide Master Myochin in the
hills.” Shonto shook his head. “He would not leave his home, saying
he has nothing even the poorest barbarian would desire. He is getting very old.
In a note Eku-sum had a servant write, he suggested that I would soon have an
opportunity to perform a move no gü player could ever choose—I could
sacrifice an Emperor.” Shonto smiled. “He will never cease to offer
me lessons.”
They walked a little
farther along the bank, saying little.
“Do you not find
this strange that they would suddenly
give up the chase?“
Nishima asked. It was the subject on everyone’s mind. The small army had
ceased to pursue Shonto’s flotilla.
“Perhaps, but they
are not really such a large force and we draw near the Capital. If a large
Imperial army suddenly appeared, the small army would be at risk. Twenty-five
thousand is almost a third of the Khan’s army. He is wise not to risk
them. It is also true that they have accomplished their main purpose: in the
wake of the small army crops are growing which will allow the Khan to feed his
entire army very soon.”
Nishima nodded. “So
we have stopped to rest our forces.”
Shonto nodded.
“That, and for other reasons. The Emperor has moved north of the Capital
with his army. If we were to meet that force before the Emperor has seen the
true size of the desert army, the Son of Heaven may be led to foolish actions.
We cannot allow a battle between ourselves and the Emperor. As it stands, our
combined force is likely less than the Khan’s. I will risk no more
men.”
They came to a stand of
plum trees, the canal bank almost white with decaying petals. The leaves were
quickly reaching their mature size, opening like blossoms. Long shadows
stretched out onto the surface of the canal and in the warm light the water
took on the color of burnished copper. The thinnest sliver of a crescent moon
floated overhead.
Coming to a tree trunk
that curved out almost horizontally over the water, Shonto stopped and leaned
against it. Nishima circled its base and leaned against the opposite side
beside her uncle. They stayed like that, side by side facing opposite
directions, without speaking for some minutes.
Shonto reached down and
plucked a new strand of grass and twirled it distractedly. “We will be
forced south again within days. The large barbarian army moves more quickly now
that they have true river craft and river men to sail them. Once we meet the
Emperor’s force, I cannot predict what will happen. Any agreement we make
with the Emperor at that time will be illusory, only respected as long as there
is the common threat of this Khan and his army. If we defeat the Khan, Akantsu
will turn on us
if he is able.“
Shonto wound the blade of grass around his finger like a ring. ”The
Emperor is not a man whose actions can easily be foreseen. He may retreat once
he sees the barbarian army in its true strength; it is impossible to say. I
must tell you now that the safety of the Empire will take precedence over the
interests of the Shonto House.“ The lord fell silent for a moment. A soft
breeze rustled the leaves of the plum grove.
“If the worst
befalls us, it is my plan to retreat into the mountains. You should know
this—one cannot predict who will survive a battle.‘’
Nishima took a long
breath. “If we must run, why to the mountains? Ika Cho would seem to
offer better possibilities for raising an army? The mountains are not
hospitable to those not born there.”
“The Emperor holds
Ika Cho and Shokan-sum has fled. I have reason to believe we would find friends
in the mountains.”
Nishima looked up at her
uncle’s face. He would always surprise her—friends in the
mountains? She wanted to ask but knew that if he had wanted her to know more he
would have continued.
“I had thought you
bore the news of Shokan-sum’s retreat into the pass with great poise. Is
there hope for him, then?”
Shonto nodded. “I
know nothing for certain, but his situation is certainly no worse than our
own.” The lord tossed the blade of grass like a dart and it was swept
away on the breeze. “In the coming battle the forces of Wa will lose if
there are factions holding back, hoping to save their troops to win a civil war
after the barbarians are vanquished. The army of the desert is too large. We
can only hope to meet it with total commitment and intelligent selection of the
battle ground. If you are forced to go into the mountains, do not become
separated from Shuyun-sum. He will be as valuable as a thousand guards. Do not
forget. The Shonto have fled the Empire before and lived in the wilds. If
Botahara smiles upon us, Shokan-sum will not find his way through the mountains
before this war is decided. Let the Yamaku know that the Shonto are beyond
their reach, waiting.”
Nishima laid her hand on
Shonto’s arm. “Uncle, I do not doubt your wisdom, but neither do I
doubt the wis-
dom of the people of Wa.
They will not allow the Yamaku to call themselves Emperors after this war, no
matter what the outcome.“
Placing his hand over his
daughter’s, Shonto squeezed. “I hope you are correct, Nishi-sum.
May the people of Wa not disappoint you.”
The last trace of sunset
disappeared before Shimeko’s eyes, but the sky retained a hint of the
darkest blue among the myriad stars and the crescent moon. The young woman
leaned against the rigging of the plague ship, forcing an appearance of calm
over herself. Although Bo-tahist monks were notoriously observant, she hoped
they would not notice her despair. The fact that, commonly, she was almost
entirely ignored by them would no doubt work in her favor.
A short distance down the
bank the last embers of a funeral pyre were glowing like the molten colors of the
sunset. Inara-sum, the young Shonto soldier, had attained completion. Death,
the former nun realized, should hardly shake her as it did. As a devout
follower of the Way, the young man could only look forward to returning a step
closer to Perfection. Yet… Shimeko did not feel the conviction necessary
to keep grief at bay.
The growing belief that
Inara’s funeral had been seen as a celebration by the Brothers caused a
constriction inside her. The young man’s death was somehow regarded as a
triumph. The Brothers’ attitude was frightening to her, seemed almost
monstrous. They had celebrated
his death because he believed with such conviction, she realized. And this war would
bring death to thousands of Botahara’s followers. Would the Brothers
celebrate that?
News was traveling
quickly now—news of the atrocities committed by the invaders. She had
been watching the faces of the refugees as they passed, frightened, unable to
believe what was occurring. The faces had begun to haunt her dreams.
With an effort Shimeko
forced a calm over her mind and focused on her situation.
The plague ship was
moored to trees and held close to the canal bank. No other ships lay within a
half rih of it and the long lines of refugees gave the ship flying the
plague banner a wide
berth. Turning as casually as she was able, Shimeko surveyed the deck. Other
than the single man guarding the gangway, only sleeping river men could be
seen.
In one graceful motion
Shimeko slipped over the side, lowering herself easily into the water which
rose to mid-thigh. Two quiet steps brought her to the bank and several more put
her among the trees. She stopped then to be sure there was no sudden movement
on board ship, no sign that she had been observed, but there was nothing.
I will not be missed now
until morning, she thought, and by then I will be far to the north—and on
my way from all the things that cause my turmoil. May Botahara forgive me.
Fifty-four
The Plum Blossom Winds
gave way to the fitful breezes of late spring and the nights and mornings saw the
occasional fog from cold air descending the mountainsides into the lowlands
after the sun set. Although this mist slowed the flotilla that bore Lord Shonto
south, the barbarian army suffered the same, putting off the inevitable day of
battle—though only briefly.
A day’s march north
of the Imperial Army’s position, Shonto landed his force and spent
several days engaged in the final preparations for battle. Reconnaissance
parties were sent both north and south to gather information about both hostile
armies and a constant stream of riders came and went bearing reports and
orders.
The main body of the army
of the desert had rejoined the smaller force and they continued their push into
the inner provinces. Skirmishes between barbarian patrols and the companies
Shonto sent north became more and more frequent as the armies vied to control
the lands that lay between them.
Accompanied by General
Hojo, Lord Taiki, and Prince Wakaro, Shonto rode among the troops, speaking to
the various company commanders, making his presence known. An army caught
between two enemy forces needed the reassurance of a confident commander and,
in this capacity, Lord Shonto lifted spirits wherever he passed.
The army itself was a
patchwork affair made up of the well-armed and trained retainers of various
lords, Imperial Guards, and the recruits who had arrived with every variety of
weapon and armor—many of them looking like patchwork themselves.
Horses were being
exercised and fed on green pasture, many a man squared off against another with
swords, and
archers loosed their
arrows on makeshift targets. More than one wager had been laid on these various
contests and officers were alert to see that no disputes erupted into real
violence—with men from all regions of the Empire such things were not
unknown. Despite the activity in the encampment there was also an air of
something being amiss—laughter that was too loud, many a young man
deliberately alone with his thoughts, men looking suddenly embarrassed when
Shonto approached as though the lord might read what was in their minds by the
looks on their faces.
Prince Wakaro turned to
Lord Shonto as they rode. “I can’t help but wonder about these men,
Lord Shonto.” He tugged at a braid in his horse’s mane. “Are
they afraid? I myself cannot find words to describe what I feel. I don’t
even know if it is fear.”
Shonto stroked the neck
of his mount with a leather gloved hand. “Anticipation of a battle wears
away at men, Prince, until they reach a point where they want a decision to be
made: either they will live or die, but they will stand no more of this
existence, suspended somewhere between life and death. At a certain point
battle comes as a relief.”
The Prince looked up at
Lord Shonto who surveyed the army with an experienced eye. He was coming to
respect this man whom his father considered the Yama-ku’s greatest enemy,
and this he found unsettling.
Shonto waved his hand to
encompass the entire encampment. “Your opinion, Lord Taiki.”
Taiki brought his horse
up and looked slowly around. “It is an army, Lord Shonto. There have been
better and there have been far worse. Battle experience is lacking among the
young, and I do not know that we will have more than one battle in which to
gain this. The other armies, I’m sure, suffer from this same weakness,”
he hurried to add. “The barbarians, however, fight in a land that is so
different from their own that I cannot believe this does not unsettle them.
Retreat must also look daunting, should they fail in their purpose. Such
factors must be weighed in a battle.”
“I agree, Lord
Taiki. Numbers are not the only measure of an army.” Three riders in blue
came at a gallop through the en-
campment. As they
approached, Shonto recognized Rohku Saicha followed by Shonto House Guards.
They pulled up before Lord Shonto and dismounted to bow low before the Imperial
Prince and their liege-lord.
“Captain
Rohku?” Shonto said, nodding to his retainer.
“There is a party
from the Emperor approaching, Sire, under a flag of” truce.“ He
pointed south. ”They come by fast boat.“
“Send for General
Hojo, Kamu, and Brother Shuyun. We will ride to meet them. Prince, Lord Taiki,
will you meet the Emperor’s emissary with me?”
The two men nodded though
Shonto thought the Prince showed a tightening around the jaw that had not
appeared even during discussions of the coming battle.
The three set off at a
canter, followed by their guards. Men in the encampment bowed low as the Prince
and Lord Shonto passed and stared after them as they went. Rumor went quickly
through the encampment. The
Emperor has sent his minions to bargain with Lord Shonto. Did this mean there was hope of
an alliance?
Just south of the
encampment a decked boat that boasted thirty oarsmen swung to an anchor in the
middle of the canal. Off its stern the Emperor’s banner fluttered in the
breeze as did the banner of a senior official and the green flag of truce.
Beneath a plum tree, mats had been spread, and it appeared that men had chosen
this spot to drink wine and perhaps compose a poem-sequence, for there was no
armor worn but by the guards standing at a distance. Those who knelt upon the
mats drank from wine bowls and laughed cheerfully.
“Lord
Shinzei,” Prince Wakaro said quietly to Shonto. “The
Emperor’s favorite talking bird.”
Shonto pulled his horse
up and dismounted. Several more Shonto guards had joined them and others had
taken up positions close by and stood with hands on their swords.
Rohku Saicha rode up in
haste. “Lord Shonto, General Hojo comes now. Kamu is across the canal and
Brother Shuyun has been called to the plague ship.”
Shonto nodded. “We
will do without them, then.” Shonto turned and saw men riding toward him
at a gallop. “General Hojo is here.” Then turning to the Em-
peror’s son,
“Prince Wakaro, does this talking bird have power to speak for the
Emperor?”
“I would be shocked
if that were so. No, this will be an offer from the Emperor. Shinzei will have
no power to negotiate. He is but the first move of the game and, as is common,
the most expendable piece. Though I doubt he will realize this.”
Hojo rode up and
dismounted bowing quickly.
“General
Hojo,” Shonto said, “please approach the Emperor’s emissaries
and ask them the purpose of their embassy. Or perhaps they have come merely to
enjoy the fine day and the view?”
Hojo bowed quickly and
set off toward Lord Shinzei and his party.
A moment later he
returned. “They will speak to Lord Shonto only, Sire. They do not have
concerns about who accompanies you.”
Shonto nodded. “And
they expect the Prince and me to attend them?” Shonto cast a glance over
his shoulder. What happened here would be known by everyone in his army within
the hour. What fools did the Emperor send that they would allow such a
situation to develop?
Shonto looked back at the
Emperor’s men and shook his head. “Take them prisoner, bind them,
and bring them to my boat.” He mounted his horse abruptly, leaving the
Prince and Lord Taiki hurrying to follow. They rode off at a canter toward the
boats that carried Shonto’s family and senior advisors. Much of the
activity of the camp had come to a halt and men tried not to be seen watching.
Shonto’s own boat
was protected by a bamboo fence forming a large open space on the canal’s
eastern bank. Riding past the sentries, Shonto dismounted and left his horse to
a guard. He stormed up the gangway of his boat, throwing gloves and surcoat at
a servant. Mounting the stairs to the upper deck, he took up a position under
the awning on the stern.
Kamu appeared suddenly.
“Sire, excuse me, my attentions were drawn elsewhere…”
Shonto waved a hand to
cut the old man off. “That guard who is a kick boxer—is he still in
our service?”
“He is, Lord
Shonto.”
“Bring him to
me.” Shonto turned to Lord Taiki and
Prince Wakaro as they
came up onto the deck looking unsure if they should have followed.
“Please, join me.” Shonto said pleasantly. He gestured to cushions.
The two men took the offered positions and an awkward silence ensued.
They did not have long to
wait, for Hojo appeared with his charges moments later. A boat ran up on the
canal bank and the bound men were assisted onto the land with some degree of
concern for their dignity.
Kamu appeared with a
young guard and Shonto nodded to have the man brought forward, speaking to him
privately and demonstrating several hand signals. “Turn Lord Shinzei over
to this guard,” Shonto said to Kamu.
The Emperor’s
emissaries padded up the stairs then and guards requested that they kneel.
Shonto sat regarding them for a moment.
“We come under a
flag of truce—emissaries of the Son of Heaven. Be certain that this will
not be forgotten, Lord Shonto.” Shinzei spoke Shonto’s name with as
much disdain as he could muster.
Shonto gave a hand signal
to the young guard who spun quickly and kicked Shinzei in the diaphragm,
doubling him over on the deck.
When the lord’s
struggle to breathe had begun to subside, Shonto nodded and the man was pulled
roughly back to a kneeling position. His voice perfectly calm and pleasant,
Shonto addressed Lord Shinzei. “Perhaps you can relate the purpose of
your visit, Lord Shinzei. Or was this merely an outing to drink wine and enjoy
the fine spring weather?”
Shinzei visibly collected
himself, trying to gain control of his breathing. “The Emperor of Wa has
sent me to demand the immediate surrender of Prince Wakaro, Jaku Katta, Lord
Shonto, and all senior advisors and officers of the same.”
Shonto waited for a
moment and then signaled the young guard who again doubled the kneeling
aristocrat over on the deck. His recovery this time was lengthy, the others in
his party staring down at the deck, afraid to move. At last, the emissary was
set back on his knees, managing not to collapse.
“My
liege-lord,” Kamu explained quietly, “is addressed as Lord Shonto
or Sire, Lord Shinzei.”
Shinzei nodded, unable to
hide the pain he felt or to maintain his dignity in such a situation. As a
favorite of the Emperor he encountered nothing but deference in all of his
dealings.
“Lord
Shinzei,” Shonto began again, his voice remaining calm. ‘ ’I
am well informed on the size and state of the Emperor’s army. It is no
larger, and certainly less experienced, than my own. You cannot afford
arrogance. Not two days north on the canal a barbarian army that, despite our
efforts, numbers eighty-five thousand men is moving toward the Imperial
Capital. In my estimate, their chieftain is four, perhaps five days away from
the throne he seeks—your lord’s throne, Lord Shinzei. Already it
grows late for the alliance that we require.“
Shonto looked at the man
kneeling before him and shook his head. “Take this message to your
Emperor. If he will provide written pardons for myself, my family, and all who
support me, I will consent to join forces with him to face the barbarian
threat. If the Emperor will not agree to this, I will allow him to face the
barbarian army alone. It is a simple choice—to retain his throne or to be
overthrown, perhaps it is a choice between life and death. Be very clear when
you explain this point to Akantsu, Lord Shinzei—it is important that he
understands his position.”
Shonto nodded to Hojo who
signaled the guards to take the Emperor’s men away.
“General,” Shonto said to Hojo as the captives were led down the
stairs, “put them on horses with their hands bound behind them and trot
them through the camp on the return to their boat. Then throw them on the
ground before their fine ship and leave them to be unbound by their own guard.
Show them not a single sign of respect.”
Hojo bowed and hurried
off.
Shonto signaled for cha
and once it arrived, his spirits lifted noticeably.
“Excuse me for
saying so, Lord Shonto,” Prince Wakaro said in a soothing voice,
“but this will infuriate the Emperor.”
Shonto smiled. “But
it will lift the morale of our own army to the very skies. We would only dare
treat the Emperor’s advisors this way if there was no doubt of the
outcome of the battle. It will give your father cause to
think also, Prince. The
next battle we fight will not require swords—it will be a battle of wills
and I have answered his opening with a message which says the Shonto have
nothing to lose, while the Emperor has everything.“
The army of Shonto Motoru
moved south as soon as the fog lifted the morning after Lord Shinzei had paid
his visit. The bulk of the army went by land though some ships were still in
use and these paced the army as it went. Open fields bordered the canal in this
area and stretched east to foothills and west toward distant mountains, jagged
against the horizon.
Many of the “rebel
army” rode horses, though companies of foot soldiers marched among the
mounted troops. Despite the patchwork nature of this force, Shonto’s
officers and the officers of his allies had marshaled it into a tight
formation, better to impress the watching patrols of the Emperor.
Shuyun stood beside his
liege-lord at the rail of a river craft. Before his arrival in Wa, he had never
seen an army and he found the sight both impressive and very sad. In the next
few days many of the men before him would die. The words of Brother Hitara came
back to him; “War brings
no soul to perfection.‘’ My Order has bound me to serve this man and now I am
at war also—a follower of Botahara, Shuyun thought, a poor follower.
Something the monk had
never anticipated was the sound of men going to war. There was silence in the
ranks, but the sounds of men and beasts tramping over the land was ominous,
disturbing, like the pulse of a dying man—the strength of its rhythm came
from fear. Unspoken fear.
‘ ’There are
no reports of a new outbreak of the disease?“ Shonto asked Shuyun.
The two men stood at the
rail of Shonto’s ship watching the army as it moved.
Shuyun shook his head.
“I have sent men out among the refugees and to the villages. The plague
seems to be under control. We have had only one report of a woman of
Shimeko-sum’s description, but this was not certain and whoever it was
made an effort to avoid contact with others.”
“Huh.” Shonto
tried to turn the hemp shroud, the muscles in his forearm bunching into knots.
“Nishima-sum told me this young woman was a person of education and
intelligence but caught in a crisis of the spirit.”
Shuyun nodded. “I
believe Lady Nishima was correct, Sire.”
‘ ’Perhaps
she seeks a monastery or wishes to live the life of a hermit.“
“Perhaps.”
Shuyun seemed lost in thought. The dull pounding of the army on the land kept
calling his attention. “She seeks escape, I believe, Sire.”
Shonto let go of the
shroud and shaded his eyes against the sun, staring off toward the south. The
Emperor’s position would not become visible until the next day at the
earliest, but it was common to see people standing with their gaze focused on
the horizon as though meditating upon a distant point.
“It is a fine
balance we must achieve, Brother,” Shonto said suddenly. “If we
meet the Emperor’s force before the barbarian army is seen for its true
size, then we risk the Emperor making a foolish mistake. If we do not arrive at
the Imperial Army’s position soon, we will not have time to join the two
armies into an effective force. Once we have committed a piece, we cannot
retrieve it. There can be no mistakes.”
“May Botahara guide
us, Lord Shonto.” Shuyun had watched his lord carefully since he had come
into his service and though it could be said that Shonto always kept much to
himself, Shuyun was noticing a change. The lord often shared information that
was not truly necessary for others to know, yet at the same time the monk was
convinced there was some knowledge that Shonto was keeping entirely to himself.
If asked, Shuyun could not have explained why he felt this.
“Once we reach the
Emperor’s position, I will move the members of my household to the
northeast of the probable battlefield. When battle has been engaged, you will
join Lady Nishima. Be prepared to run toward the mountains, Shuyun-sum. Leave
everyone else behind if they cannot keep your pace.” Shonto turned to
regard his Spiritual Advisor. “If the Shonto army falls and I cannot
escape, Lady Nishima must be protected at all
costs. I charge you with
this, Brother Shuyun. Do not fail.“
Shuyun gave a half bow in
response. “Perhaps Lady Nishima should be closer to the mountains
now?”
Shonto shook his head.
“There is danger whichever course we choose, Shuyun-sum.” The lord
shrugged. “Perhaps it is the selfish path, but I wish to keep Nishima-sum
close for now.”
The river men dropped the
sail behind Shonto and Shuyun as the breeze had come up and was moving the ship
ahead of the marching army.
Shonto waved a hand out
toward the patch of dark blue uniforms among the men on horseback. Shuyun could
see Shonto pull his focus away from the knowledge he was hiding. “I am
concerned about Lord Butto and these Hajiwara men in Lord Komawara’s
guard. Lord Butto has not spoken of it, but certainly it must weigh upon
him.” Shuyun leaned out over the rail looking down into the water.
“I have considered this matter also. Lord Koma-wara believes that their
sworn oath binds these Hajiwara men and that all of my lord’s allies are
safe from any plans for vengeance. Perhaps that is true, but men have been
known to word their oaths in ways that are understood to mean different things
to different people. I would keep the Butto and the Komawara companies separate
on any battlefield.”
“Huh.” Shonto
shook his head. “Within our own ranks to have such concerns…”
He left the thought unfinished.
Fifty-five
Fog persisted in the
morning so it was not until the sun was high that Lord Shonto was able to move
his army south again. Even after the fog had cleared, the sky was covered with
a high, thin mist that filtered a weakened sunlight down to the earth.
Several of Shonto’s
advisors had voiced the concern that the Emperor might move his army north
under cover of darkness and surprise Shonto’s force in the morning when
the fog lifted, but this turned out to be a groundless fear. Patrols reported
that the Emperor kept his army behind earthworks that had been dug into the
side of hills on either side of the canal.
Shonto sat under an
awning on the stern of his ship, giving no sign that he was only hours away
from meeting his enemy. He pored over a scroll with great focus of attention; a
secretary knelt in attendance and Kamu also waited at hand. Sitting only a few
paces off, a servant played a quiet melody on the harp. Occasionally the lord
would look up and give his attention to a passage of the tune and then, with a
nod to the musician, return to his reading.
Finally Shonto rolled the
scroll and set it aside. Reaching for a cup of cha, he sipped and found it cold
and returned the cup to the table.
“It is an
interesting position, don’t you think?” Shonto said to his steward.
With some care he unrolled a map and placed four jade paperweights, carved in
the shape of the shinta blossom, on the corners. He waved a hand at the map and
Kamu moved closer to look on.
“The Emperor has
split his position to either side of the canal.” The lord tapped the spot
with his finger. “What is your opinion of that?”
Despite his age and
apparent frailty Kamu had once
been both a swordsman of
great reputation and a senior officer in the Shonto armies. Stewards of Great
Houses seldom had such a depth of knowledge in military matters and Lord Shonto
did not let this expertise go to waste.
“The Emperor must
believe it is his function to stop an army from descending on the Capital,
therefore he blocks the canal. In truth, I believe he could position his army
anywhere and the Khan would not pass it by. This division of his
forces…” Kamu shook his head. “The Emperor makes a foolish
mistake. The bridge that connects them across the canal… it is too
vulnerable to fire rafts.”
Shonto nodded. “I
suspect our Emperor has not blocked the canal to stop the barbarian advance but
to stop our army from passing. No doubt the Son of Heaven would like to keep
the Shonto between his own army and that of the Khan.”
Shonto ran his finger up
the line of the canal. “And I certainly do not wish to spoil the
Emperor’s view of the barbarian army.” Moving his finger to a hill
east and slightly north of the Emperor’s position, the lord said.
“We will concentrate our troops on this slope. The Khan will array his
forces here—there is no other choice.” Shonto traced an arc east
from the canal north of the Emperor’s position.
“That will form a
triangle.” Shonto said, tracing the three sides with each army being a
point. “If the Khan is an intelligent man, he will not wait but will
attack both positions at once—the barbarian army is large enough to do
this. If the Khan waits, there is a possibility that Ak-antsu and I can reach
an understanding. Once the Emperor sees the army of the desert with his own
eyes it is my hope that he will be more willing to listen to our arguments. We
shall see.”
Shonto stared at the map
for a moment more without speaking. “If the Emperor will join forces with
us, Kamu-sum, we will have two choices. Fight the barbarian army with a force
perhaps two-thirds its size, or retreat to the southeast. If we choose to retreat,
we will see if you are correct. Will the lure of an undefended Capital be more
than the Khan can resist? If so, there is a chance that we can raise an army
large enough to be
sure of defeating the
barbarians. A battle now is a difficult decision. Such a fight is likely to be
inconclusive and, at worst, could result in the annihilation of the armies of
Wa. It is a great risk, Kamu-sum, a great risk indeed.“
A guard approached,
bowing and waiting to be acknowledged. Kamu gestured and the man came forward to
speak quietly to the steward. The old man nodded.
“Sire,” he
said turning back to his liege-lord, “our forward scouts can see the
Emperor’s position.”
Shonto nodded. “I
will take a fast boat. Have a horse ready at our forward position. And I will
speak with General Hojo and our senior commanders.” The lord rose
suddenly. “Well, steward Kamu, the endgame is always the most
interesting, is it not?”
Late in the day
Shonto’s army came upon the plain that lay before the Emperor’s
army. Patrols reported the barbarians only half a day behind now and the rear
of the Shonto columns were under constant observation from barbarian patrols.
Due to sheer numbers, the barbarians had taken control of the shifting lands
between the two armies and they tracked the Shonto army as silently and
relentlessly as a predatory animal.
Shonto was still not in
armor as he rode before his army though he wore a sword in his sash—the
sword the Emperor had given to him. A group of concerned Shonto guards stayed
close by, eyes turned to the earthworks that sheltered the Imperial Army.
“The Emperor will
wait,” Shonto said to his senior advisors. “He will not undertake
to accomplish with swords what he hopes can be done by words. It is good to
remember that he hates the Shonto because he fears us.”
Shonto stood up in his
stirrups, looked around the horizon, and then shook his head. “Excuse me
for saying so, Prince Wakaro, but the Emperor is not the general your
grandfather was. His position is untenable.”
Wakaro gave an almost
imperceptible shrug. He was the only man in Shonto’s party who wore full
battle armor and he was no doubt suffering some embarrassment at not
demonstrating the acceptable bravado in the face of the enemy. Having tied his
helmet to his saddle, the
Prince’s streak of
white hair was at the mercy of the breeze and waved like an ominous flag. The
Prince was struggling to maintain his Imperial dignity and this was made more
difficult by his lack of skill with horses-appearing far worse than it was by
proximity to the men of Seh; riders of the first order.
Shonto nodded to the hill
upon which he proposed to establish his own army. “What is our assessment
of that position?”
Lord Komawara spurred his
horse forward three paces and bowed from the saddle. “Lord Toshaki and I
have ridden and walked every section of the hill, Lord Shonto. It is not
defendable from all directions due to the small size of our force, but it is a
reasonable position in which to weather an attack form the west and north. It
is certainly more defensible than the Emperor’s earthworths,”
Komawara said with disdain. “The slope is steep at the base and rolls off
to a series of benches halfway up the flank. The crest is thickly wooded.
Considering this is not a battleground of our choosing, we could do much
worse.”
Shonto looked over at
Hojo, who nodded agreement.
“We will secure
that position and move our forces there in the dark,” Shonto said.
“Light fires to guide the way. Tomorrow we will witness the arrival of
the barbarian army, and our Emperor shall have the same pleasure.”
Shonto turned his horse
to face his advisors. Lord Taiki and Butto Joda had become friends over the
past days and sat on horses side by side. Jaku Katta, General Hojo, Lord
Komawara, young Toshaki and Shuyun formed a loose group. Only the Prince and
his captain rode apart— outsiders, Yamaku; of questionable loyalty.
“We will move our
forces to the hill and then set a pavilion on the plain between the
Emperor’s position and our own. I will attempt to establish contact with
the Emperor at the earliest possible moment.” Shonto looked into the
faces of the men before him. “In the history of Wa no foreign enemy has
ever penetrated the inner provinces. It is impossible to separate the clouds
that cover the future, but it is beyond doubt that a loss to the army of the
desert would mean the loss of the Capital, if not
the Empire. If the Khan
is an intelligent general, he would pursue our army to the southern borders,
for our army is the basis of all our hopes for the future. We do not know which
action in the days to come will be a deciding action. We must never forget that
anything we do could be the single act that changes the course of history. Do
not lose courage, not for an instant. History will turn on the events of these
next days and it will be shaped by each of us. Do not lose courage.“
Nishima lay awake long
into the night. She had crossed the small plain that men were referring to as
the “battlefield” in the dark and found the experience disturbing
in the extreme. The fires illuminated rows of armed men who marked the way in
the dark and fog—an eerie spectacle of yellow-red light reflecting off
armor and weapons and faces distorted by the light and darkness.
As Lady Okara had
insisted that she did not want a sedan chair, Nishima and Kitsura had gone on
foot when Nishima would rather have ridden. Her experience with horses was
limited, for ladies of breeding were not supposed to ride, but in the unsettled
years after the Interim Wars Lord Shonto had thought it prudent that she master
the basics of riding.
A large pavilion had been
pitched on a ledge dug into the hillside, just inside the sheltering edge of
the wood, and this had been divided with hangings into three rooms for the
ladies from the Capital. Mats and rugs made it comfortable and lamps and a few
other furnishings created an impression of order and security—all seeming
a great sham to Nishima.
In an attempt to gain
some sense of tranquility, Nishima had turned to the poetry of Lady Nikko.
Sky
Torn to rags and tatters.
Earth
A ruin of storm shattered trees.
The riches of summer have been scattered
To the four directions.
The first days of Autumn arrive
Like invading armies
Wisdom is more fragile
Than a young girl’s love,
Lost between one generation and the next.
These boys drop stones into the village
well
To break each morning’s ice
Never asking, “How long until the
well is filled?”
In Itsa peasants work the family fields
Season after season without rest Until the soil bears nothing But thistle and
scrub
The moon drifts toward winter Each night
colder than the last, Soon women will sell winter clothing For a few sticks of
firewood
From A Journey to Itsa by Lady Nikko
Not precisely the
reassurance Nishima was looking for. She set the scroll down.
Earlier it had been
decided that Lady Okara would be taken south toward the Capital by Shonto
guards who would shed their blue livery. Skirting the Emperor’s army
would be difficult, for he sent patrols out into the countryside, but there was
no doubt in anyone’s mind that Lady Okara’s reputation would
protect her from all but the barbarians. She was anxious to see her island home
again and Lord Shonto was equally anxious to have the great painter out of
harm’s way.
Nishima knew the parting
in the morning would be difficult. Oka-sum had risked so much for her, for so
little return, Nishima felt. Poor Oka-sum, the young aristocrat thought, I tore
her from her solitude and cast her into the center of a war that may see the
fall of our Empire. May Botahara protect her.
The thin fabric of the
tent seemed impossibly fragile to a woman who had spent most of her life
surrounded by substantial walls, and the reality that pressed against this
material was not the wild beauty of the world but the coarse brutality of men.
She longed to have Shuyun come and lie beside her. It was not entirely a desire
to be pro-
tected by someone
stronger, for Nishima knew that wars could bring down even the mightiest, but a
desire to comfort and be comforted in the face of the utter uncertainty of the
world.
It was close to dawn
before she managed to fall into a fitful sleep.
Fifty-six
Shonto walked along the
path that had been dug into the side of the hill, followed by his guards. The
gray light of early morning had become the gray light of a foggy day. Reports
from outriders indicated that this propensity for morning fog diminished only a
few rih south, indicating that one did not have to stray far from the mountains
to rid oneself of this weather.
Leave it to the Emperor
to pick a battlefield commonly enshrouded in fog, Shonto thought. He had risen
before first light and met with his advisors. After much discussion it had been
decided that Prince Wakaro would bear an offer to his father, and though the
Prince had gone off showing a brave face, Shonto did not expect him to return.
Even if the Emperor answered Shonto’s letter, the lord did not expect the
bearer of the response to be Prince Wakaro. It is a sad family that
cannibalizes its own, Shonto told himself, but Imperial families seemed to
suffer this ill too commonly.
Though the fog muffled
sound and played tricks on the ears, there was no doubt that an army moved upon
the plain. The sounds of voices, the stamp and whinny of horses, the clanking
of weapons and armor filtered up through the layers of mist to the men of Wa
perched on their hillsides. This will open the Emperor’s eyes, Shonto
thought. I would give much to be standing beside him as the fog clears.
Guards in armor laced in
the darkest blue appeared through the mist, bowing to Lord Shonto as he passed.
A few paces later he came upon Lord Komawara staring out into the featureless
gray.
“Can Komawara eyes
part the mists?” Shonto asked.
Komawara turned and bowed
low. His face lit with half a smile. “Komawara eyes fail this test as
miserably
as most others, Lord
Shonto. But when I traveled in the desert with Brother Shuyun, he taught me not
to rely on my eyes as other men do. I cannot claim to have attained the skill
of the Botahist-trained in this, but I am learning. It seems to be a matter of
focus.“
Shonto stopped at the
young lord’s side and looked out into the mist as Komawara did.
“What do your other senses tell you, Lord Komawara?”
Komawara listened for a
few seconds before answering. “An army gathers on the plain, Sire, I have
heard the pounding of mallets on wood indicating that tents have been raised.
Horses are being pastured,” he pointed to the north. “I smell fires
burning and there is a tang of tar in this odor. They burn the ships now. This
close to the Capital the barbarians would appear to have no expectation to
return north. I hear the sounds of armor being cleaned and weapons being honed.
I hear the sounds of men who are not entirely confident. So far from
home—if their chieftain has misjudged the strength of this vast Empire
they have crossed, they will never return to their lands, to their
people.”
Shonto nodded. “You
have crossed swords with the men of desert, Lord Komawara, is it possible that
we can win a battle against such superior numbers?”
There was a long silence
then and Shonto found himself straining to hear the sounds that drifted up from
the plain.
“It would depend on
the place and the commander, Lord Shonto. When we attacked their supply rafts,
we had the advantage of surprise and they thought they had been set upon by an
entire army. I do not believe it is foolish pride to say that the men of Wa are
stronger warriors. The reports from the battle for Rhojo-ma would indicate this
to be true. A confident army with superior position would likely prevail—at
great cost—despite smaller numbers. Confidence comes from the men’s
faith in their commander, Sire.”
“And the Emperor?
Can he meld the two armies into a force that will bear the blow this Khan will
deliver?‘’
Komawara shrugged.
“The Emperor is unknown to me, Sire. If he abandoned his position on the
west side of the canal, burned the bridge, and concentrated his force and our
own on the eastern hillside, the Emperor’s
position would be
improved. But I cannot say that he could inspire the confidence required to
beat a foe who is stronger in numbers. It is impossible to know.“
Shonto turned and looked
back toward his own position, hidden in the fog. Noises similar to those heard
emanating from the enemy position echoed here.
“We will
see,” Shonto said quietly.
The sound of armored men
approaching caused both lords to turn around. A moment later Kamu materialized
out of the fog followed by guards.
He bowed low. “A
rider has arrived from the north bearing news, Sire.” Kamu paused for a
second to catch his breath. “Lord Shonto Shokan has come down from the
mountains with a small force. He hurries to join you, Sire.”
Shonto remained calm at
this, compared to the obvious excitement that his steward barely contained.
“We must get word to him. He must not risk capture. There is no reason
for him to hurry. His presence here with a small force will hardly be the
deciding factor. We must warn him to stay well clear and approach from the
southeast. He must take no risk of capture, Kamu-sum, absolutely none. Send
messengers immediately.”
The steward bowed quickly
and was gone.
Prince Wakaro did not
know whether to feel relief or not. The ride through the fog toward the
perimeter of his father’s defenses was a terrifying endeavor. Even his
guard wearing the armor of the Imperial Guard was little comfort. The men of
the Imperial Army knew that Jaku Katta and his rebel followers still wore their
black uniforms and all the insignias of rank.
They had found a guard in
the fog and finally been escorted through the lines. The feared arrow did not
find him and the Prince was relieved to the point of developing a small tremor.
He was not sure if Shonto or his followers would have condescended to wear
armor in such situations, but the Prince had decided he did not care. To die of
an arrow shot by some nervous, unknown archer did not seem like a dignified
death.
He and his men stood
surrounded by Imperial Guards, and though they had not been shown the courtesy
due an Imperial Prince they had been treated well enough and
even allowed to retain
their swords. The Prince realized he had stopped trying to predict his
father’s reaction to this embassy from Lord Shonto—an embassy led
by his own son.
Perhaps he should have
refused Shonto’s request that he approach the Emperor, but the Prince
felt that what Shonto had said was true. This was a decisive moment in history,
and he did not want to be known for all time as the prince who contributed to
the fall of the Empire. So he tried to swallow his fear.
Lord Komawara had told
Wakaro that he had been frightened before the attack on the barbarian supply
rafts and there was something about Komawara that made the Prince believe the
young lord would never stoop to lies. A guard officer appeared then and it took
a moment for the Prince to realize it was Jaku Tadamoto. The young guardsman
seemed to have aged many years in the past few months.
“If it is
convenient, Prince Wakaro, could you accompany me?” Tadamoto asked in the
refined tones of a scholar. How did the men of the Imperial Guard respond to a
commander who sounded and looked like a historian or a poet? A few weeks
earlier the thought would never have occurred to him and it surprised him.
Nodding, the Prince fell
into step beside the young colonel who deferred to the Imperial Prince in voice
only. It was no time to demand that proper etiquette be followed, Wakaro
decided.
They made their way along
a deep trench behind one level of the earthworks. Bundles of arrows stood
against the trench wall and, on a dirt shelf, archers stood looking out onto
the fogbound plain. Prince Wakaro had become more intimate with fear recently
and this had increased his sensitivity to it. He could feel the fear among
these men.
They mounted a wooden
stairway that brought them up a level. The effort was causing the Prince to
sweat under his heavy armor, and he pulled off his helmet and tucked it under
his arm as he often saw guards do, for there was no one on his staff to reach
out and take this burden from him.
They progressed through
various rings of guards until the sound of banners rustling in the frail breeze
told
Wakaro that the Emperor
would be near at hand. Indeed, only a few paces farther along and they were
stopped by guards. Wakaro stood trying to hold together the shreds of his
failing courage. I have seen the barbarian army, the Prince reminded himself.
Any death I find here will be more charitable than the death I would find on
the battlefield. Stories of what the barbarians did to captured enemies had
reached Wakaro through his guards. His dreams had not been the same since.
A guard appeared out of
the fog and gave a hand signal. Tadamoto motioned the Prince forward. A few
paces along and a small pavilion took shape before the Prince. He knelt and
bowed to his father who did not offer even a nod in response.
“I am told you are
a messenger for the Shonto?” the Emperor said, his voice betraying tight
control—a sign of anger that the Prince dreaded.
“Despite all
appearances, Sire,” Wakaro said, ashamed at the quaver in his voice,
“I remain the Emperor’s loyal servant. The truth of this will be
revealed as the fog lifts. An army of unprecedented size is before us. If the
Imperial Army does not join with the forces of Lord Shonto, the Empire will be
lost.”
The Emperor stared at his
son until the young man looked down. “You have a message from your
master?” the Emperor said at last.
Wakaro reached into his
sash and removed the carefully folded letter. He passed this to Tadamoto who
set it on the edge of the small dais.
The Emperor looked down
at it for a moment as thought the letter itself was an insult to his dignity.
He picked it up suddenly, tearing it open without even glancing at the seal.
After casting a final, cold eye upon his son, the Emperor turned his attention
to Shonto’s letter. He looked up in a moment. “This does not differ
from the message Lord Shinzei conveyed,” the Emperor said, his face
flushing with anger.
Wakaro could only nod. He
kept his eyes cast down.
The Emperor threw the
letter in his son’s face, startling the Prince so that he almost fell
backward.
“Colonel Jaku. Take
this man out of my sight,” the Emperor said as though dismissing an
annoying servant.
“He is charged with
treason and we are at war. Deal with him accordingly.‘’
The Prince reared up,
stumbling to his feet. He felt Jaku Tadamoto’s hand on his sword arm and
then other hands gripped him also. “I have not lied!” the Prince
cried out. “I do not support your enemies. The enemy is a barbarian army
that has armed itself using Imperial gold.” He was dragged backward, the
Emperor disappearing in the fog. “Father! You will see that I tell the
truth. In just a few hours. Father!” Jerked off his feet, the Prince hit
his head against something hard. He sank completely into the fog then; it swirled
close about him obscuring everything, even his thoughts.
Swimming up to the
surface of the fog, ever so slowly, the Prince came back to the world. He lay
on his side on a surface that was soft and uneven. Nausea passed through him
like a wave rushing onto the shore though it did not break but only dissipated
in the smallest ripple. Two more waves moved him and he felt for a moment that
he had washed ashore and was swept back and forth by the rhythms of the sea.
Finally the Prince opened
his eyes. A thick, straw mat was the surface under him.
“Sire?”
It was a soft voice, not
at all hostile. Wakaro tried to nod.
“Can you hear me,
Sire?”
Tadamoto, Jaku Tadamoto:
Wakaro recognized the voice now. He moved his head, a definite nod, he was
certain.
“If you wish, I
will help you to sit.”
After a moment of
consideration Wakaro shook his head. I must have more time, he thought. The fog
will lift and then I will be vindicated. His eyes focused on a second guard who
stood a few paces off. In his hands this man held a sword laid across folds of
white silk. The Prince closed his eyes again.
After a few moments had
passed, the voice came again. “Sire? I will do everything to preserve
your dignity, but you must assist me in this.”
“I am more
concerned with my life, Colonel,” Wakaro said, words coming with
difficulty into a dry mouth.
‘I am prepared to
give you time to make your preparations and also your own sword. In this I defy
the orders of my Emperor. Please, Prince Wakaro, I offer you the path of
dignity. It is the honorable way.’‘
The Prince shook his head
softly.
“Tadamoto-sum?”
he whispered, using the familiar form. “If you will grant me one
request… I will cooperate in any way you wish.”
Tadamoto did not answer
immediately. “It is not my place to grant requests, Prince Wakaro. I risk
the Emperor’s displeasure in what I do now.”
Displeasure, Wakaro thought, the word
striking him like a blow. He fought to control growing panic. “I wish
only to be given until the fog lifts to make my preparations. It is a small
thing,” he said, trying not to let his voice be reduced to the whimper
that was threatening. The Prince propped himself up on his elbow then, looking
up at the young guard colonel. He prayed it was compassion he saw there.
Tadamoto crouched at the
edge of the mat, looking down at the Prince. Very deliberately he nodded once,
then rose and walked away, leaving the Emperor’s son under the eye of
several guards.
The days had fallen into
a pattern of fog in the morning which then lifted at virtually the same hour
each afternoon. The Prince knelt on his mat facing the north, searching for the
first sign of the barbarian army. The rest of the Imperial Army encampment was
hidden from view by a roll in the hill and some low bushes. Undoubtedly, the
Prince had been carried to the top of the hill on the canal’s eastern
bank.
Faint signs of blue began
to appear overhead and the Prince felt his hope rise. The guard, holding what
Wak-ara realized was a ceremonial white robe, still stood, unmoving, at his
back. Had the Prince known how to pray to Botahara, he would not have hesitated
to do so.
The fog seemed to have
learned considerable cruelty in the last few hours, for it kept showing signs
of thinning and then blowing in as dense as it had ever been. Then the plain
before the Imperial Army began to appear, a few paces at a time, the green
grasses trampled but still vivid against the white of the mists.
Finally a barbarian
sentry appeared, riding a dark horse. Colored banners took form, waving among
the tendrils of white—gold and Imperial Crimson, and blue and spring
green. Wakaro offered up an awkward prayer of thanks to powers unknown and
unnamed.
The mist disappeared more
quickly by the moment. A man cleared his throat at the Prince’s back
causing the young man to tear his eyes away from the scene being revealed
before him. Jaku Tadamoto had returned.
‘ ’May I
assist you with your armor, Sire? It would be my honor.“
The Prince pointed out at
the army that was slowly coming to light. “It is as I said, Colonel. Once
I had seen this, I could not chose another course. The Empire is in grave
danger. You need Shonto Motoru.”
Tadamoto nodded.
“May I begin with your shoulder pieces, Sire?”
Turning back to the
north, the Prince saw that more of the army of the desert was coming into view.
Fingers began working at the lacing on his shoulder pieces. But it is there before them to see, the Prince
thought. Could they not see?
Tadamoto and a guard were
lifting the heavy body armor over Wakaro’s head when the guard happened
to look up.
“Botahara save us.
Colonel!” He pointed to the plain.
Tadamoto turned to look
as the armor slipped over the
Prince’s head. He
froze in position for a second and then
stood up to full height,
the Prince completely forgotten.
The barbarian encampment
was a vast, teeming sprawl,
dark against the new
green, like a bloodsucker Tadamoto
had once found undulating
on a rush beside a pond.
“I am not a
traitor, Tadamoto-sum,” the Prince said as calmly as he was able, as
though the sanity of his tone would make the young guard realize how mad this
entire situation was. “I described this army in detail in a letter to my
father. I have tried to warn him of this for some weeks. I have committed no
act of treason.”
Tadamoto stood staring
for a moment longer. “I will speak to the Son of Heaven.” He turned
and hurried off, leaving the Prince to struggle against a fit of shaking that
suddenly racked him.
Tadamoto made his way
quickly down the path to the Emperor’s pavilion. Bowing to the guard, he
gave a password reserved for dire emergencies that would allow him immediately
into the Emperor’s presence. A guard announced his commander and Tadamoto
was brought forward.
The Emperor sat in the
same place under the small pavilion of crimson silk. Like everyone else, he
stared out at the clearing plain as though transfixed. After a moment he spoke
to Tadamoto though he did not take his eyes off the sight before him.
“Did he die well,
Tadamoto-sum?”
Jaku cleared his throat.
“I allowed him time to make his preparations, Sire. And then
this…” The young officer waved a hand toward the barbarian army.
“Prince Wakara wrote the truth, Sire…”
The Emperor turned to
Tadamoto, his face suddenly drained of blood. “He aided a rebel lord. I
will have no traitors in my House, Colonel Jaku. Carry out your orders.”
And with that he returned his attention to the north.
Tadamoto stood for an
awkward second, then, despite being entirely ignored, bowed stiffly and
retreated. This is a murder, Tadamoto thought, a coldhearted
murder.
fifty-seven
The army of the
barbarians and the two armies of Wa faced each other across the open fields in
chilling silence. The men on either side stared out over the green grass and
wondered if their death was somehow, mysteriously, taking form among the
indistinguishable faces of the enemy.
After the shock of seeing
the barbarian army for the first time, Akantsu II sent an embassy to speak with
the representatives of Lord Shonto. Appointed to speak for the Emperor, Jaku
Tadamoto rode out on a gray horse accompanied by two guards. The Son of Heaven
demanded that Jaku Katta, former commander of the Imperial Guard, come forward
for Lord Shonto and made it known that no other would be acceptable.
Having already helped an
Imperial Prince to die that morning, Tadamoto felt like a man being slowly torn
apart, for there was no doubt in his mind that Katta was also on the
Emperor’s list of those who would fall upon their own swords.
To Tadamoto’s left
the barbarian army prepared for battle at a pace that could almost be described
as leisurely and this did not raise the young colonel’s confidence. The
Emperor would not discuss the barbarian army, and when Tadamoto dared to push
him the Son of Heaven finally answered; “I am well aware that the army is
larger than previously reported, Colonel.” Beyond that the Son of Heaven
would say nothing, knowing full well who had assured him that the barbarian
force was small.
How had he been so
misinformed? Tadamoto asked himself again, realizing he would quite possibly
never know. But what had happened with those fools he had
_____^mjkjkjvo
sent north? Katta had
told the truth, he reminded himself for the thousandth time that day. Katta had
told the truth and his own brother had not listened.
Jaku Katta and his two
guards appeared now, coming down the last run-out of the slope that protected
the Shonto position. Neither party displayed flags of truce nor did they carry
banners, as would have been common under the circumstances. It was still hoped
that the barbarians did not realize the armies of Wa acted separately.
The two groups rode
slowly forward, like two patrols meeting and pausing to speak for a time. Katta
stopped his horse first and made Tadamoto approach him. The younger brother
shook his head at this tactic. With his tongue Tadamoto tried to work some
moisture into his mouth. So much depended on this one conversation… And
Tadamoto was still not certain why the Emperor had demanded that Katta should
speak for the Shonto. All of the Emperor’s choices seemed to be selected
to cause Tadamoto confusion and test his loyalty.
The evening before
Tadamoto had played gü with Shonto’s vassal-merchant, Tanaka, a
practice he had taken up in the last few days. The old merchant had played a
wily game, forcing the distracted Tadamoto into a foolish mistake. When the
game was surely won, the old man had surrendered and pushed back from the
board. Tanaka had answered the colonel’s expression of surprise with a
shrug. “I can see a course that will win you the game, Colonel, so I have
surrendered my force to you, hoping thereby to gain your good will. In the days
when I played this game with Lord Shonto, I often did the same. He is a gü
master of some reputation, as you know. My alternative was to risk losing everything.”
The old man spread his hands in a gesture that seemed to say: the choice is yours.
The brothers motioned for
their respective guards to stop and rode forward, Katta waiting for Tadamoto to
bow and when he did not the elder brother smirked. No one dismounted.
“Brother,”
Katta said, and Tadamoto answered his brother’s nod with the same
gesture. A moment of silence. Tadamoto thought his brother
looked much the same as
when they had parted months before, though now Katta had some color on his face
from time in the sun, making Tadamoto wonder what things had passed in his
brother’s life since they had last spoken.
“Lord Shonto has
asked me to inquire after Prince Wakaro. The Prince has not returned to
us.”
“The Prince is the
concern of the Emperor only.” Tadamoto said, the half-lie coming with
difficulty. “Lord Shonto should not trouble himself.”
Katta looked into his
younger brother’s eyes then, and Tadamoto found himself looking down at
the leather reins in his hands, adjusting his grip on them.
Katta shook his head with
some sadness. “The Emperor demands much of his servants, Tadamoto-sum. It
is a sad thing. I will inform Lord Shonto.”
Tadamoto swallowed.
Perhaps this ability to look into the souls of others was a characteristic of
all opportunists, and womanizers, too, for that matter, the young colonel
thought.
Katta cocked his head to
the barbarian army. “I did not lie, Tadamoto-sum. The Emperor thinks I
have betrayed him, but I have merely put the safety of Wa first. There lies the
end of our Empire as we have known it.. We must not allow this to happen,
Tadamoto-sum, don’t you agree?”
Tadamoto looked into his
brother’s gray eyes then, wondering if there was truly some shred of
honor behind the words or if this was merely part of another elaborate plot.
“I have come with a message from the Son of Heaven.” Tadamoto
almost referred to his brother as General Jaku, for he still wore his Imperial Guard uniform and insignia. “You
may tell Lord Shonto that the Emperor will accept the surrender of the lord’s
army immediately. There will be no pardons for rebels. If Lord Shonto wishes to
show his great loyalty to the Empire, he will resign his command upon receiving
this message. We will speak only to those who come to arrange the surrender. No
other emissaries will be recognized.” Tadamoto reached into his sash and
removed a letter, thrusting it toward his brother. “This is the message,
inscribed so that there shall be no misunderstanding. Please, deliver it to
your lord.”
Katta looked down at the
paper in his brother’s hand but made no move to accept it. “The
Emperor assumes that Lord Shonto will surrender his life to the Emperor rather
than allow Wa to fall. Hear me, Tado-sum, Lord Shonto will retreat in the darkness
and leave you to face the barbarians alone. We will retreat toward Yankura and
raise the army needed to oust these barbarian chieftains.
“This Khan, you
know who he is. The Emperor paid him gold to help bring down the Shonto. He is
a half-caste—born in the desert to a woman of Seh. But he is more than
that. His mother was born to the House of Tokiko. He has Imperial blood in his
veins, this Khan. For many years he lived in Wa, after his mother was rescued
from the tribe that had abducted her. If this man takes the throne, his claim
could be recognized. The barbarians think that they come to make Wa their own,
but I do not believe it is to be so. This Khan does not care for their
prophesies or claims or vendettas. He will make himself Emperor with the
barbarian army at his back, but he will be an Emperor of Wa. The barbarian army
will be split and spread across the Empire, made ineffectual, and this Khan
will become a man of Wa.
“But he does not
love us, Tadamoto-sum. The half-castes are barbarians to the men of Seh. His
life before he returned to the desert was not such that he has gained respect
for the men of Wa. He would be a danger on our throne and I cannot say what his
reign would bring.”
Katta stopped, glancing
up for a second at his brother’s eyes. Whatever he saw there seemed to
give him hope. “Tado-sum. Akantsu is not a man of honor. You know this.
What befell Prince Wakaro? Was it just?” Softly Katta pounded his fist on
his armored thigh. “Lord Shonto has spent the last months slowing the
barbarians’ advance, allowing the Emperor to build an army. And yet Lord
Shonto knew of the Emperor’s plot against him. Knew that the Emperor
would be unlikely to make peace with him even in the face of an invasion. Look
at this!” Katta waved a hand at the army of the desert. “We can
save the Empire, Tado-sum. The Jaku name can go down in history as the Shonto
name did in the past—as saviours
of Wa.“ Katta
lowered his voice. ”Exchange guards with me. Tell them it is the
Emperor’s wish. Return to your master with my men as though they were
your own. Take them into the presence of the Emperor as witness of what was
spoken here. They are the best swordsmen I have, and utterly loyal. They will
not fail. Surrender the Imperial army to Lord Shonto and there will still be a
chance that we can win against this Khan.‘’
Tadamoto still held out
the Emperor’s letter. It was an impossible scheme. Tadamoto knew he was
being watched with great interest by the Emperor’s officers. There was no
chance that he and his brother could simply exchange guards—it would not
go unnoticed. And even if it were possible, these guards would not be allowed,
armed, into the Emperor’s presence. Tadamoto knew that he was the only
one who was allowed near to the Emperor wearing a sword. Yet he was
loyal—loyal to the Emperor even while he had grown to hate Yamaku
Ak-antsu.
“Brother,”
Katta said, reaching out and taking the letter. “Motion your guards
forward. It is worth any risk to save the Empire.”
Tadamoto shook his head.
“Even in time of war they will not be allowed into the Emperor’s
presence carrying weapons of any sort.”
“You carry a sword,
brother. It can be snatched from your sash at the correct moment. These men
understand what needs to be done. They have made their peace with Botahara.
Once the Emperor falls, you must take control of the army. I know you have many
loyal men in the guard, Tado-sum. They will support you. Tomorrow the Khan will
have prepared his forces for the battle. There is no time, Tadamoto-sum.”
Shaking his head, the
younger brother reined his horse back, his gaze fixed on his brother’s
gray eyes. “You do not understand loyalty, Katta-sum. You think it is
something one owes to another, but it is not so. Loyalty to principles is the essence
of all honor.” Tadamoto looked down at the reins in his hands again.
“It is this difference that has led to this—meeting across the
field of battle as we do. What you ask… it is impossible. I do not
believe the Emperor will waver in his position. If you think Lord Shonto can
save the Empire by retreating to raise
an army, then it is a
course you must recommend. But if the Khan pursues you… ?“ Tadamoto
looked into his brother’s face a last time, shook his head, and turned
his horse back toward the Emperor’s position.
Fifty-eight
An Empire away
From distant battles
Yet there is no peace for the spirit.
When letters come,
White rice paper bearing the Dragon seal,
Old men walk out alone into rain swept
fields.
Fog lay around the base
of the hill and the thousand fires of the barbarian army illuminated the mist,
causing it to glow like a fabric of mystical origin. Shonto stood looking out
toward the plain, his hand resting lightly on the trunk of a tree. Two paces
away Kamu stood watching in silence. Lord Shonto had spoken very little since
sending for the steward, but this did not seem to matter to Kamu—his lord
had requested his presence and it was possible that nothing more than that
would be asked for. The old man did not feel it was his place to question.
Earlier in the evening
Shonto had requested that his armor be brought and had then inspected it
meticulously, knowing full well that Kamu had done the same. The steward did
not take offense at this, for he knew that Shonto’s inspection was a
ritual only, something to occupy the mind. Even so, the old warrior was
gratified that his lord had found the armor to be without flaw.
Now Shonto was lost in
silent thought. Everyone wondered if the battle would be joined the next day,
after the fog cleared. It depended on the Khan, for the men of Wa would not
take the offensive.
“Shokan-sum,”
Shonto said suddenly, “have we word of his progress?”
Kamu cleared his throat.
“The countryside is full of
barbarian patrols, Sire.
I instructed Lord Shonto’s guides to bring him to us with all possible
caution. I apologize, Sire, his present location is not known to me.“
Shonto moved his hand as
though he brushed away an insect though Kamu knew it was the apology his lord
waved off.
Silence returned.
Occasional music and singing would drift up from below—sometimes the
haunting scales of a barbarian flute and sometimes the familiar tunes favored
by the soldiers of Wa. Neither side seemed inclined to the drunken, boisterous
singing often heard in camps. Somehow Kamu had expected it from the
barbarians-curious.
Shonto shifted his
position, running his hand down the smooth, white bark of the birch. “I
wonder about this Emperor, Kamu… Is it possible that he will sacrifice
his Empire? Is Akantsu so certain I will surrender before allowing the loss of
the Imperial Capital? He takes a great risk.”
Kamu ran his hand through
gray hair. “Undoubtedly he knows Lord Shonto is more loyal to the Empire
than the Yamaku—who are only loyal to their own ambitions. If the Khan is
defeated and my lord is part of the command that routs these invaders, the
Emperor believes he will lose his throne for his part in bringing the
barbarians into Wa. Akantsu must think that he can only survive if both Lord
Shonto and the Khan fall. He will not sacrifice his House to save the
Empire.”
Shonto nodded. “If
I were to surrender my force to the Emperor, would he fight or would he
retreat?”
Kamu kneaded the stump of
his missing arm and shifted his weight subtly from foot to foot. “Sire,
I… I cannot say what is in die mind of the Emperor of Wa.” Kamu
considered carefully before speaking his next words. “If Akantsu stands
against the barbarian on this field and does not triumph, the Imperial Army
will be shattered. The barbarian army is formidable.” The old steward
whispered his last sentence. “Certainly the Emperor would be a fool if he
did not retreat and attempt to increase his force.”
Shonto nodded. “He
would be a fool. I agree. The question is really very simple: who will
sacrifice their House to save the Empire? Thank you, Kamu-sum.”
* * *
The former commander of
the Imperial Guard, Jaku Katta, sat on a rock with his back against a tree and
examined a sketch which showed the relative positions of the armies in the
field. A lamp hung from a branch to the general’s right and several
guards knelt on the edge of the circle of light. The fires of the barbarian
army glowed in the mist gathered below, and overhead stars appeared to be
immersed in liquid, points of light diffused by a high veil of the thinnest
clouds.
Jaku looked up from his
map and stared into the darkness. It is hopeless, he thought, the Emperor could
hardly have chosen a worse field. Considering the number of ideal positions
farther north, it was almost a betrayal of the Empire to have chosen this site
to face the invading army. Fool! Jaku thought. If he had only listened…
Rolling the map with some
care, Jaku created a calm to replace his anger. His teachers had taught that
anger and fear destroyed one’s ability to reason, dulled the reactions,
and this was a time that would demand the very best of the former kick boxer.
Jaku set the map aside.
If only Tadamoto would reconsider his proposal. A dead Emperor would change the
world—as surely as the change from winter to summer. Shonto could defeat
this Khan, Jaku had no doubt of that, and the Jaku family would retain a
position at court, for who would sit upon the throne but a member of the Shonto
family—the son or Lady Nishima.
Tado-sum, the kick boxer sent his thoughts out to his brother,
why do you stay loyal to this
man?
There was no doubt in
Jaku’s mind that it would be worth the life of his brother to kill the
Yamaku Emperor. He was not certain that his brother would agree, however.
What will Shonto do? Jaku
asked himself again. He must retreat, the guardsman thought, it is the only
wise choice. Akantsu was such a fool! Both armies had to be preserved if they
ever hoped to stand against the barbarians.
Jaku believed it would
take the Khan another day to ready his attack, which could allow the armies of
Wa a chance to slip away. But if the Khan had any idea of what really
transpired in the camps of his enemy, he would
attack the next day. Pray
that this chieftain does not understand what transpires here, Jaku thought.
As any good general, Jaku
tried to consider all the possibilities, no matter how unpleasant. Defeat of
the forces of Wa on this plain would put the Jaku on the run—if they
survived. Nitashi or Ika Cho would be the provinces most likely to remain
autonomous if the Empire fell—at least for a while. An army might be
raised there. Whichever province Jaku chose, he knew that he must make his way
there by the fastest method—by boat, unquestionably. Yankura would be his
destination if the armies of Wa suffered defeat. From there he could go either
north or south—Ika Cho or Nitashi. He would not decide before reaching
Yankura. Much would depend on what occurred in the next few days—on who
survived.
Calling for an inkstone
and paper, Jaku shifted so he could write by the light of the lamp. Considering
the uncertainty of the future, custom indicated that he must compose the
required poems. There were still many hours before a battle would
begin—if there was a battle at all.
A servant brought
steaming bowls of cha to the two ladies who sat on grass mats looking out over
the scene to the south. They were as far away from the sight of the armies as
they could manage and still be within the protective perimeter of Shonto’s
defenses.
Once the servant had
returned to the darkness, the conversation resumed.
“Do you remember,
when we journeyed north on the canal,” Nishima said, “my spirits
fell low and you lectured me…”
“I never lecture,
cousin,” Kitsura interrupted.
“Encouraged me, then,” Nishima said, slowly turning her
bowl, steam rising into the air, the swirls barely visible in the starlight.
“You said it was truly surprising that, considering our family histories,
we had never been forced to flee before. Excuse me for saying so, cousin, but
I’m not certain I truly believed that. Yet here we are. If the Emperor
does not come to his senses, my uncle will take our force where? South,
perhaps, or east. And will the Khan take the Capital then? I believe so.
Strange to think—the capital of Wa in the hands of a barbarian
chieftain.” She sipped her cha.
Kitsura did the same. The
night was warm for the time of year and without a breeze. A waning moon would
not appear until very late and the stars were suspended in a haze. The lights
of the Capital glowed in the south for the nightly fog did not spread south of
the hills upon which the armies camped.
“I hope my family
have escaped south.” Kitsura said quietly. “Our estates in Nitashi
should be out of reach of barbarian armies for a while.” There had been
no word from the Omawara family for many days and Kit-sura’s worst fear
was that the Emperor had moved against them.
Nishima reached out and
touched her cousin’s arm. “I am certain they have slipped away and
have been unable to send word. Your family have been well informed of the true
situation, thanks to the diligence of their own daughter. The Omawara have had
warning long before any other family in the Capital. Do not despair, cousin, I
am sure they are safely away.”
Kitsura nodded—a
smile of thanks for her cousin’s reassurance. They sat quietly, sipping
their warm cha, the aroma of the herbs blending with the complex scents of
spring in Wa.
Tadamoto sat across the
board from the vassal-merchant and stared at the arrangement of pieces as though
he contemplated his next move, but in truth his mind was elsewhere.
Tanaka cleared his throat
quietly.
Tadamoto looked up and
then realized that it was indeed his turn to play. “Excuse me,
Tanaka-sum, I am not a worthy opponent this evening. I apologize.”
“There is no need
to apologize, Colonel Jaku. Please. This battle will decide the fate of the
Empire.” Tanaka tried a reassuring smile. “Your brother’s
proposal? It unsettled you?”
Without ever intending
to, Tadamoto had spent much of the evening explaining the present situation to
the Shonto merchant—had even told him of the Prince’s death and his
meeting with his brother. It was quite likely that Tanaka was the only man
Tadamoto knew who was, beyond a shadow of doubt, not an informer for the
Emperor—a man to be valued for that alone. The young
colonel had also come to
appreciate the merchant’s opinions and the unassuming manner in which
they were proposed.
“Katta unsettles me
simply by being Katta. He demands much.” Out of frustration Tadamoto
finally exchanged a piece, a move he had explored several times though he could
not remember if he had decided it was a good move or bad.
Tanaka nodded.
“Your brother said the same thing of the Emperor, yeh?” The
merchant responded by taking a swordsman. “It seems you are caught
between two men who have the same requirements but different ends in sight,
Colonel.” Tanaka’s face contorted in a small grimace. “Most
difficult.”
Tadamoto stared down at
the board again. Tanaka was forming a substantial attack, there was no doubt,
though Tadamoto could not quite see where the effort would be concentrated. To
the right side of the colonel’s keep his position was weaker and to the
left the board was more complex, so he moved his Emperor to the left, hoping the complexity would shield it.
Tanaka contemplated the
shift in focus Tadamoto’s move created. There was no evidence that he was
having trouble concentrating nor did he appear very concerned with the
situation just beyond the walls. Tadamoto had been expecting the merchant to
ask what would become of him on the eve of the battle but was beginning to
realize that Tanaka had no intention of asking him. This response had added to
Tadamoto’s feeling of anxiety and he suffered from an urge to explain the
merchant’s situation to him just to be rid of the tension.
“I had the honor of
watching Master Myochin Ekun play gü on several occasions—years ago
now. He played against my liege-lord. Those were instructive matches, Colonel
Jaku, two formidable masters of gü. I must say, those were humbling
matches also.” Tanaka moved a dragon ship
into the center of the fray. “Master Myochin won almost
invariably—but then he had the advantage of being blind.”
Tadamoto looked up at the
merchant, wondering if this was meant as humor, but Tanaka stared at the board,
his palms together, fingers pushing under his chin, his look serious.
“It is an unusual
advantage, Tanaka-sum, one which most people would choose to be spared.”
“No doubt that is
true, Colonel, but the game that Master Myochin plays exists entirely within,
he does not even need a board. He has also never seen any of his
opponents—they are only differentiated by their styles of play. Master
Myochin plays gü—we play…”he waved at the contest in
progress, “a game on a board with another who intimidates us or is our
friend or rival or lover. Our game is always caught up in the world—we
cannot escape this—and it lacks… purity.” Tanaka shrugged.
Tadamoto moved a swordmaster to counter the dragon ship, no longer caring if he made intelligent moves.
“I had never considered this before, but what you say is…
fascinating.”
Tanaka removed
Tadamoto’s swordmaster with a guard commander and the young colonel stared at the position. His swordmaster had been well covered, and obviously so. Tanaka was
offering a sacrifice and there seemed to be no choice but to take it. He looked
further but was not sure where Tanaka’s attack would concentrate. He took
the guard commander with a foot-soldier and Tanaka answered without a second’s
contemplation, taking the foot-soldier with his dragon boat and pinning Tada-moto’s own dragon boat in the process.
The young colonel threw
up his hands and then pushed over his Emperor
in surrender.
“The Commander of
the Imperial Guard defeated by a guard
commander.”
He smiled, the tension in his face disappearing for an instant. “It could
not have been more artfully done, Tanaka-sum.” He gave a half bow to his
opponent. “I congratulate you. For a man with the affliction of sight you
play remarkably well.”
Tanaka nodded, bowing
lower than his opponent. “You are too kind, Colonel. Like any Emperor, I
will sacrifice a guard commander without hesitation to win a battle.”
Tadamoto stood abruptly,
jarring the gü table as he did so, knocking some of the pieces to the floor.
He looked down at the older man, his face hard with controlled anger. ‘
’You presume too much, merchant. Your instruction is neither asked for
nor acceptable.“ Tadamoto waved toward the door. ”I have much to
prepare for.“
Tanaka gave a low bow and
rose. He was shorter than Tadamoto by half a head, so stood looking up at the
younger man. “Loyalty to principles, Colonel, those were the words you
used. What principles is your Emperor loyal to? Ask yourself that, for if you
serve him you are, without choice, loyal to those same principles.”
Tadamoto waved toward the
door again, glaring at the merchant as he did so.
Tanaka turned and took a
step but stopped. “There is more at stake than the honor of Colonel Jaku
Tadamoto. Will you sacrifice the Empire for that?”
“Guard!”
Tadamoto called and the door burst open immediately. “Take this man to
his quarters, by force if necessary.”
The guard bowed, but
Tanaka proceeded out the door without further resistance, casting a final
glance over his shoulder and though the look on the merchant’s face was
truly unreadable, Tadamoto felt it was an accusation.
The door closed and
Tadamoto was alone. He found himself staring down at the gü board, the
pieces in disarray. For a moment he could not find the guard commander Tanaka had sacrificed, and this was disturbing. Then
he saw it and replaced it carefully on the gü board, as superstitious as
any soldier on the eve of a battle.
Tadamoto slumped down on
a cushion and stared at nothing. How long he sat like that he did not know, but
he was eventually interrupted by a tap on the door.
“Enter,” he
called.
The face of an Imperial
Guard appeared. “A message, Colonel, from the Emperor.”
Tadamoto nodded and the
guard entered, setting a small stand bearing a letter within his
commander’s reach. Waiting until the guard had closed the door behind
him, Tadamoto picked up the letter, barely glancing at the seal as he broke it.
He unfolded the pale yellow paper and found the clear hand of the
Emperor’s principal secretary. A single vertical line of characters:
Shonto will surrender his army to you at
sunrise.
Tadamoto tried to read
the message again to be sure he had not made a mistake, but his eyes would not
focus.
Shonto would surrender? Shonto would
allow his House to come to an end in ah attempt to save the Empire?
Tadamoto set the paper
back on the stand, staring at it dumbly. He felt no joy at this news, he
realized. In truth, he felt deep sadness.
Nishima paced back and
forth across the small room in her tent, unable to maintain even a facade of
patience or inner peace. After her conversation with Kitsura, she had sent
servants to find Brother Shuyun, reasoning that a meeting with her family’s
Spiritual Advisor under the present circumstances would be completely natural.
A lamp flickered on a low
table where Nishima had tried to write earlier—tried to create some order
out of the turmoil she felt within. It had been an unsuccessful attempt. She
could not find words that even approximated what she felt.
“Excuse me, Lady
Nishima,” her servant’s voice came from close outside die tent.
“Please
enter,” she answered quickly, her heart lifting.
A maid pulled back the
flap of the door. She bore a tray.
“Excuse me, my
lady. An Imperial Guard messenger brought these.” She nodded down at
letters, bound together by a silk cord, lying on the silver tray.
“Please,” Nishima
waved at the table and the servant placed the tray there, bowing as she left.
Nishima was struck by how drawn and pale the woman’s face was. Her future
is as uncertain as anyone’s, the aristocrat thought. Kneeling by the
table she unknotted the cord, careful to choose the letter intended to be read
first. Unfolding the crisp paper revealed a blade of spring grain and Jaku
Katta’s indifferent hand struggling down the page. Her view, she
realized, had changed, for she had once convinced herself that the
general’s brushwork had qualities that could be admired—as she had
once felt about the general himself.
Plum blossoms Cover the land In a
shroud of white. Morning in the fields
Grain shoots struggle up Into the
season’s warmth
I am not daunted by the sunrise
“He is
impossible,” Nishima whispered. Jaku cannot accept that a mere woman can
resist his efforts. She tossed the letter onto the table and found that the
second letter was sealed with the Jaku family symbol and beside this a line of
characters read:
If circumstances require.
She was appalled. It is
his death poem, she realized, and he has sent it to me. Presumptuous fool! On the verge of calling for a
servant to have the letter returned, Nishima realized that Jaku might indeed
die the next day. He was apparently estranged from his brother—who would
he leave his final words to?
It is a small thing, she
told herself. In all likelihood the guardsman will survive—it will be a
cuckolded husband who brings about the Black Tiger’s end—and then I
will have the poem returned without comment.
She put the two poems
into her sleeve and sat watching the lamp flame flicker. From beyond the thin
wall of her tent the sound of a soldier’s flute rose up, as light and
uncertain as the flight of a butterfly. Listening not as a musician but with
her heart, Nishima found the music very beautiful, evoking an image of a
fragile, solitary
spirit.
A rustling of the tent
fabric and a soft voice. “Lady Nishima? Please excuse my
intrusion.”
It was Shuyun. She rose
quickly to her feet and crossed toward the opening.
“Ah. My servants
found you, Brother,” she said quietly. “Please enter.”
Shuyun slipped in through
the opening. “I met no servants, Lady Nishima,” he said.
He has come of his own
will, Nishima thought, and this gladdened her heart. She reached out and took
his hand, drawing him into the room.
“You cannot address
me as Lady Nishima here,
Shuyun-sum, it is not
permissible.“ She smiled and received a smile in return.
“You sit alone,
Nishima-sum. I am concerned.”
She shrugged, lowering
herself to a cushion. “How can one sleep? Tomorrow the world I know will
change utterly. Many, many will die, perhaps some that are close to me. I feel
separated from my emotions in the face of this.” Nishima reached over and
turned down the flame on the lamp. “When my mother died, I remember
feeling much like this, as though the shock of what had occurred rendered me
incapable of feeling for some time. I remember doing all the things that were
required of me, appearing very controlled to everyone, but inside…
Botahara save me.
“It was more than
just the loss of my mother. A time was over suddenly and I felt that I had
never given it the attention required to properly appreciate it. Everything had
changed. It was as though I had been traveling in a safe canal and suddenly
found myself at sea—a sea of uncertainty. I had never truly appreciated
the canal and it was past.”
She looked up, searching
for understanding and felt the monk’s warm hand squeeze her own. She
smoothed a crease in her robe. “I look back at my recent journeys on the
canal and think that I understand things that seemed impossible to untangle
before. I realize, now, that Jaku Katta is truly the tiger, driven by instincts
he can neither understand nor control, and Lord Komawara, whom I thought
impossibly parochial, is thoughtful and noble and quietly very brave.
Kitsura-sum and I are often spoiled and compete with each other just as we did
when we were children, and my uncle is working tirelessly to preserve an Empire
that the Shonto have shaped longer than any Imperial dynasty.” She caught
the monk’s eye again. “And you, my friend… are out of place
in this world, in the House of a great lord. Yet I sense that you are not at
peace within your own Order either. Where is your place, Shuyun-sum? You…
you look so troubled.”
He shook his head.
“I have been in a council. Lord Shonto did not want to wake you
immediately.” Shuyun took a controlled breath. “I’m sure he
would rather speak to you himself, but… Lord Shonto has agreed to sur-
render his army to the
Emperor. We will join the refugees fleeing to Yankura in a few hours.‘
Nishima pressed her
forehead with her hand, remaining like that for some time. Then she moved
forward until she pressed her cheek against Shuyun’s neck and he
e“What will become of
us,” Nishima whispered. “Whatever will become of us.”
Fifty-nine
All preparations were
made in the dark or the dim light of covered lamps. It was crucial that the
barbarians saw nothing untoward or they might react in ways no one could predict.
Nishima heard more than saw her tent come down in the dark. She was standing in
the midst of total chaos, Kitsura clinging to her arm as though she feared
Nishima would evaporate into the darkness at any second.
The two women were
dressed in men’s hunting costumes, the better for riding, and perhaps the
thought of this unsettled Lady Kitsura even more—she had less experience
with horses than her cousin.
Although she had spoken a
few words with her uncle, the meeting had not been private and Nishima still
did not know the reason for Shonto’s sudden decision to surrender his
army to the Emperor. Some part of her wanted to believe it was a ruse of the
gü Master, an apparent sacrifice that opened the gate of an elaborate
trap.
Yankura was the
destination everyone mentioned or the Islands of Konojü, but Shonto had
said neither to her, so she was uncertain of their direction.
The great lord met with
his advisors now, planning the move of the army to the Emperor’s
position. The Emperor was expecting the surrender of the Shonto along with the
army but this was not to be so. All of those the Emperor named in his scroll
would flee with the Shonto; Jaku Katta, Lord Komawara, and all of the Shonto
family retainers and senior advisors. The oaths of the Shonto House Guard would
never allow them to join the Ya-maku. It would not be a small party able to
move quickly, and this concerned Nishima.
“There is a hint of
gray in the east, cousin,” Kitsura
said, her voice curiously
high-pitched. “Should we not be on our way?”
Turning to the east,
Nishima could see no signs of light. “We have time yet, Kitsu-sum. Be
patient.”
Servants bustled about,
sorting clothing and other goods, packing trunks and bags. Much would be left
behind, Nishima realized, but this did not seem important. She was concerned
for her staff, and this thought brought an image of Shimeko to her mind. Where
had she disappeared to, Nishima wondered? Such a troubled soul but someone
Nishima had developed an affection for. I should never have allowed her aboard
that infernal ship, Nishima thought.
Her last memory of the
plague ship was of it passing along a side canal toward a Botahist Monastery.
The land there was so flat it seemed to be setting out across the fields, sails
full and drawing, the terrifying green banner waving against the blue sky.
“May Botahara
protect her,” Nishima whispered.
“Cousin?”
“I am reduced to
mumbling. Please excuse me.”
She felt Kitsura’s
grip tighten on her arm for a moment in reassurance.
Lord Taiki rode toward
the two torches, their copper light reflecting dully off black lacquered armor
in the darkness and fog. Clearing his throat so that his presence would be
known, Taiki whispered to a guard. “Give the signal.”
A lamp opened quickly,
three times, and a torch dipped once in reply, leaving an arc of flame hanging
in the air for the briefest instant.
They continued forward.
Shapes took form in the fog-riders in black.
“Colonel Jaku? I am
the emissary of Lord Shonto Mo-toru.” Taiki spoke quietly.
“Come forward, Lord
Taiki.”
A pace apart Taiki
stopped and looked at the young man illuminated in the torch light. He wore an
unadorned helmet and his face-mask hung open revealing a fine-boned silhouette.
The green eyes could not be seen and Taiki was surprised that he would think of
this.
“I have orders to
conduct Lord Shonto through the lines into the presence of the Emperor, Lord
Taiki.”
Taiki took a long breath.
“Lord Shonto slipped away with his family and senior advisors, Colonel
Jaku.”
Silence.
Taiki saw Tadamoto reach
out and take a plait of his horse’s mane into his gloved hand. “And
my brother, Katta?”
“He has disappeared
also along with Lord Koma-wara.”
“I see. My
Emperor’s instructions were very clear: if I sense treachery, I am to cut
you down and retreat.”
Taiki controlled his urge
to rest a hand on his sword hilt. “There is no treachery, Colonel. Lord
Shonto warned the Emperor of this invasion months ago. He has done everything
within his power to prepare the Empire for this war. Lord Shonto was ignored.
He has now given up his army for the defense of the Empire. Do you expect him
to forfeit his life as well?” Taiki realized he had raised his voice and
forced his next words in the most reasonable tones. “There is no
treachery, Colonel Jaku. Only a desire to save Wa. I am prepared to move our
force, retreat or attack or prepare for battle as we are. I will surrender
command to whomever you appoint. Do not fear, Colonel Jaku, we will not risk a
war between our own army and the forces of the Emperor with a barbarian army
standing ready. I await your instructions.”
The sounds of clattering
armor and horses stamping and calling out to each other carried across the
empty field. The barbarians were stirring.
“Bring your men in
an organized file down the southwest slope of your hill and form them into
ranks behind the position of the Imperial Army. This must be done quickly, Lord
Taiki, it is our intention to retreat under cover of morning fog. We must move
south. This position is not favorable.”
“You will surrender
the Capital, then?”
Tadamoto did not answer.
“It is the Emperor’s will that you retain command of Shonto’s
army for now,” he said. “By the hour of the hare we will have begun
moving south. Further orders will be sent to you.”
Jaku Tadamoto turned his
horse and moved back into
the darkness, the torches
borne by his guard were quickly consumed by the fog.
Shonto knelt on cushions
set out on a flat section of stone projecting from the side of the hill. Lamps
had been hung in the trees nearby, but the apparent tranquil-ity of the scene
was belied by the sounds of an army moving in the darkness around them.
“No news could be
more welcome, Lord Taiki,” Shonto said, his voice calm. “It was my
fear that the Emperor would make a stand upon this field, and I would have
committed my troops to a slaughter. General Hojo will assist you in moving the
army, Lord Taiki, and then will join my party. You have much to do, may
Botahara be with you.” Shonto bowed low.
“Sire. I take on
this duty out of loyalty to the Empire and because you wish it,” Lord
Taiki said, carefully keeping emotion out of his voice. “The Emperor does
not command the smallest part of my loyalty. When the Khan is
defeated…”
Shonto held up his hand.
“When the Khan is defeated, there will be much to do to restore the
Empire. The commander of an Imperial Army cannot speak of civil war. Choose
your words with care, Lord Taiki, even in this company. The Emperor trusts few
men.”
Taiki hesitated and then
bowed, touching his forehead to the cool earth. He retreated three paces and
rose to his feet, the company bowing to him as he turned and walked beyond the
circle of light.
Shonto nodded to General
Hojo who hurried after Taiki lest the lord become lost to him in the darkness.
“Kamu-sum, is our
party ready to travel?”
Kamu bowed quickly.
“They will be, Lord Shonto, before the hour of the hare, if need
be.”
Shonto gave a tight
smile. “Please see to our preparations.”
Kamu bowed, slipping off
into the night as quietly as a Botahist monk.
Lord Komawara bowed then.
Like the others present he wore full armor, his helmet tucked under his arm.
“May I see to my troops, Sire? I can offer some small assistance to Lord
Taiki before we depart.”
Shonto nodded. “We
must be gone soon after sunrise, Lord Komawara. Do what you can, but we cannot
wait.”
As had Lord Taiki,
Komawara touched his head to the ground before retreating and hurrying off.
“General Jaku, no
doubt you wish to do the same.”
Jaku nodded.
Shonto gave the guardsman
a half bow. “An hour after the sunrise.”
Jaku, too, bowed low and
disappeared into the darkness.
Shonto was left facing
Lord Butto who, like Lord Taiki, was not seen as part of Shonto’s
rebellion and would join the Imperial Army.
Butto Joda bowed low and
returned to a kneeling position, a boy in armor laced in purple.
He is no boy, Shonto
reminded himself, he is a formidable strategist and ruthless when necessary.
Shonto nodded,
acknowledging the young lord.
“Sire, if I may
presume… No one would expect you to go north. If you traveled the edge of
the foothills you would come to my fief. It would be an easy thing to hide
there. The Butto hunting lodge is secluded and not uncomfortable. I would send
word ahead of you. And, Lord Shonto, the mountains could be a last resort. Even
if Akantsu can defeat this Khan, he will look for you to go south or to cross
the Inner Sea to the islands. You have assisted the Butto in the past, Lord
Shonto, and now sacrifice much for the sake of our Empire. I would risk the
displeasure of the Son of Heaven without hesitation if I could assist you in any
way.”
Shonto was silent a
moment. “This is a generous offer, Lord Butto. The future is so unclear,
I would hesitate to earn anyone the Yamaku’s enmity. The Emperor may
retain his throne yet. Do not endanger your House as I have mine. The Yamaku
will not be a dynasty like the Mori—their ascendancy will not last. Do
not be concerned, Lord Butto, the Shonto have survived far worse than this. We
are practiced in the art of waiting.” He gave the young lord a brief
smile. “Lord Taiki will need your assistance, may Botahara walk beside
you.”
Lord Butto bowed again.
“May the Perfect Master watch over your House, Lord Shonto.” Bowing
low again, the tiny figure backed away and hurried off.
Shonto sat alone but for
his guard who kept their distance, kneeling in perfect silence.
A whisper came from
beyond the lamp light. “Uncle?”
Shonto smiled.
“Lady Nishima. Please, do not be shy.”
As she stepped into the
light, Shonto was confronted with the sight of his daughter dressed in the
clothes of a boy.
“Like Princess
Shatsima, I am ready to flee to the wilds if that is your wish, Sire.”
Shonto smiled, despite
the gravity of the situation. “I am certain that Shatsima never looked so
lovely nor faced her exile with such courage. You do honor to your House, Lady
Nishima.”
She came and perched on
the edge of the stone. “I am certain Princess Shatsima not only exhibited
but also felt more courage, Uncle.” She waved a hand in the direction the
Shonto army moved. “It shames me to feel such trepidation when I am not
among those who will join the battle.”
Shonto shook his head.
“After Rohku Tadamori witnessed the fall of Rhojo-ma, he told his father
that he would rather die in a thousand battles than stand by and watch others
give their lives. It is a common thing to feel. There is little comfort in this
knowledge, but I am certain that you would enter the battle as willingly as any
man of arms, were that your part to play. Those who do not wield a sword will
yet be called upon, Nishi-sum. An act of bravery may be asked of each of us
before this war is over.”
Nishima nodded her head,
sadly it seemed. “I pray I am equal to it, Sire.”
“We all have the
same prayer, Nishi-sum, even the bravest.”
Nishima waved toward the
eastern horizon. “It grows light. Sunrise is not distant now. Is it
time?”
“I wait only for
the few to return who assist Lord Taiki: Jaku Katta, Hojo, and Lord Komawara.
They will not be long.”
The blaring of horns and
the clashing of metal shook the air suddenly and Nishima and Shonto turned to
look out toward the field.
“Botahara save
us,” Nishima whispered. “What is that?”
“An army preparing
for battle. The Khan grows impatient to sit upon his throne.”
“Will he attack
today, then?”
“The army he seeks
will be gone when the fog clears. Then this barbarian chieftain wi!i be tested.
Will he pursue the Emperor’s army or will he choose to ascend the throne
and declare himself Emperor of Wa? It is the question our Emperor would give
half his wealth to have answered.”
“No one can know,
Uncle, this Khan is a great mystery. Who is he? From where did he come?”
Shonto looked at his
daughter then, raising an eyebrow; “I have not told you? Jaku Katta has
admitted many things now that there is no question of regaining the
Emperor’s favor. This Khan is your very distant cousin, Lady Nishima, a
half-barbarian with Tokiko blood in his veins. He has almost as much claim to
the throne as do the Yamaku or the Fanisan or the Oma-wara.”
“Uncle, this is not
possible! How can you tease at a time such as this?”
“It is the truth,
Nishi-sum. His mother was of the House of Tokiko, married to a lord of Seh.
Barbarian raiders abducted her and she bore a son in the desert.” Shonto
waved toward the north. “And now he comes to claim his birthright.”
Nishima looked out into
the still, dark night, where the fires of the barbarian camp glowed in the
mist. ‘ ’So it is he who has lived in the wilds, like Shatsima,
waiting to reclaim his throne.“ Nishima pressed her fingers to her chin.
”It is as Hakata said. During times of upheaval, when history is created
daily, miracles become commonplace.“
The horns echoed off the
hills again and a stillness answered as the moving army paused to listen. There
was no answer from the opposing camp who prepared their retreat.
Shonto reached out and
took his daughter’s hand. “Join Kamu-sum and Brother Shuyun, now. I
will wait a while to see that all has gone well. Stay close to Brother Shuyun,
Nishima-sum, he is charged with your safety.”
Nishima sat for a second
and then spoke in a small voice. “May I not wait with you?”
Shaking his head, Shonto
squeezed her hand. “The less experienced riders should not come last.
Watch over your cousin, she will find this an ordeal, I fear.”
Nishima sat saying
nothing, then put her arms around Shonto. Neither spoke for a moment, then
Nishima released him, touching his cheek as she turned to go.
The body armor was
slipped over the Emperor’s head by attendants and the lacings tightened.
“Enter,
Colonel,” the Son of Heaven said to Tada-moto who hovered outside the
entrance to the tent.
Tadamoto knelt and bowed
his head to the ground, moving forward awkwardly in his armor.
“Do not keep me in
suspense, Colonel. If I desire suspense, I attend a play.”
“Excuse me,
Emperor.” Tadamoto shifted his helmet under his arm. “Lord Taiki
has delivered the army of Lord Shonto Motoru, Sire, but the Shonto have fled
with their advisors and other members of the rebellion.”
The Emperor nodded,
considering the information. “It was to be expected,” the Emperor
said with some finality. “Motoru will remain treacherous to the very
end.”
Tadamoto shifted and felt
the weight of his sword against his thigh. The guardsman closed his eyes for a
second, the words of both Tanaka and his brother coming back to him.
/ am not loyal to his principles, Tadamoto thought. There are no guards present—/ am the only armed man in this room. It would be easy.
But what would ensue?
“Will Taiki deliver
up this army as he has said, or is this a trap, Colonel?”
Tadamoto placed a gloved
hand on his sword.
This man…
“I believe that
Taiki will bring us the army and is prepared to take orders in the coming war.
His loyalty to the Emperor is, however, in question.”
“Once we have our
march in order, Colonel Tadamoto, I will transfer the command of the Shonto
army to you. After the river is crossed, we will have time to deal with the
disloyal.”
The disloyal, Tadamoto thought. / remain loyal to my principles.
The Emperor’s
shoulder pieces were laced into place. “Is there light,
Tadamoto-sum?”
“The sky is turning
gray.”
The Emperor nodded.
“Then let us leave this barbarian to wonder. He will take the Capital,
I’m certain. We move south toward Yankura.‘’
Tadamoto nodded and
retreated from the tent. Osha, he thought, I must send word to Osha.
He stepped outside to
find the sky light, hinting at blue, and the fog hanging in the valley being
swept away by a breeze from the north. The army of the desert could be seen in
the mist, wavering, as though it lay at the bottom of a moving stream.
“Komawara. Is he
not with you?” General Hojo asked Jaku Katta.
“I have not seen
him since we left your company, General Hojo.”
“We wait only for
him.” Hojo stood holding the bridle of his own horse. He kept looking
north as they spoke. The barbarian position was becoming visible and the fog
threatened to clear. “This will expose the Emperor’s
retreat,” Hojo said. “The Wind Goddess will bring ruin upon us if
this continues.”
Jaku nodded. He
dismounted. “What will the Khan do?”
Hojo did not answer. The
two warriors stood looking out over the field as the sky became fully light.
Horses were heard coming down the path behind them, and the two generals turned
in time to bow to Lord Shonto.
They were within the
protection of die trees just below the base of the hill so their view was
imperfect.
“Can you see the
Imperial Army?” Shonto asked. “Are they in the earthworks
still?”
Hojo dropped the reins of
his horse to the ground and picked his way some distance down the slope,
stepping over fallen trees and bramble. Leaning out from behind the base of a
tree, he scanned the Emperor’s position.
Pulling himself back he
shouted up the hill. “The Imperial Army appears to be retreating from
their position, but this operation is not complete.”
“Damn fool,”
Shonto said. “If this mist clears, they will be caught on an open field.
Better to stay behind their earthworks and pray they can hold until
dark.”
Shonto came up closer to
Jaku but did not dismount. Mist pushed up the hill from the valley then,
enveloping Hojo in white. The lord motioned his guard forward. “Do not
leave General Hojo alone in this fog.”
Five guards dismounted
and stumbled down the slope, disappearing before they had gone a dozen steps.
Again a braying of horns
and a clash of arms, then again, and once more. The shout of hundred thousand
went up, an inhuman din, and the sound of a charge shook the earth.
“General
Hojo!” Shonto shouted.
There was no answer. All
that could be heard was the pounding of hooves, the crying of men.
Suddenly the mist
cleared, snaking off around the sides of the hill, and there, on the field, was
the barbarian army in full charge.
Hojo turned and ran
awkwardly up the embankment followed by his guard. “They break
ranks,” he said breathlessly, “the few that remain. It will be a
slaughter.”
“It is a
rout!” Shonto shouted. “Damn that fool Emperor! Damn him for
eternity. They will fall upon Lord Taiki from behind.” He spurred his
horse. “Come, we must save what we can. If these armies are broken, the
barbarians will take the Empire.”
The others were quick to
follow, whipping their horses up the hillside in pursuit of their liege-lord.
They came up to the shoulder of the hill in moments and Shonto stopped to
survey the scene.
The first wave of
barbarian warriors washed across the earthworks, taking the few who tried to
stand and throwing them back like bits of flotsam. Men of Wa were on the wooden
bridge spanning the canal trying to escape to the western bank, but many fell
to arrows and a fire ship was bearing down on the bridge.
Standing in his stirrups,
Shonto watched with an air of detachment, the gü Master surveying the
board, weighing possibilities coldly. “The banners of this Khan, do you
see them?”
There was a
second’s silence and then Hojo pointed. “There.”
In the rear of the army
the gold and crimson banners fluttered in the cool north wind.
“He made no offer
to accept a surrender,” Jaku said bitterly.
Shonto nodded, turning to
Hojo. “Send guards to warn Kamu and our household. They must leave
everything and move as quickly as possible.”
Shonto wheeled his horse
to the south and set off at a gallop, the sounds of battle growing dim as they
descended the long slope of the hill. A different scene faced them as they
broke out of the trees: the army of Lord Taiki was formed up, ready to march,
but was not on the move, and the army of the Emperor was forming ranks to the
west. Over the crest of the hill upon which the earthworks had been established
men poured in disarray.
Pointing toward the
Imperial Army, Jaku said, “They do not even realize what has
happened.”
“The barbarians
will crest the hill soon enough,” Hojo said, “then all will
know.”
“The
Emperor’s army will break and run,” Shonto said. “Our own
forces will take the blow. We must do what we are able. General Jaku, General
Hojo, you will organize the rearguard action and we will march south and take
our losses.” He waved them forward and the small group set off at speed.
A shout went up from Lord
Taiki’s army before Shon-to’s party reached them, and men turned to
the north where the vanguard of the barbarian army appeared. On the crest of
the hill the army of the desert hesitated, banners fluttering, the men of Wa in
flight before them. The soldiers of the Imperial Army stood looking back as the
Khan’s army grew, crimson riders appearing under a cloud of gold silk
banners.
The Khan had taken the
field and was, for the first time, seeing the distant Imperial Capital rising
up above the mist. Barbarian warriors collected below the banners of their
chieftain like the dark crest of a wave forming on the hillside. Like a wave
crest it gathered weight and grew in size until it must rush down and spread
itself across the shore. The din of horns assaulted the ears three times, and
each time the barbarians answered the call with a shout and a clash of arms.
With a final shout the
army of the desert surged down the hillside. The men of the Imperial Army stood
looking on for a few seconds and then they broke and ran, the panic washing
through the unformed ranks like wind through wheat.
Shonto’s party
closed with Taiki’s army, standing its ground still, and a guard raised
the blue silk and shinta blossom on a staff to a shout of elation from the men.
A rider in Komawara blue raced along the edge of the troops, pulling open his
face mask-as he came.
Hojo waved a hand at this
rider. “The mystery of Lord Komawara… he stayed to fight with his
men.”
Shonto’s guard met
the rider with drawn swords, but Shonto waved them aside and Komawara pulled up
his horse before the lord.
“The barbarians
split their force to attack, Lord Shonto. My men are ready to ride out to meet
them. Lord Butto will join me.‘’
Shonto looked up the
slope to the charging army and nodded to Komawara. “Their force is large,
Lord Komawara. You may slow them, but be prepared to fall back quickly. General
Hojo will prepare our defense. Where is Lord Taiki?”
Komawara waved a gloved
hand to the south. “At the head of the army, Sire.”
“May Botahara
protect you,” Shonto said and waved his guard to follow, setting out
toward the south.
Komawara spun his mount
and raced off, closing his face-mask as he went and tightening his helmet cord.
The crest of the
barbarian wave broke upon the rear of the fleeing Imperial Army first, riding
down the foot-soldiers. A conch sounded in the rear of Lord Shonto’s
force and the Komawara banner shook free in the breeze, fluttered for an
instant and then the north wind faltered and died. The conch sounded again and
riders in darkest blue and riders in purple set off with a shout to meet the
charging barbarian cavalry.
With the dying of the
north wind the cloud of fog halted in its southern retreat, reformed its
ghostly ranks, and began to creep north, devouring the heads of the two armies
of Wa, then drawing in the bodies.
* *
Lady Nishima turned to
Shuyun who stared off at the hilltop. Dark banners waved on the crest and men
massed there in growing numbers.
“Those are the
banners of the Khan, Lady Nishima. It would appear that the barbarians have
attacked the retreating Imperial Army.”
Dark stains on the green
fields marked the distant armies of Wa. Horns sounded, their metallic voices
borne across the land on the north wind.
Nishima looked back
toward the hill they had recently departed. “Where is my father?”
she said, keeping panic from her voice with an effort.
Kitsura rode up then, one
hand on the reins and the other holding tight to the saddle.
“Can you see,
Brother?” she asked. “What occurs?”
Rolling across the green
land, the shout of the barbarian army struck like the first breath of winter.
“Botahara save
us,” Kitsura whispered.
The dark mass of the army
of the desert poured down the slope of the hill. Nishima tore her eyes away,
looking back the way they had come, searching for the signs of blue.
Near at hand a single
rider jumped a low stone wall, coming toward them at a gallop from the
direction of Lord Taiki’s army.
“A
messenger,” Shuyun said.
Kamu appeared, galloping
his horse down the line of Shonto retainers, his empty sleeve blowing in the
wind like a banner. He stopped beside Lady Nishima, staring out toward the
beginning battle.
“We cannot tarry,
Lady Nishima, Brother. We must make haste,” he said.
Nishima nodded.
“What has become of Lord Shonto?”
The rider who came toward
them waved then and no one made a move to make haste as Kamu had suggested.
They waited, transfixed by the terrible scene unfolding before them.
His horse in a lather,
the rider, a Shonto House Guard, reined in before Kamu, pulling open his
face-mask as he did so. “I come from Lord Shonto. Our lord orders that
you leave everything and flee with all haste. The barbarians have carried the
attack to us.”
“Where is
he?” Nishima said, the fear she felt breaking through. “Where is
Lord Shonto?”
“He has joined the
army, Lady Nishima, to direct the defense.”
Nishima turned her face
away, covering her eyes with her hand.
Shuyun pointed to the
north, east of the hill that had been the Shonto encampment. Barbarian riders
were emerging from behind a stand of trees not far off. Turning in his saddle,
Shuyun surveyed the field in all directions, then he reached over and took the
reins from Kitsura’s hands, pulling them over the head of her mount.
“The north wind is
dying,” Shuyun said, “The fog will hold for some time now. Lady
Nishima?” he said with some gentleness. “Lord Shonto is a capable
man surrounded by able warriors. We must look to ourselves.” He tugged at
the reins of Kitsura’s mare. “Steward Kamu, the fog clears first in
the east. May Botahara protect you.”
“You must have
guards, Brother,” Kamu protested. “I cannot let the Ladies Nishima
and Kitsura go off unprotected.”
“We will be more
likely to slip away undetected the fewer we are.”
“I will go with
Brother Shuyun, Kamu-sum,” Nishima said. “Do not be concerned. In
the fog Brother Shuyun can see where others are blind. Brother.”
The monk turned his horse
and led the two ladies south, disappearing into the cloud of white.
Lord Komawara elected to
charge the barbarians, knowing from his experience that they could be thrown
into confusion by a direct attack. To his left he could see the small form of
Butto Joda, riding a massive stallion and outdistancing his apprehensive guard.
Jaku Katta held a position to the lord’s right. Arrows whistled overhead,
passing both north and south.
The opposing armies met
with a clash of steel that rang across the field. Komawara took his first man
from the saddle with a blow from his pommel. He caught a fleeting glimpse of
Jaku Katta, his sword flashing and barbarian riders falling back before the
great warrior.
He fought another, one of
his Hajiwara guards knee to
knee with him as they
both battled forward. It soon became obvious to Komawara that the momentum of
their charge was being overcome. The Hajiwara guard toppled from the saddle and
he saw two barbarians on foot pounce on him.
A shout came from
Komawara’s left and he saw Lord Butto spur toward him. “We must
fall back while there are enough of us to win through.”
Komawara looked around
quickly and realized that, among the fallen barbarians, the field was strewn
with men in Komawara colors and the Butto purple. He tore his conch from his
saddle as Lord Butto fought to protect him. Sounding the retreat, he dropped the
conch to the ground and went to the aid of Butto Joda. Lieutenant Narihira
appeared at Lord Butto’s side, unhorsing a barbarian and disarming
another who retreated.
The three fell back, more
barbarian raiders appearing with each passing moment.
“There is no end of
them,” Butto shouted.
“They are like the
swarming of the Butto across my lord’s fief,” Narihira answered.
Butto Joda almost fell
from his horse as he aimed a blow at the Komawara guard who wore the green
lacing on his sleeve, but Narihira turned this aside. Komawara drove his horse
between the two men as the first tongue of mist drifted past them. In a moment
they were completely enveloped, the sounds of swords ringing came out of the
mist around them, but they could see no others. Barbarians appeared before
them, charging immediately. They were separated in the ensuing fight and lost
their way, no longer certain which direction was a retreat, which a futile
charge.
Despite the number of his
guards the Emperor of Wa kept his hand on his sword hilt. His army was in
retreat before a vastly superior force and at the crest of the hill that his
army had recently abandoned he could see the gold “banners of the Great
Khan waving in the fitful breeze. The banners slowly descended the hill which
told the Emperor more about what happened in the battle than any number of
reports. The Khan had a perfect view of the situation—the scene of his
triumph.
Colonel Jaku Tadamoto
rode through the Emperor’s guard, bowing from the saddle.
“Colonel?”
“Lord Taiki’s
army is holding ranks thus far, Sire, though they are cut off from us now. Our
troops have broken rank, Emperor, the barbarian army sweeps all before
it.”
The Emperor nodded, his
reaction unreadable behind the frozen features of his black face-mask.
“Gather what troops remain and retreat toward the Capital. If we can slip
out across the lake, we may yet save some part of this frightened army. What
direction does Lord Taiki go?”
“It is difficult to
know, Emperor: south, generally.”
The Emperor reached up and
tightened his helmet cord. “Offer what resistance you can to cover our
retreat, Colonel.” The Emperor turned and spurred his horse toward the
canal where his boat waited.
Tadamoto sat his horse
watching the Emperor go. I did not tell him that many say they saw the Shonto
banner at the head of Lord Taiki’s army, Tadamoto thought—no doubt
he will find out soon enough.
It was quickly obvious to
Lord Taiki that they could not be certain of their direction in the fog and the
relief he had felt at returning command of the army to Lord Shonto quickly gave
way to apprehension. The knowledge that they would face a barbarian army of one
hundred thousand if they were still on the field when the fog cleared kept them
moving all the same.
In council with Lord
Taiki, Shonto had decided to go what they hoped was southwest to meet the canal
which would take them to the Capital—perhaps the only destination they
could be certain of.
The sounds of battle
surrounded them and companies of riders would appear and disappear like
apparitions. Neither General Hojo, nor the Lords Butto and Komawara, nor Jaku
Katta had been heard from since the fog returned and not one member of their
party found their way back to the main body of Shonto’s army. The worst
was feared, though no one would give voice to this, but Lord Taiki became more
pessimistic about their fate by the moment.
Despite moving across
level ground the army progressed at the pace of an old man on foot, a result of
their uncertainty of direction, no doubt.
“This fog is both a
blessing and a curse, Lord Shonto,” Taiki said. Like everyone else, he
found himself constantly searching the mist around him, looking for signs of
the enemy or for a landmark that might tell them where they were. Patrols could
not be sent out, for they would never find the army again and this made the
commanders doubly blind.
“It is a blessing,
do not doubt it. We should have been swept from the field, but the Khan has
lost us as we have lost him. Pray it holds until we are beyond his reach. We
will march by night. If we can find our way across the river, we may escape,
Lord Taiki. It is the most we can hope for.”
The ringing of steel
sounded before them where Shonto had placed his strongest swordsmen. A rider in
blue pushed through toward Lord Shonto and Taiki.
“We have met a
barbarian party, Sire,” he shouted as he came. “Reinforcements are
being called for.”
“What numbers? How large a
party?” The man rode up then, bowing from his saddle. “Large, Sire.
It is impossible to tell.”
Shonto turned and gave orders
to an officer and there was a flurry of movement around them. Horns blared to
their right, sounding far too close. Riders appeared suddenly and Taiki drew
his sword at the same time as Shonto.
“They are Lord
Komawara’s men!” someone shouted and Taiki heard a voice thank
Botahara—his voice. But then he realized these men fought barbarians.
Shonto cursed beside him.
“We have ridden into the heart of the battle, Lord Taiki. Fall back in
that direction.” The lord waved his sword. “We must hold our force
together.” His words were lost in the chaos. Arrows whistled and fell
among the men near him. Like any lord of Seh, Taiki did not flinch or try to
cover himself.
Barbarian warriors
engaged the guards around the two lords. Butto purple could be seen in the mist
now, riders hard pressed and few. Taiki saw Shonto cross swords with a
barbarian. The lord of the Shonto fighting like a com-
mon warrior, Taiki
thought, and then he, too, was fighting for his life. More arrows fell, shot by
which side Taiki could not tell. Lord Toshaki Yoshihira unseated a man to
Taiki’s left, shouting that he had seen the canal bank. Arrows flew and
men fell around him.
Taiki took a
barbarian’s helmet off with a blow and then finished the stunned rider
with a perfectly aimed cut. He looked around for Lord Shonto but could find him
nowhere. Shouts were heard now: the
canal, they had found the canal.
They waited in the mist,
absolutely still. Nishima had lost track of the times Shuyun had made them do
this, or ordered them to turn suddenly, or reverse direction all together.
“What is it,
Brother? What do you hear?” Kitsura whispered.
Nishima leaned close to
her cousin. “Say nothing. Shuyun-sum can sense chi at some distance. Do
not destroy his focus.”
Kitsura’s beautiful
face was pale, frightened, yet she struggled to maintain a semblance of dignity
even so. She nodded at Nishima’s words.
Riders had passed close
to them several times and they often heard the barbarians’ horns and the
clash of swords. Shuyun looked up at the sky which showed some signs of the
lightest blue.
“The fog is
clearing to the east, we are forced toward the canal.”
He tugged at the reins of
Kitsura’s mare and Nishima moved her horse to stay close beside him. They
went perhaps a hundred feet and the mist grew thicker again. Shuyun motioned
for an abrupt turn to the left, then stopped them again. Riders could be heard
close by, many riders by the sounds. Kitsura mumbled the Bahitra. The riders
passed.
Leading them another
hundred feet, Shuyun suddenly stopped, his eyes closed. A man coughed somewhere
nearby though Nishima did not know from what direction this sound came.
Shuyun spoke and his
voice sounded strange, distant. “Do not move from this spot no matter
what occurs.”
He handed the reins of
Kitsura’s mare to Lady Nishima, pressing her hand as he did so.
Moving his horse forward
the monk slipped into the mist. Kitsura reached out and gripped her
cousin’s sleeve. The sound of something of weight striking the ground
came to them and then a riderless horse appeared before them, causing their own
horses to shy, throwing Kitsura to the ground.
Shuyun appeared then,
dismounting quickly and helping Kitsura to rise.
“Are you injured,
Lady Kitsura?”
She shook her head.
“No…” Moving her arm in an arc, she tried to smile.
“No, I am unharmed. The ground is soft.” She remounted with the
monk’s assistance.
Without further
hesitation they moved off, more quickly now. The fog was clearing, there was no
doubt.
As the mist pushed back,
Shuyun pressed the horses into a canter. Soon the sounds of battle seemed to
recede and they stopped infrequently now.
There was a shout to
their right. “Ride,” Shuyun called out. “Stop for
nothing.” Saying this, he whipped Kitsura’s mount with his reins
and turned toward the sound of horses bearing down.
The circle of their world
had drawn itself out to half a rih and in their entire world Nishima could see
no moving figure. At a low stone wall time was lost while Nishima jumped both
horses over, one at a time. Kitsura climbed over, one fall being enough for the
day.
They rode on, seeing no
one, and finally Nishima pulled their horses up, looking back over her
shoulder.
“Brother Shuyun
said to stop for nothing,” Kitsura panted.
Nishima shook her head.
“But he is alone. How many were there, did you see?”
Kitsura shrugged.
“I cannot see through fog, cousin. I think the Capital is showing through
the mist, look.”
Off to their left the
white walls of the city reflected the afternoon sun.
“I am entirely
turned around, Kitsu-sum.” She wiped her brow with a sleeve in a most
unladylike action, causing her cousin to laugh.
“It is not a time
for laughter, cousin,” Nishima scolded.
“Excuse me,
Nishi-sum, I… excuse me.” She forced her face into seriousness
though her eyes still retained a sparkle.
The sound of a horse
running over soft ground came from behind them and they both turned to see a
rider jump a ditch.
“It is Brother
Shuyun, cousin,” Kitsura said, “I am certain.”
Nishima pressed her horse
forward to meet the monk. When he stopped, she rode up beside him embracing him
from her saddle. Kitsura examined a tree in the distance and the beauty of the
Capital appearing from the shroud of mist.
Waving toward the north
and west where the fog was clearing, Shuyun pulled free of Nishima’s arms.
She released him reluctantly and turned to look.
Among the tendrils of
dissipating mist the Imperial Army straggled over the fields, making their way
toward the Capital in small groups, many on foot, having shed their armor to
make better speed. Spread out over many rih, the silent, defeated soldiers of Wa
retreated.
“Where is my father
in all of this?” Nishima asked.
Shuyun shook his head. He
pointed east and Nishima turned to see a large force off in the distance moving
toward the river. “Lord Taiki’s army?” she said.
“Barbarians.”
Shuyun said quietly. “That line of retreat is cut off. The Khan will
force us all into the Capital.”
They began to move again.
A flowing ditch was used to water the horses and Shuyun stopped them then to
let the horses graze for a time.
Sitting on the bank in
the warm spring sun it seemed to Nishima that there could hardly be a war only
a few rih away. She closed her eyes and tried to make herself believe it was
all a dream, but when she opened them the retreating army told her the dream
was true.
Taking her reins from
Shuyun as they remounted, Kitsura said, “There is no fog for me to become
lost in, Brother. I must learn to ride while I may.”
A group of horsemen
converged with them and though Nishima’s tendency was to avoid them
Shuyun thought
that they wore the
midnight blue of the Komawara and this proved to be true.
“We became
separated from our lord in the fog and confusion of battle,” an officer,
one Narihira Chisato explained. One of the men was obviously injured, though
not bleeding. Shuyun forced him to dismount and examined his
injuries—broken ribs and terrible bruises. The injured man’s
companions made a bundle of his armor and strapped it behind his saddle.
“Was there news of
my father, Lord Shonto?” Nish-ima asked, almost afraid of what she might
be told.
The officer turned back
toward the scene of the battle as though searching for the answer to
Nishima’s question. “Lord Shonto joined Lord Taiki,” he said,
still looking out over the field, “no doubt regaining control of the
army. We charged the barbarians then, Lady Nishima, to protect the retreat.
Since that time we have seen no sign of Lord Shonto’s
force.‘’ He waved toward the thousands whose paths converged on the
Capital. ”All we have spoken to are from the Emperor’s army which
was routed before they could retreat. The Son of Heaven has fled, surrendering
the field to the barbarian pretender. It is a black day, Lady Nishima. The
north wind blew out of the desert and brought ruin upon us.“ The man
shook his head sadly and said no more.
The small party continued
in silence, pushing their tired mounts on toward the Imperial city. As if the
gods of wind and weather had not caused enough pain for one day, the western
sky was lit with a sunset that caused the heart to ache.
“It is a sign of
the end of a glorious empire,” one warrior whispered. The others glared
at him and he bowed, whispering apologies.
Darkness came slowly, the
colors of the sunset lingering after the stars appeared in the east. The lights
of the Capital flickered to life and the night finally turned dark. Seven
Imperial Guards joined them and nothing was asked or offered about the
identities of the riders without armor.
Nishima and Kitsura
pulled cowls over their heads and the darkness masked them well enough. Both
were careful not to speak and the Komawara guard formed a pro-
tective wall between the
guardsmen and the others. Little was said, at any rate, each alone with their
thoughts.
The Empire had fallen; that was enough to occupy the
mind.
Sixty
The northern gate to the
Imperial Capital was open and the bridge that crossed the canal to it had not
yet been destroyed. A party of Imperial Guards were stationed at the entrance,
or had merely taken it upon themselves to stand guard, it was not clear which.
Lady Nishima’s
party was challenged as they rode up though it seemed to be mainly for the sake
of form—so many fled to the Capital. One of the Imperial Guards in
Nishima’s company identified himself as the Great Khan come looking for a
good inn and in the ensuing laughter they slipped into the city of the Emperor.
The streets and canals
were choked with the soldiers of the Imperial Army and panicked residents and
refugees attempting to make their way toward the city’s eastern gates and
the Lake of the Lost Dragon. No organized defense was in evidence and robbery
and looting had begun in plain view.
“Where is the
Imperial Guard?” Kitsura whispered. “Will the Emperor not defend
the city? Has he fled?”
Nishima shrugged, looking
about, alarmed by what she saw. The guardsmen who had accompanied them into the
city immediately went their separate ways and only Shu-yun and the three
Komawara guards remained. Among the thousands jostling in the streets this
seemed little protection.
As they progressed into
the city, Nishima’s fear began to recede. She realized that the looting
was not widespread and that, generally, people were proceeding in an organized
way and often offered assistance to others. She began to relax and smiled at
her cousin who looked truly frightened.
Many of the soldiers were
headed in the direction of the Island Palace, as was a large part of the
population.
Rumors said the Emperor
had not fled and that the defense was being organized from the palace.
Although horses were
seldom used in the Capital, a city of canals and narrow streets, they were common
that evening as the retreating army arrived. The city was not designed for
transport by horse, however, and they soon encountered a footbridge too narrow
to pass.
Shuyun turned into a
tight alley which led out onto an avenue that ran along the edge of a major
canal.
“Where shall we go,
Shuyun-sum?” Nishima asked. Until then there had been little hope of
going anywhere but where the crowds went.
“I do not know, my
lady.” Shuyun answered, “your family residence will have been taken
by Imperial Guards some time ago. Perhaps Lady Kitsura’s family have not
left the city and we could find rest there for the evening. If we want news of
what has happened in the field, I suggest we go toward the palace though your
name cannot be spoken there.”
Nishima looked toward
Kitsura. “I would like news of my family, cousin, but I understand your
concern for Lord Shonto. My own family is more likely to be safe. Let us go to
the palace gates at least and find out what we can.”
Nishima gave her cousin a
smile of thanks that dissolved immediately into a look of concern. They
followed the canal, walking their tired horses across a bridge where, for the
first time in their lives, the two ladies were jostled by the people in the
streets.
It was late in the night
when they came to the Gate of Serenity and in the square before the gate
thousands gathered. A few small fires blazed on the cobbles of the square and
soldiers and guards rubbed shoulders with all manner of citizens. .
Atop the gate black-clad
Imperial Guards stood, ignoring all questions and taunts. A single bell sounded
the hour of the owl as though only one bellkeeper in the entire city stayed at
his post. The hour rang through the teeming city in a strangely empty way.
Nishima’s party
dismounted and the Komawara guards took the animals in hand and loosened their
saddle girths. One of the men walked off to see what could be learned, but when
he returned he shrugged. “You can learn any-
thing you desire here. The
Emperor has fled, the Emperor has fallen on his sword. The barbarians are at
the gates. The barbarians have gone toward Yankura. Everything is being said,
nothing is known.“ He found a wall to place his back against and fell
promptly to sleep.
Jaku Tadamoto, Commander
of the shattered Imperial Guard, found his way into the city aboard a
commandeered sampan, sculled by two riverman his guards had pressed into
service. He was not seriously wounded though he was bruised and battered and
his once fine armor, a gift from his brother Katta, had saved his life more
than once.
Scholars make poor warriors, he told himself over and over
again.
The Imperial Army had
been shattered and sent fleeing in disarray. The Emperor’s decision to
take command himself had proven the army’s undoing. That and the
Emperor’s refusal to join forces with Lord Shonto. Had Lord Shonto
escaped with his army? Tadamoto wondered. Was there hope for the Empire yet?
A group of Imperial
Guards looked on as he passed, yet none made a move to bow to their commander.
Tadamoto saw no animosity in their looks. It was as though he had simply lost
his rank; there was no anger on their part but neither was there respect. Scholars make poor warriors, Tie said to himself again. He
had but one intention now, to go to the Palace and seek out his sovereign if
the Emperor was not already on his way to Nitashi. Tadamoto had left his young
brother, Yasata, as a guard in the palace—determined that at least one
member of the Jaku would survive. They would escape. Tadamoto had a plan and
gold enough. Had Osha received his message? Had she fled? He would take Yasata
and find her. The three would make their way to the Islands of Konojü. It
would be years before this desert-bom Khan would cross a sea. It was likely
that intrigue would have ended his reign before then—this chieftain did
not know what would happen when he entered the Island Palace, could not
imagine. He would learn to sleep lightly and listen to whispers.
The rivermen brought the
boat alongside a set of stone steps that led to a side gate used by the
Imperial Guard.
Tadamoto disembarked
stiffly and forced himself to stand erect to ascend the steps. The canal and
the quay were thronged with people—all trying to escape the barbarians,
no doubt. It was a sad sight and sadder yet when Tadamoto realized that he
would soon join them. His future would become as uncertain—was as
uncertain now.
A password opened the
gate and Tadamoto and his guards entered. They were in a square bordered with
quarters for the Imperial Guard.
“Colonel
Jaku,” a guard said quietly. “I will find attendants to assist you
with your armor and to see to your injuries.”
Tadamoto shook his head.
If he kept moving, the stiffness could be worked out as long as he did not stop
again. “I have duties. See to yourself now, but I will need a
boat—before dawn, no doubt.”
“I will arrange for
the boat myself, Colonel.”
Tadamoto nodded. He
walked toward the central palace buildings. The grounds were quiet, deserted,
almost serene in contrast to the streets beyond the walls.
Mounting a set of stairs,
Tadamoto passed the hedge-maze where he had been given instructions by the
Emperor—instructions and threats, as it always was with the Emperor. Two
guards challenged him as he came to one of the great doors to the palace. He
identified himself and gave the password needed.
“The Emperor, is
Tie‘ in the Palace?”
“I cannot say,
Colonel,” one guard answered. “Perhaps the Son of Heaven attends
the council in the Great Hall.”
“Find my brother,
Colonel Jaku Yasata.” Tadamoto ordered one of them. “I will need
him to attend me in my quarters within the hour.”
Inside the palace,
Tadamoto was met by near darkness; only a small number of the hall lamps had
been lit and these smoked from lack of attention. He removed one and used it to
find his way.
Few knew the palace as
well as the Commander of the Guard. He took an impossibly narrow set of stairs
used by servants and kicked open a door to another hall, saving himself some
minutes. The Emperor, Tadamoto was certain, would flee at the first opportunity
and Tadamoto did not want that to happen.
* * *
There was a stirring in
the square and whispers rippled around the edge. Much pushing occurred at the
mouth of the major avenue and then mounted armed men appeared, some in black
and others in blue or purple.
“Shonto
livery!” one of the Komawara guards exclaimed, rousing the two ladies
from a near sleep.
Nishima leapt up from the
cobbles, surprised by the pain from riding. “It is General Hojo,”
she said, and had to be restrained by Shuyun from rushing forward.
“Do nothing,”
Shuyun whispered in her ear, “until we know what occurs here.” He
kept a grip on her arm and Nishima leaned against him as others stood and vied
for a view. She closed her eyes and felt the monk’s warmth. Surprised to
find herself fighting back tears, she forced herself to open her eyes and focus
on the scene, what little of it she could see.
Jaku Katta and the
diminutive Butto Joda rode at Hojo’s side. All three were covered in dust
and appeared very grim. They rode at the head of a substantial force of armed
men, Imperial Guards and Shonto men and a few wearing purple. They stopped
before the gate and silence fell in the square as ten thousand held their
breath, listening.
Hojo looked up at the guard
over the gate. “Open the gate,” he called out. “We will speak
with the Emperor.”
The guard stood frozen in
place and then disappeared. There was silence and then Hojo rode up to the
gate, drew his sword, and pounded on the wood and bronze with his pommel. The
square rang with the sound of his anger.
“Open this
gate!” Hojo roared, “or we will have it down and the palace will be
open to all.”
A guard officer appeared
above the gate. “We do not open the gate to rebels,” he shouted.
Jaku Katta spurred his horse
forward, pulling off his helmet as he did so. “Brother.” he called
out. “You must open the gate. The barbarians march toward the Capital and
the Emperor does nothing. The Yamaku have betrayed Wa. Open the gates! We have
an Empire to defend.”
There was hesitation
above the gates. Other black-
uniformed men appeared
and there was a hasty council. Suddenly a sword flashed above the gate and then
others. The crowd surged forward at this and the Shonto guards pushed them
back. The black-uniformed men disappeared and a moment later the gates creaked
open and Jaku Yasata appeared.
The crowd surged forward
again, shouting. “Bring forth the Emperor.” A chant began.
“Bring forth the Emperor.”
The Shonto men and
Imperial Guards pushed the crowd back, but even so Nishima felt herself thrust
forward and she struggled to keep her grip on Shuyun and Kitsura.
They were close to a
Shonto guard now and Shuyun called out and was recognized. Nishima was squeezed
through the wall of guards and found herself face to face with Hojo Masakado.
“Lady Nishima! May
Botahara be praised.” He almost forgot to bow.
The crowd took this up
then and Nishima heard the syllables of her name pass around the square like a
chanted prayer, a sound she found deeply disturbing.
“You should not be
here, Lady Nishima,” Hojo started but then stopped. “Come, we must
go in while we may.”
Dismounting his horse,
Jaku Katta bowed to Lady Nishima, a standing bow but low. “The north wind
has brought us together, Lady Nishima, I am grateful.”
Nodding Nishima stepped
away, lqoking for Hojo. What of my father? she thought, what has happened to
him?
The general had turned
toward the gate and Nishima fell into step between him and Butto Joda who
performed an awkward bow.
“My father,
General, I have had no word of him.”
Hojo shook his head.
“We were separated on the field. The main force has not reached the city
though I do not doubt Lord Shonto has managed an organized retreat. Do not
fear, Lady Nishima, your father is wise in the ways of the battlefield. ”
“And Lord
Komawara—what of him?” Kitsura asked.
“Lord
Komawara,” Hojo said with great warmth. “He is out on the plain
yet, harrying the enemy in the dark. Lord Butto tells us that, lost in the fog,
Komawara encountered the Great Khan and his guard and engaged
them, felling a chieftain
and sending the Khan running. Lord Komawara and General Jaku,“ he nodded
at the guardsman, ”have become the great warriors of our time, Lady
Nishima. Their deeds will make a thousand songs.“
Lady Nishima looked away.
What a terrible thing, she thought. Behind her, she heard the whispers of the
Komawara guard repeating Hojo’s words.
War will destroy all of our souls, Nishima thought.
The Emperor paced the
length of his chamber and back again. “Hopeless fools,” he
muttered, “they will fall into argument over the correct color robes to
wear at the surrender of the Empire.‘’
A knock rattled the door
to his chamber and made the Son of Heaven start. “Enter,” he called
out.
The face of a kneeling
guard appeared. “We have a boat, Emperor. It is being readied as we
speak.
“The palace is
completely surrounded, Sire. The people…”he hesitated,
“appear unruly, Emperor.”
“They are calling
for my head, is that what you mean?”
The guard said nothing
but stared down at the floor before him.
“Knock when the
boat is ready.”
Before the door closed,
the Emperor had returned to his pacing. Venturing onto the balcony, he looked
out over the city. Little could be seen, but the open fires in the squares said
much. They will have someone’s head before the night is over, the Emperor
thought. Anyone’s will do—nothing less will satisfy them. Well, he
almost smiled, let them have any number of ministers and palace officials.
He paced back into the
room and looked down at the armor of an unranked guardsman: the disguise for
his escape. It went with the uniform he wore. He crossed the room and knelt on
a cushion, staying only a second before morbid curiosity drew him back to the
balcony, like a man fascinated by his own fear of heights.
Where was Osha? He had sent
for her an hour ago. Were the servants afraid to say that she was gone? Run off
like his wife and sons the minute he left the palace to go to war. He shook his
head.
From the Gate of Serenity
he could hear shouting and
what sounded like a crowd
chanting. The words were unclear, but he found the sound unsettling all the
same.
A knock sounded at the
door again and it opened without the Emperor’s command. Osha slipped into
the room, looking around, her face like a frightened bird’s.
“On the balcony,
Osha-sum,” came the Emperor’s voice. “I am basking in the
affection of my loyal subjects—who call out for my death.”
Osha moved slowly toward
the sound of the Emperor’s voice and finally saw him, dressed in the
black robes of an Imperial Guard, his dark form blotting out the stars.
“Do not be afraid,
it is not your name they chant,” the Emperor said.
She did not like the tone
of his voice.
The Emperor stood on the
balcony, his back to the rail, his arms crossed.
“It warms my heart
to see that not everyone has abandoned me, Osha-sum. Loyalty has not fled the
palace entirely.”
She nodded.
“Here is what you
must do,” the Emperor said matter-of-factly. “There is no one else
I would trust. I will make my escape in moments. You must bar the door to this
chamber when I leave and open it to no one. Force them to break it down. I
should be out of their reach by then. I had the robes of a servant brought for
you. A servant will be safe enough.”
I am a mistress, Osha
thought. She knew what happened to the pampered mistresses of fallen Emperors.
The Emperor pointed at
neatly folded cotton robes lying on a small stand. “Quickly. We will
throw your robes off the balcony.‘’
Osha nodded. She began
unwinding the yards of brocade sash. Looking up, she saw the Emperor watching.
I am about to die at the hands of the people he has betrayed and he stares at
me as though I am a hired woman. She closed her eyes and continued.
Steeling her nerve as she
finished unwinding her sash, Osha asked the question that haunted her. “I
hope your officers survived, Sire, so that they may assist you in the future.
Colonel Jaku, for one, would be a great loss.”
She turned her back to
the Emperor and removed her outer robe.
“The Colonel has
acted as a loyal subject should— putting himself in the path of the
barbarian army so that his Emperor might escape. As for the rest, they turned
and ran, trying to save their miserable lives, may they be damned for
eternity.‘’
Osha steadied herself as
she felt the room spin.
“Osha-sum, shyness
does not become a dancer. Do not hide your beauty.”
Nishima fell in behind
General Hojo as Jaku Katta led the way to the Great Hall. The tramp of soldiers
behind her was disquieting and so out of place. She had been in these halls
many times, but they had been filled with laughter and music and poetry on
those occasions. She felt Kitsura take her sleeve, like a shy child not wanting
to be left behind.
“General Hojo, what
is it you intend here?” Nishima asked nervously.
Hojo did not slow his
pace. “We intend to force this fool Emperor to perform his duties. He
cannot leave his throne, as much as it would gladden me if he did,” the
general said, casting a glance at Jaku. “We cannot fight the barbarians
and a civil war as well,” Hojo said, pointedly.
Nishima saw Jaku shake
his head. “This Emperor, in an attempt to bring down your lord’s
House, sold our Empire to the barbarian Khan, General Hojo,” Jaku said
with force. “I have not changed my opinion—the Emperor is a threat
to all.”
Nishima looked back at
Hojo, wondering how he would respond. The two officers had obviously been
arguing the point.
“We will let Lord
Shonto decide the fate of Emperors, General Jaku. Soldiers will always make
decisions with a sword. It is our way, but there are other ways.” He said
this with finality.
They reached the doors to
the Great Hall and the guards stationed there drew their swords. Jaku did the
same, followed by the men around him.
“Stand
aside,” Jaku commanded as he pulled open his
face-mask. “The
Emperor you serve has fallen. You cannot be loyal to a ghost. Stand
aside.”
The men hesitated,
exchanging glances, and then gave a half bow and laid down their swords. The
doors were thrown open and the members of the council turned, their eyes wide.
Immediately the officials leapt to their feet and fled in every possible
direction, ornate robes flapping, like a flurry of escaping moths. The Dragon
Throne was empty.
Hojo stormed into the
room while his guard chased down several running officials and dragged them
back to him. Nishima remained outside the door, trying to hear what was said. A
commotion to her right drew her attention, and she saw Jaku Katta disappearing
down the hall with Lord Butto on his heels.
General Hojo came out the
door then, an official in tow. “This man has kindly offered to lead us to
the Emperor,” Hojo said, pushing the man in front of him. Something drew
his attention. “Where do they go?” Hojo waved his sword down the
hall at the backs of retreating Komawara guards.
“They follow General
Jaku and Lord Butto,” Nishima said.
Hojo looked around as
though sure he would find Jaku beside him.
Nishima pointed.
“That is the way to the Imperial apartments, General.”
“May the gods take
them!” Hojo swore and set off at a run, followed by the entire company.
Shuyun paced the general.
“Those Komawara guards wear the green lacings on their sleeve—they
were Haji-wara men, General.”
Hojo nodded, saving his
breath. They came to stairs and the armored men lagged behind. Shuyun looked
over his shoulder once and then sprinted ahead. Seeing this, Nishima pushed
past General Hojo and the other men exhausted from battle. She ignored the
calls of her cousin and the guard, focusing on the sound of Shuyun’s running
feet just ahead of her.
Tadamoto reached the head
of the stairs leading to the Emperor’s apartments. From the guards before
the Great Hall he had learned that the Emperor was in the Imperial
apartments and, though
less than certain he would be allowed through the halls, Tadamoto had set out.
To his surprise, he had not been challenged once. The Imperial Guard, their
commander realized, had broken and run just like the army in the field.
Down the long hallway he
saw lamps and the black of guards before a door, indicating the Emperor was not
unprotected. Akantsu is a fine swordsman, Tadamoto reminded himself, he is
never entirely unprotected. Loosening his blade in his scabbard, Tadamoto
started down the hall.
As he approached the
guards before the Emperor’s chambers, Tadamoto heard the pounding of
boots on the stairs behind. Turning, he saw a single black-clad guard crest the
stairs with a leap and come running down the hall toward him. Drawing his
sword, Tadamoto signaled the guards, who rose and drew their weapons as well.
Jaku Katta slid to a stop
on the polished floor, facing his brother. He reached up and removed his helmet
and stood regarding Tadamoto.
“It is my hope the
gods have brought us here with the same purpose, brother.‘’
Tadamoto did not lower
his sword. “Do not do this, Katta-sum.” He swallowed with
difficulty. “Do not stain our name with this crime.”
“He is a traitor,
brother. You know this is the truth. Wa deserves a sovereign who understands
honor. Let me pass.”
The sound of running feet
in the stairwell.
Jaku did not look back.
“They are my men,
Tadamoto-sum. You can do nothing. Stand aside.”
The colonel shook his
head. “I cannot, brother.”
Jaku nodded. Very slowly
he tossed his helmet aside and it rattled on the floor, sliding to a stop against
the wall.
Turning toward the
Emperor, Osha removed a second robe, the sheer silk wafting to the floor like a
falling banner. She could not stop the tears, but she did not sob. Forcing her
feet to move forward, she stepped out into the cool night.
The Emperor watched her
with some interest. He
reached out to her as she
approached and she took his hands and pressed them to her, his touch fueling
her resolve.
She stood looking at the
confusion in the Emperor’s face for a second, realizing she could not let
the instant pass. “Tadamoto-sum,” she whispered, “was my
lover.”
Saying this, Osha pushed
the Emperor, her Sonsa training giving her surprising strength. As he fell
back, the Emperor’s grip tightened on one of her hands and she grabbed
the rail with the other, pulling against his great weight. Groping with one
hand, he grasped at the balustrade, cursing her, but Osha let go of the rail
and caught this hand before he could save himself. And then, without hesitation,
she followed him over the railing, her motion graceful as though she took
flight.
Jaku drew his sword and
faced his brother who stepped back immediately, his guard faltering. Men were
in the hall behind, running. Butto Joda came to a position off to Jaku
Katta’s right, stepping into the Tiger’s line of vision but staying
out of reach of his sword.
“General
Katta?” the youth said. “General Hojo is correct. This is a
decision for Lord Shonto or the Great Council. I beg you reconsider.”
Jaku did not appear to
hear. Lunging forward, he took the sword from Tadamoto’s hands so that it
bounced off a post and fell to the floor.
Tadamoto faced the point
of his brother’s blade, but his attention was drawn back over
Katta’s shoulder. “Brother…” he said, lifting a hand to
point.
That second’s
warning saved Jaku’s life. The first Ha-jiwara guard’s blow missed
Jaku’s neck, the blade cutting through armor and deep into the
guardsman’s right arm. He raised the sword again as the Black Tiger
stumbled aside. Tadamoto leapt in between and took the second blow on the side
of his helmet, which drove him to the floor.
Jaku spun and landed a
blow one-handed, accounting for one as the other Hajiwara men fell on him. The
guardsman retreated, using a post to protect his injured right side. Lord Butto
reached for his sword but, unexpectedly, a Hajiwara guard sprang at the young
lord and
drove the pommel of his
sword into Butto’s face mask, leaving him limp on the floor.
The two guards before the
Emperor’s door held their places, swords at the ready. Jaku circled away
from these men, unsure who they would side with. Someone else reached the
stairhead and started down the hall.
“We will avenge
Lord Hajiwara, General,” Narihira Chisato hissed, “for it was you
who placed him in the path of Lord Shonto with lies and false promises.”
The injured Hajiwara man
leapt at Jaku. As the guardsman cut him down, Narihira stepped in coolly, sword
raised. The Black Tiger fell heavily to the floor and did not move. Narihira
raised his sword for the final stroke but found himself propelled across the
room, hitting the floor and sliding to the feet of the guards at the
Emperor’s door. One held the tip of his sword to Narihira’s throat,
and the Hajiwara guard lay still.
Nishima arrived to see
Shuyun literally toss the Hajiwara guard aside and then bend over Jaku Katta,
who lay in a growing pool of blood. The monk made a sign to Botahara and rose,
looking around.
“Is there no hope,
Brother?” Nishima asked. She stood across the room, frozen in place.
Shuyun shook his head.
“His spirit has fled, my lady. Jaku Katta is in the hands of the Perfect
Master. May Botahara protect him.”
Shuyun crossed to Lord
Butto who lay unmoving. Removing the youth’s helmet, the monk found his
eyes open, only whites showing. Coming to stand beside him, Nishima laid her
hand on Shuyun’s shoulder.
Katta is dead, she thought, trying to make it
seem possible. But why do I feel so little now when I believed I felt so
strongly before?
“He
breathes,” Shuyun said. “His life force is strong.”
“He was knocked
down with a pommel, Brother,” one of the Imperial guards said. “He
cannot be badly hurt, I’m certain.”
“Please, Lady
Nishima…” Shuyun took her hand and drew her down. “Watch Lord
Butto.”
The monk then rose and
went to the other fallen men as Hojo and the others came into the hall.
The other Hajiwara guards
were dead, but Tadamoto had raised himself to one elbow, and propped himself
there with visible effort.
“My brother?”
Tadamoto said in a near whisper.
“Who is your
brother, Colonel?” Shuyun asked.
“Katta,” he
said with effort.
“Lie back, Colonel
Jaku, you are injured,” Shuyun said. Softly he removed the ruin of the
guardsman’s helmet.
Tadamoto shook him off
when the monk reached out to probe the wound.
“My
brother…” Tadamoto turned and saw the great, still form of Jaku
Katta lying against the wall in a dark pool. Sobs racked him and he would let
no one near.
Hojo stood looking on. He
made a sign to Botahara.
“He intended to
kill the Emperor, General Hojo,” Shuyun said. The monk motioned at
Narihira still lying at the feet of the two Imperial Guards. “It was Jaku
Katta the Hajiwara men had vowed revenge against, not Butto Joda.”
“The Emperor is
inside?” Hojo panted, motioning to the door with his sword.
The two Imperial Guards
held their positions.
“We will not harm
your Emperor,” General Hojo said. “Let us pass.”
One guard shook his head,
pushing Narihira away with his foot.
Scrambling to his feet,
the Hajiwara retainer joined the other party where Shonto guards pushed him to
the rear.
Hojo motioned Shonto
swordsmen forward.
Lady Nishima turned away
and suddenly her cousin came and knelt beside her. The ringing of swords
stopped abruptly and Hojo stepped up to the now unguarded door.
“Wait,”
Tadamoto said, lurching to his feet. Supported by a man in Butto livery, he
followed Hojo as he tried the door and found it unbarred.
Entering the room
everyone stopped, searching the dim corners, looking for doors. The room was
empty.
“He has hidden or
made his escape,” Hojo said, driving his pommel into a gloved palm.
Waving at the balcony,
Tadamoto moved forward. On the balustrade a torn scrap of silk wafted in the
light
breeze. The guard colonel
stepped out onto the balcony, looking around, confused.
One of Hojo’s
officers peered over the balcony and turned to his commander, inclining his
head almost imperceptibly. The general hurried forward and Tadamoto did the
same. A white form lay on the stones far below, a dark shadow at its side.
“There is our
Emperor,” Hojo whispered. Beside him Tadamoto turned slowly and spiralled
to the floor.
A Shonto officer pointed
out beyond the north gate where a long line of torches snaked its way south.
“And there is Lord
Shonto and his army.” Hojo said, his voice strangely quiet. “Inform
Lady Nishima. She will have some good news this night.‘’
Standing inside the Gate
of Serenity, Nishima held tightly to Kitsura’s arm. They almost leaned
upon each other, their exhaustion was so great.
“Food,”
Nishima whispered to Kitsura. “I will greet my father and then food and
perhaps a bath. If we are to escape or face a barbarian attack, let us do it
fed and clean, and perhaps even rested.”
“I could sleep upon
the cobbles,” Kitsura said.
“You did,
cousin,” Nishima reminded her, but her lightness of mood was entirely
false, in Her heart she sent up a silent prayer: bring him to me safely. He is good and wise. Bring him
safely.
The gates were open and
soldiers pushed back the crowds outside. They jostled and shouted and still
called for the Emperor, his death not yet known, and then, suddenly, they
cheered.
“That will be the
hero, Komawara,” Kitsura said. “Imagine.”
Men on horses appeared in
the dim light, framed by the great arch under the dark sweep of tile. Three men
rode abreast, one in darkest blue, one in gray, and one in Shonto blue. Nishima
let out a long sigh and another prayer to powers unnamed—a prayer of
thanks.
Outside, the people in
the streets fell utterly silent, and then Nishima heard a single
voice—the sound of a woman crying. She found herself moving forward,
Kitsura trying to restrain her. She shook off her cousin’s grip and
continued. Komawara was dismounting now and the rider in
Shonto blue also: her stepbrother, Shokan. And then she was running. Shokan
saw the movement and turned toward her, his face black from dust and streaked
with tears. Nishima felt her body stop, as though it obeyed commands from
forces more powerful than her will.
Shonto’s personal
guard came slowly through the gate bearing a bier of lances upon their
shoulders and on it lay a form draped with a banner—the blue silk of the
shinta blossom. Nishima felt her knees strike the ground. A cry of deepest
agony tore at her throat. Then she felt hands lift her, and she pressed her
face into the blue lacing of Shokan’s armor. Kitsura’s arm
encircled her shoulder and she heard the soothing voice of Shuyun, chanting a
prayer for the dead.
Nishima had not eaten,
bathed, or slept. She sat in a strange room in the Imperial Palace turning a
cold cup of cha compulsively between her hands. She stared off, deep into her
memories, perhaps, and looked as if she would begin to sob again at any second.
Kitsura had left her for
a few minutes, lured by a hot bath, and Shuyun was off seeing to the ceremony
for her father. There was so little time; they would have to perform the rites
before dawn. They’re
going to burn him,
she thought, and this realization was like a blow to her heart.
A tap sounded on the door
to the room and a maid’s face appeared—one of Nishima’s own
maids!
“Tokiwa,”
Nishima exclaimed, “how is it that you are here?”
“Steward Kamu
brought us, my Lady,” she bowed, hesitating, her eyes cast down.
“I’m sorry, my Lady.”
Nishima nodded. Her mouth
formed the words, thank you, but no sound came.
“Lord Shonto and
Steward Kamu wish to speak with you, Lady Nishima.”
“Please bring them
to me,” she said. Perhaps their company will help, she thought.
The maid disappeared.
Seconds later Shokan and
Kamu entered. They bowed and knelt on the mats.
“I have no
cushions, I am sorry,” Nishima said, her voice small.
Shokan shrugged.
“It lifts my heart
to see you safe, Kamu-sum. It is a miracle.” She looked into each of the
men’s faces. Certainly they are able to maintain an appearance of dignity
better than I, she thought. I must look a ruin.
“The
miracle,” Kamu answered, “is Brother Shu-yun’s servant,
Kalam. He went out into the fog and met a horde of barbarian raiders, sending
them off chasing phantoms. He led us and hid us and put his ear to the ground
and lured barbarians off into the mist and even drew his sword against his own
people. He will be a man of Wayet.”
Nishima’s smile was
pained.
“Nishi-sum,” Shokan
said gently, “despite all, we must prepare for the future. There are many
things that must be spoken of.”
Nishima nodded, a sudden
coldness spread through her. “You will not marry me to this Khan, will
you, Shokan?” she said, surprised by the edge of hysteria in her voice.
“Sister, I would
not marry you to anyone you did not choose.”
She turned her tea bowl,
still focusing on nothing.
“Nishima, the Lords
of Wa and the officials of the government are meeting in the Great Hall as we
speak. There is no heir to the throne.”
“There are sons,
Shokan-sum. Have you forgotten?”
Skokan glanced over at
Kamu. “Wakaro is certainly dead, and the others will follow their brother
once the people learn that the Yamaku have fallen. They are a despised family,
Nishima-sum. No Yamaku will sit upon the Dragon Throne again.”
There was silence for a
second, but Nishima did not really take this information in. She could not
force herself to focus on the conversation.
“If a suitable
sovereign is not found, there will be a civil war, Sister.”
Nishima looked up. I have
lost a father, why have they come to bother me with this, she asked herself?
“Shokan-sum, excuse me for saying so, but you are speaking the worst
foolishness. The Khan is about to take the throne. In a few hours he will sit
in the Yamaku’s place. The Empire, I may remind you, has fallen.”
Shokan rubbed his palm
with his fingers. “If there is not a chosen sovereign, claimants will
spring up all over Wa. There will never be a concerted effort to oust the
barbarians, for there will be no alliance strong enough. The lords of Wa will
war among themselves, making the barbarians’ work easy. It will be a
generation before we see the enemy gone, perhaps more.”
“They are such
fools,” Nishima said coolly, but there was no conviction in her voice.
“Nishima-sum!”
Shokan reached over and took hold of her arm, spilling cha over her hands.
“You must listen.”
She fixed him with a cold
glare and he let go of her hands. “I am listening, brother. What is it
you have come to say?”
Shokan took a deep
breath.
Nishima realized he
waited for eye contact before he spoke and so she looked up, not trying to hide
her anger.
“There is one
candidate acceptable to all,” her stepbrother said, speaking with
unnecessary precision. “If you will consent to become our Empress,
Nishima-sum, we will avoid civil war.”
Nishima started to laugh,
but the laugh died in her throat. She began to speak and could not. She stared
at her brother as though he had spoken words that, beyond all doubt, confirmed
him mad.
“Lady
Nishima,” Kamu spoke gently. “Thousands of lives may be saved by
your decision. There is an entire Empire to think of.”
My father is dead. The Empire has fallen.
Why will you not leave me in peace? “Kamu-sum,” she said as reasonably as
she could. “I know nothing of the ways of government. How can you
seriously expect me to rule? This is madness,” she said, exasperated.
Again she began, trying to achieve a tone of reason. “What of Lady
Kitsura? The Omawara have as much Hanama blood as the Fanisan. Perhaps she will
consent to be your Empress. Please, brother. Speak no more of this… I
cannot bear it.”
“Sister, my father
raised me to understand my duty.” Shokan’s voice was as cool as
hers now. “Did he not do the same with you?”
Lady Nishima stared at
Shokan. My father is dead, how
can you insult me now? Have I not paid enough?
“Lord
Shonto,” she said to her stepbrother, “if I seriously believed that
I could play a part in saving Wa, I would not hesitate to do so. But once this
crisis is passed and we avoid civil war—then Wa will be saddled with an
Empress who knows nothing of the art of ruling. If one day we do oust the
barbarians, I would not know where to begin to rebuild an Empire. I would be a
worse ruler than the Yamaku.” She waved a hand at the door. “Bother
me no more with this. We have a lord whose ceremonies must be seen to.”
“I will say no
more, sister,” Shokan answered, “though I would ask you to come to
the Great Hall and inform the gathered lords of your own decision. Then you may
see the civil war begin with your own eyes.”
“Shokan-sum!”
Nishima cried. “You do not know what it is you ask. Please do not place
this burden upon me.” Her hands trembled and she dropped the cha bowl to
the mat. “Please, it is my life you ask for.” She covered her face
with her hands but no tears came.
Oh, father, she thought, they are not satisfied with one Shonto life, they want
another.
“Sister,”
Shokan said very softly, “I would spare you this if I could. I would take
it upon myself, but I cannot. By midday a barbarian army will be at our gate.
We must have a new sovereign and we must have made our escape. If you will not
take up this duty, the Empire will dissolve into chaos. Let me tell the
gathered lords that you require time to consider. That you will answer in an
hour. Let us hold off calamity as long as possible. Sit and ponder the
alternatives, Sister. Speak with your Spiritual Advisor. Let me say you will
decide within the hour?”
Nishima sat for a long
moment, then nodded her head, the tiniest of movements. “I will give you
my decision at dawn. Please ask Brother Shuyun if he will attend me.”
Kamu looked over at
Shokan who nodded toward the door. Bowing, the two men rose and left, closing
the door quietly behind them, and making Nishima think that they suddenly felt
they should not disturb the grieving daughter. As though they had not thrown
her already uncertain life to the wind once again.
She sat unmoving, and
then Lady Kitsura entered through a screen. She was dressed in the silk robes
of a peer—one of Nishima’s robes, in fact.
“There is a bath,
Nishi-sum, and your servants have found some of your own robes.” Kitsura
paused.
Nishima did not look up.
“I can accept the fall of the Empire,” she said in a flat voice,
“more easily than I can believe that my father is gone—he seemed
the greater of the two.”
Kitsura nodded. Kneeling,
she took Nishima’s hands. “A bath will help, cousin, truly.”
Nishima nodded. Servants
came and led her to her bath, leaving her to soak in peace as she preferred.
Carefully laid out within view were robes and combs and perfumes, and the box
that belonged to her mother decorated with the warisha blossom of the Fanisan
House. Nishima closed her eyes. So many had died that day. Jaku was dead, she
realized. His death poem was hidden in her hunting costume. I must have it sent
to his brother, poor man. She hugged her arms across her breasts and felt the
warmth work at knotted muscles. Remembering the teaching of Brother Satake, she
began an exercise to relax her muscles and calm her spirit. Her focus was so
poor that this was an indifferent success.
A tap on the screen
preceded a maid’s voice from outside. “Brother Shuyun awaits, my
Lady.”
Nishima fought back a
sudden attack of tears and, when she felt she had mastered them, she stepped
out of the bath.
Dressing without too much
haste was difficult, but she forced herself to move slowly lest her servants
think she rushed to meet a man. “Tokiwa,” Nishima said to the maid
who waited beyond the screen. “I wish to pray with Brother Shuyun, I do
not want to be disturbed for any reason.”
“Yes, my
Lady.”
“Have you laid a
bed for me in the adjoining room? I will try to sleep later.”
“It has been done,
Lady Nishima.”
“Thank you, Tokiwa.
You may go. I will tie my sash.”
She could easily imagine
the servant nodding and performing her graceful bow before hurrying off.
Nishima left her hair
down and combed it carefully. She tied her sash with particular care.
Slipping into the room,
Nishima was disappointed to find Shuyun not present and then she heard his
voice whisper her name from the balcony.
Shuyun was standing at
the rail, looking out to the north. Nishima came and stood close beside him,
resting her hand on his shoulder.
“Upon the
fields,” he said, pointing off to the distance.
A fire burned there and
then Nishima realized that it must be many rih distant—the figures moving
around it were so small. The blaze was enormous.
“What is
this?” Nishima asked.
Shuyun shook his head.
“Even the Kalam does not know.”
“They burn the
fallen, certainly.”
Shuyun shook his head.
“Perhaps, but it is not their way, Lady Nishima.”
They stood a moment
longer and then Nishima took his hand and gently led Shuyun away from the
spectacle, back inside. Nishima opened a screen at the room’s end where
an enormous bed had been made. A single lamp cast a soft glow.
Nishima stopped him at
the bed’s edge and embraced the monk who returned the caress with more
warmth than usual. Nishima guided his hand to the knot on her sash.
“Pull,” she whispered.
Doing as he was
instructed Shuyun felt the knot give and unravel in his hand.
“A Lover’s
Knot,” she said.
The monk almost stepped
away, but she held him.
“lama fallen
Brother,” he said, an edge of anguish in his voice. “A lost
one.”
She held him close,
afraid he would leave. “Do not despair, Shuyun-sum, I have found you.
Please stay with me. Tonight I have need of a friend more than ever.” She
reached back and took the sash from his hand and let the heavy brocade slip to
the floor, uncoiling itself around her feet.
“They have asked me
to ascend the throne,” she said suddenly, her voice the smallest whisper.
He nodded. “I have
been told.”
She stepped away, pulling
the quilts back on the bed and drawing the monk in after her.
They lay close in the dim
light of the lamp. “I must tell them what I will do in a few
hours.”
They did not speak for
some minutes. “I do not think I can bear my father’s death,
Shuyun-sum. I have not the strength… and they want me to be their
Empress.”
“I believe Lord
Shonto will be reborn in only a few days. His spirit will return, though you
may never meet it or know it if you do.”
Nishima did not answer
immediately. “Even so, he is lost to me. I am a selfish, spoiled peer,
and it is my loss that grieves me though it shames me to say this.
“It is not
surprising that I have led you from the path, Shuyun-sum. I am so far from
perfection it is a marvel I was not bora an ant.”
Shuyun smiled. “Be
careful what you say, ants have Empresses also. It is a fate that can pursue
you from lifetime to lifetime.”
The sounds of distant
voices reached them, the chanting of the crowd beyond the gates.
“I do not know what
answer I should give the lords of Wa. My father warned that an act of bravery
might be required of me, yet I do not think I am brave enough. I know nothing
of ruling, Shuyun-sum. It seems a sham to ascend a throne that in a few hours
will belong to this barbarian Khan.”
“I am not certain
the barbarian will be long for this throne,” Shuyun whispered.
“Perhaps only days.”
Nishima pulled back so
that she could see the monk’s face. “Why do you say this?”
“In the mist, when
I disappeared and had you and Lady Kitsura wait—do you remember the
coughing? The tribesman suffered from the plague, there is no doubt. It will
spread among the army of the desert more easily than the wind blows through
unshuttered houses. It will be a great tragedy. Tens of thousands will die, and
if the Khan takes the city the plague will spread through the Capital.
Barbarian patrols have crossed the river and turn back all those who hoped to
make their escape. The population of the city is four times what it would be
normally.”
“Botahara save
us.” Nishima said. “We will all die-barbarians and people of Wa
alike. Is there no escape?”
Shuyun nodded. “For
the few, there is hope of escape.”
Nishima closed her eyes.
“Do the others know of this, the plague?”
“I have told only
General Hojo. It is possible that others may guess what the barbarians’
fires mean—they must burn the plague-dead and all of their belongings,
perhaps even their horses, hoping this will save them. It will not.”
Shuyun paused. “I regret that General Hojo will not listen to my counsel
in this.”
Nishima pulled back so
that she could touch the monk’s cheek, tracing the outline with great
tenderness. “What have you counseled?”
“To save Wa, we
must save the barbarians. It is the only possibility.”
Nishima froze, unable to
believe what she had heard. “Even I am aghast at this suggestion. They
have murdered the length our Empire.”
“And so have we, my
lady. You do not know how many refugees have died on the roads and the
canal.” Shuyun took her hand and pressed it to his heart. She felt the
warmth, the tingle of chi. “When the barbarians reach the Capital
tomorrow, I could walk out to meet them under a flag of peace. I would offer them
an exchange. My Order will save them from the plague if they will lay down
their arms. Thousands of lives might be saved.”
Nishima propped herself
up on one arm. The people of the Capital—the plague would ravage the
city, while she escaped. But save invaders? No one would agree to this. She
looked out the half open screen, and saw the flicker of the barbarians’
pyre, far out on the plain.
Did not Botahara teach
compassion? she asked herself. “Is it possible, Shuyun-sum? Will this
Khan believe you?” She rolled back, staring up at the ceiling, her hand
to her brow. “If not, you would be in great danger.” Her mind raced
through the possibilities now. “Will the Bo-tahist Brothers perform this
task? The barbarians are not followers of the True Path.”
“Few are,
Nishima-sum.” Shuyun pushed her hair back behind her ear. “The
Brothers will agree reluc-
tantly. It saddens me to
say this, but I believe it is more likely that the barbarians will listen than
it is that the lords of Wa will agree to this course.“
“But it is our only
hope,” Nishima said, convinced now that Shuyun was right. ‘
’Tens of thousands could be saved—barbarians and people of Wa
alike. The lords of Wa must be convinced.“
“They will not be.
Their hatred of the barbarians is unreachable. Tell them that plague is about
to sweep the barbarian army from the Empire and they will not care how many
people of Wa will have to die so that this will occur. Sacrifice is their way.
To suggest we save the invaders—they will not allow it.”
Nishima rolled so that she
pressed her cheek close to Shuyun’s. “You make my choice
difficult,” she whispered in his ear.
An act of bravery, he had told her. There had been
so many already.
“Shuyun-sum, tell
me truthfully—if an Empress commands that this be done, will the lords of
Wa obey?”
Shuyun considered for a
moment. “Lord Taiki, General Hojo, and your brother control the army. No
others have an organized force. Will these three obey a command from the
Empress they have placed on the throne? I believe they will, Lady Nishima,
though I fear it is not the answer you wish to hear.”
Nishima closed her eyes
for some time, breathing as Brother Satake had taught her. Oh, father, it is my
greatest fear. You ask me to overcome my greatest fear. She felt her heart
beating and forced it to calm. Thousands
of lives she told herself, balanced against my own desires and fears.
Opening her eyes she
whispered to the room. “If Hojo and Shokan-sum will agree to your plan, I
will ascend the throne though my entire life I have vowed I would not.”
She felt Shuyun draw her
close. Pressing her eyes closed she said a silent prayer, though it was not to
any god. Nishima spoke to Lord Shonto, praying she had chosen correctly. May
this be the act of bravery, she thought, and not an act of foolishness.
She whispered close to
Shuyun’s ear. “What name will I take if I am to ascend the throne
of Wa?”
Shuyun drew her closer
and said, “Shigei.
”
“I do not know that
name.”
“It is from the
mountain tongue, as is my name. Shuyun—he who bears. Shigei—she who
renews. It is the name of a mountain spirit. It is also the name given to fair
spring winds and to the scent of new budding leaves. She who renews. Empress
Shigei.”
Nishima nodded slowly.
“I will need the wisdom of your counsel.”
“You will have the
wisest of counselors, my Empress,” he whispered. “You will rule
with your heart as well as your reason and you? subjects will come to love you
as they have few others.”
The lamp flickered out
and they lay still in the darkness until the gray light of dawn appeared through
the half-open screens.
Sixty-one
The sunrise filtered
through a long tear in the cloud, somewhere far out over the unseen sea. Among
the weeping birch trees on the edge of the Pool of the Sun the Shonto guard had
built the pyre. The sound of the three small falls that crossed the pond mixed
with the breeze moving through the new leaves and made Nishima think of her
father’s private garden.
Under the silk banner
that he had borne into battle, Lord Shonto Motoru lay hidden from the eyes of
those who cared for him. To one side Kamu stood holding the lord’s
favorite stallion, a sword strapped to the saddle— the same sword the
Emperor had given the lord in this very garden.
The death of his ancestor, Shokan had said, an honorable death.
Brother Shuyun completed
a long prayer, and all present made signs to Botahara. Nishima felt Shokan
release her hand as he stepped forward, a surcoat of pure white over his Shonto
blue catching the light of the sun.
Removing a tiny ornate
scroll from his sleeve he paused to find his voice.
Through a long winter we have awaited
The rebirth of spring.
During the cold nights
We dreamed
Of the plum tree’s blossom
Along the shore of an endless canal
Cranes stand among rushes
So still
The harmony of their world
Is left untouched
The boat passes,
White against blue waters,
Its wake causing birds to fly
Rising up among blossom laden trees
Passing on the breeze, the boat Follows
the ribbon of blue, As narrow and perfect As the river among the clouds
Shokan and Lord Komawara
had begun this poem during a sleepless night and Nishima had completed it that
morning—many others would follow.
Stillness and quiet
descended as all present offered their silent prayers. Nishima looked around.
The more important lords of Wa, those who had not fled the Capital, were
present, as were the lords who had followed her father south from Seh. The
senior officials of the Palace were present; chancellors, ministers, and sundry
advisors had come to pay respects to the Emperor’s most powerful
lord—the man who had given his life in an attempt to save Wa. Lord
Komawara stood beside a recovered Lord Butto, the two so grim that it hurt
Nishima to look at them.
She made herself breathe
in careful rhythm, for her part of the ceremony was yet to come. Conscious of
her new role, Nishima was determined to conduct herself accordingly though
certain this would be the most difficult thing she had ever done.
At a nod from Shuyun she
stepped forward, and a bowing attendant passed her a small torch, its flame
guttering in the breeze. She closed her eyes for a second, certain she would be
overcome by the odors of the burning oil. / release his spirit from this world, she reminded herself. She bowed
low, holding back the sleeve of her white robe, and touched the torch to the
pyre. At first nothing seemed to occur, but then the lamp oil caught and the
flames rose up, spreading both left and right with a sound like a giant wing
beating the air.
She stepped back then and
tossed the torch into the flame. As the silk banner caught, she closed her
eyes.
“Lady
Nishima,” the attendant said softly.
She turned and took the
handful of white plum petals
she was offered and these
she tossed onto the flaming pyre where the rising heat took them and scattered
them on the wind.
The fire crackled and
roared now, too hot to be near. The mourners stepped back then and she felt
Shokan take her arm. Space opened up around them and Nishima felt the distance
despite the presence of her brother. Isolation, she thought, a life of
isolation. Only that morning her decision had been made known and already she
was set apart.
/ cannot turn back, she told herself. Tens of thousands of lives depend on the strength of
my resolve.
But Shokan and Hojo and
Lord Taiki had agreed to support Shuyun’s plan though they argued against
it strongly. In the end they had decided that having Nishima as an Empress was
more important. Then had come her first test. She discovered that the lords of
Wa and the senior Ministers of the Right and Left had already selected a name
for the new Empress. A name from another tongue was not acceptable, they
explained; there were traditions.
Nishima had been forced
to be utterly firm with them— she would ascend the throne as the Empress
Shigei. Their choice was to offer the throne to someone else. They had
acquiesced: a name was an important thing, no doubt, but there were certainly
other matters of greater consequence.
Once she had ascended the
throne, Nishima thought, this tactic would no longer be possible. There would
be many more such battles of wills, Nishima thought, many, many more. Fighting
them when all she felt was a need to be alone, to have time and peace to heal
the wound inside her—that would be the challenge. It would be so easy to
give in, but she must not. She would be an Empress and that meant she would not
let ambitious counselors gain control of the government.
They ascended a flight of
steps and attendants waited there with a sedan chair. Nishima looked at this
with dismay.
“I will
walk,” she said firmly.
“But,
Empress,” the Minister of the Right said in his most pleasant voice,
“it is unseemly for a member of the Imperial family to walk.”
“I am not yet an
Empress nor a member of the Imperial family. I am Shonto. I will walk.”
Tugging Shokan’s
arm she skirted the sedan chair and ascended the next stairs as quickly as
decorum would allow. The sound of the funeral pyre could still be heard and as
they reached the Palace doors she turned to look back. White smoke rose in a
high column from the shore of the glittering pond and she thought of her father
lifting up to soar among the clouds.
Movement caught her eye
beyond the fire. It was the barbarian army gathering beyond the city walls.
Botahara save us all, she thought.
It was the shortest and
least elaborate investiture in the history of the Empire of Wa. Ceremonial
meals were reduced to a few dishes being arranged to symbolize an entire part
of a ceremony. Elaborate rituals involving the Imperial Governors of the
Empire’s nine provinces were not performed, for there was not a single
governor in the Capital. Swearing of oaths by lords and officials and the
giving of gifts and favors and ranks—all of these things were left to
another time—all present hoping there would be such a time. Only the
short, final ceremony was to be performed and this was a great relief to the
Empress-to-be.
Nishima was borne to the
doors of the Great Audience Hall in the sedan chair she had rejected earlier and
here she was allowed to step down to a carpet that stretched the length of hall
to the steps of the Dragon Throne.
To each side of this
knelt the counselors and senior officials and behind these men, instead of the
ceremonial guard, stood men in Shonto blue. In truth, many of the members of
the Great Council and of the guard had fled the city and those remaining had
been forced to make do as best they could. The Major Chancellor, the second
most powerful person in the Empire, had escaped some days earlier. To the
dismay of the court Nishima had appointed Kamu to this position temporarily. He
knelt at the foot of the steps to the dais, his ceremonial robes spreading out
around him like a fan, the gold scroll of his office held in his only hand.
As Nishima entered, the
assembled officials bowed their heads to the stone and remained there for some
moments. A slow chant of
great beauty began as the new Empress slowly progressed the length of the hall,
the Ministers of the Right and Left following three paces behind on their
knees.
Walk beside me, father, Nishima prayed, / have not the courage. She felt as though her spirit had wrenched itself
free and she both walked on the carpeted floor and floated up to the heights of
the hall, watching herself as she progressed, a small uncertain child in the
immense hall.
Do not let my spirit escape, she prayed, not yet.
Shokan knelt with his
forehead pressed to the stone at the end of the first row of officials and this
touched some part of her and called her spirit back, for with his face hidden,
Shokan looked for all the world like his father. Her father’s presence
seemed to be there and this gave her strength.
Before the throne a silk
cushion had been set and the Ministers of the Right and Left assisted her in
kneeling here and then retreated to their places. Nishima’s robes spread
out around her, Imperial Crimson bearing the five-clawed, golden dragon. At her
insistence a tiny shinta blossom had been embroidered on her right sleeve, the
flower of the warisha on her left. Kamu knelt three paces off, his head touched
to the floor. Nishima bowed to her ancestors on the empty throne.
The chant continued,
rising in volume, reverberating in the great hall. The Minister of the Right
came forward and laid the sword of office across the arms of the throne and
retreated. An ancient bronze gong was brought forward by the Minister of the
Left and this was set at the foot of the throne to one side.
There were no words to be
spoken by the ascending sovereign—far too many Emperors had been children
barely out of the cradle—but the Major Chancellor rose to a kneeling
position and recited the sovereign’s oath of office. Kamu’s voice
gained strength and authority with each phrase.
“It is the duty of
the Empress to care for her children, the people of the Empire of Wa, to care
for the lands and the forests and the waterways. In time of famine the Empress
will give food to her charges; in time of war, provide shelter and restore
peace to the people who are the children of the Empress. In gratitude the
subjects of the
Empress will attend each
to their duties, giving their loyalty only to the sovereign of Wa. May Botahara
bless the most revered Empress, Shigei, of the Imperial line of the Fanisan
House.“
The courtiers rose to
their knees, making a sign to Botahara. As the chant came to an end, Nishima
bowed once more to the throne. She was to rise and take her place now, but she
could not will her legs to move.
This is wrong, Nishima
thought. What is it I do? She could not get up.
Kamu opened his mouth to
whisper. She saw “Nishima” begin to form on his lips, but he
stopped himself. She looked over at him, imploring him to help, and he could
only stare back, unable to speak or move.
There was utter silence
in the hall then, all eyes turned toward her. The carved dragon that curved
around the back of the throne seemed also to stare.
/ must, Nishima said, / must.
Willing herself to rise,
Nishima found her feet under her and, with great deliberation, placed a foot
upon the first jade step and then the second and finally the third. Two steps
to the throne. She lifted the sword of office with both hands and turned to
face her court. Stiffly she lowered herself to the cushion cm the jade throne.
The Great Council of State knelt before her, each official reflected in the
polished stone of the floor.
And now I must rule, Nishima thought, and the
realization was like waking in a cold room. The warmth of the dream she had
lived had vanished and her feelings seemed distant, confused.
As one, the entire
assemblage bowed again and then rose to the kneeling position. Kamu took the
place of the Major Chancellor on the first step and reached over and sounded
the bronze gong. It was not loud in the massive hall, but in seconds it was
answered by all the bells on the grounds of the Island Palace and this in turn
was echoed by the bells of the city, the bell-keepers having been found or
replaced.
It was a sound of great
hope and joy and as she looked down the Empress saw tears on the cheeks of the
old Shonto steward. No sound could be heard above the great din of the bells,
but Nishima could see that he cried freely
like an unashamed child
and the new Empress felt a tear streak her own cheek in response.
The ringing of bells
seemed to be endless, and Nishima sat attempting an appearance of tranquillity.
At last the bells ceased and Nishima took a long breath and nodded to Kamu.
He raised himself up as
though the increase in height would project his voice farther. “The
Empress requests the presence of the following that we may discuss a solution
to the problem of the barbarian army gathering beyond the Capital’s
gate.”
The assembled officials
looked stunned, but they did not understand the meaning of this and so sat,
casting glances to their allies in the hall.
Kamu read a long list
including General Hojo, the Lords Butto, Taiki, Komawara, most of the senior
lords of Wa who remained in the city, and Initiate Brother Shu-yun.
All of those listed filed
in through side doors, approaching the dais on their knees and bowing low to
their Empress. Lord Komawara and Lord Butto had just come from the city walls
and wore armor still, their helmets tucked under one arm.
Nishima nodded again and
Kamu turned to the gathering.
“Due to the
machinations of the late Yamaku Emperor, a barbarian army sits beyond our
walls, their intention being to place their own chieftain upon the throne of
Wa. The Empress will hear the advice of her counselors regarding this
matter.” To the dismay of the gathered officials, Kamu turned to the
Botanist monk. “It is the wish of the Empress that the Spiritual Advisor
of Lord Shonto Shokan, Brother Shuyun, make his thoughts known.” Kamu
nodded to Shuyun.
Performing his double
bow, first to the Empress and then to the gathered officials and guests, Shuyun
sat back, his hands together as though he would meditate.
“Empress,” he
said, his soft voice surprisingly calm in the hall full of upspoken tension and
emotion. “Honored ministers. I have learned that the plague has begun to
spread among the army of the Khan. The great fire seen on the fields in the
night was an attempt to cleanse
the barbarian army of
this disease, but plague is among them and cannot be cured with fire.“
Everyone present leaned
forward to listen now and Nishima heard the word “plague” whispered
down the length of the hall. The reaction of the council was
obvious—relief, elation, joy. Many made signs to Botahara. Shuyun
continued. “It is my recommendation, Empress, that we send emissaries to
the Khan bearing an offer to bring Botanist Brothers to heal the barbarians,
if, in return, the invading army will lay down its arms. Only this will prevent
the plague from being spread among the people of the Capital.”
The reaction was not so
controlled this time. Nishima heard voices of protest. She looked down at Hojo
and the other Shonto allies. They sat in stolid silence. Now you must keep your
word, she thought, or we are lost. Shuyun had been right—they would prefer
to see any number dead if it would mean the destruction of their enemies.
Nishima gave a subtle hand signal to Kamu. “The Empress wishes to express
great concern for the people who have gathered in the Capital hoping that the
sovereign and the Great Council would protect them. Therefore, it is the wish
of the Empress that this mission be carried out immediately. Brother Shuyun,
you speak the language of the tribes?” Shuyun nodded.
The very portly Minister
of the Right bowed to the throne and Kamu fixed him with a withering glare as
he nodded for the man to speak.
The Minister’s
voice came out very small. “Certainly a decision such as this should be
considered by the senior officials, Major Chancellor.‘’ He looked
directly at Sho-kan. ”The course Brother Shuyun suggests—saving
those who have caused so many such grievous loss—I fear that the very
people we hope to save would not choose this course.“ Shokan did not make
eye contact with the Minister. He sat looking toward the foot of the throne,
his face composed and unreadable.
Nishima started to answer
herself but stopped at a look from Kamu. Instead she whispered to the Major
Chancellor. “There is no time for this,” she almost hissed.
Kamu turned back to the
Minister. “The barbarians prepare their attack as we speak, Minister,
there can be
no time lost in lengthy
discussion. This embassy will be carried out immediately. If you wish to join
Brother Shuyun, your wisdom and council would be welcome.“
The Minister looked
around attempting to gather support, but no one met his eye. To walk out onto
the field before an army of eighty thousand? The Minister shook his head and
then bowed low. His next words came from a dry mouth. “Certainly, the
wishes of the Empress will be carried out immediately. We should, however, be
proceeding to remove the Empress to safety.”
“I will not
leave,” Nishima’s voice rang out in the hall. All stared
open-mouthed. The voice of a woman in the Great Hall had not been heard in many
years, and what it lacked in volume it made up for in sheer uniqueness.
“I will not leave until Brother Shuyun has spoken to the leader of the
tribes,” she said quietly, “nor shall any of my council. The safety
of the population is your charge.” There was no mistaking the strength of
her decision. The Minister of the Right cast a final look at Shokan, bowed and
sat back, his dismay obvious to all.
Nishima nodded to Kamu
again. “Brother Shuyun, please, there is so little time,” he said.
Nishima rose from her
throne, placing the sword across the arms. Stepping around the throne, she left
the hall by a small door, her heart beating wildly. Shuyun came after her,
followed by Shokan and several other Shonto allies.
Nishima stepped aside as
the hall widened, waving the others past. “You must make all haste,
Brother,” she said, resisting an urge to embrace him before the others.
“I will follow. May Botahara walk beside you.”
The monk bowed then and
turned and ran, followed by the others, each bowing as he passed.
Shonto guards fell into
step around her and they passed through a door into the main hallway of the
palace. Everyone in the hall dropped to their knees as she passed, pressing
their foreheads to the floor.
One bowing woman caught
her eye as she passed.
“Kitsura-sum? Come
with me please.”
Her cousin rose quickly
and fell into place three paces behind. Nishima reached back and pulled her
forward by her sleeve.
“Please, cousin,
hurry.”
* * *
The army of the desert
had formed outside the Capital’s northern walls and this had drawn the
foolish and the curious within the city. They came to see a spectacle, but once
they had mounted the walls or roofs the sight left them with little to say. The
men of Shonto’s army who had survived the terrible retreat now busied
themselves with improving the city’s defenses, though the Capital was
never designed to weather a conceited attack, and their attempts were largely
futile.
Between the barbarian
army and the walls of the city a dais had been erected under a yellow silk
awning. Upon this dais a large wooden chair, almost a throne, was placed and,
on either side, the gold banners bearing the Khan’s crimson dragons hung
from standards. Frames of bamboo had been built behind the dais and crimson
silk was laced to these frames, creating an effective screen.
It was not clear to
anyone in the city if this seat was meant to be the place where the Khan would
accept the surrender of the city or if this was merely the position from which
he intended to watch the city’s fall. Perhaps it was meant to perform
either function, but there were many inside the Capital’s walls who hoped
a peaceful surrender was possible.
Shuyun mounted the steps
to the top of the gate he had so recently used to enter the city. Lord Shonto
Shokan, Lord Komawara, and General Hojo were only a few paces behind and they
all stopped to look out at the army, clearly preparing its attack not far off.
Hojo nodded. “In
Denji Gorge, Brother Shuyun, I opposed your plan to scale the walls and was
proven wrong. It is my hope to be proven wrong again. If the Khan does not
agree to this plan, Brother, I do not think we will move our army out of the
city without terrible losses. Our Empress will have no force with which to
regain her throne.” Hojo looked down at the small monk, the
warrior’s discomfiture obvious.
Shuyun said nothing for a
moment. “Pray to Botahara, General Hojo. I put myself into His
hands.”
The monk turned and
descended the stairs. He was given the green flag of peace and a guard opened a
small portal in the city’s wall.
Lord Komawara caught up with
Shuyun as he was about to pass through. “I would go with you, Brother
Shuyun. Perhaps I may be of some assistance.”
The monk hesitated for a
second, meeting the young lord’s eye. Shaking his head, Shuyun reached
out and touched Komawara’s arm. “It would be my honor, Lord
Komawara, but this plan is my own and has little support. It is my desire to
risk as few as possible. I thank you.”
Komawara bowed, the short
double bow he had learned when the two had gone into the desert. Bowing in
return, Shuyun stepped through the arch and heard the door close behind him.
Stairs led down to the
canal where a sampan tugged at a line. Shuyun stepped aboard and sculled
quickly to the other bank where a ruin of stone was all that remained of the
bridge that had been torn down at first light.
Tying the sampan to a
rock, Shuyun ascended the bank, unfurling his flag of peace as he went. A few
paces took him beyond the plum trees that grew along the canal—in leaf
now, the glory of spring blossom having been stripped from them by the winds.
The massive army of the
desert did not seem distant now, and Shuyun found himself unconsciously
performing a breathing exercise to calm his spirit.
So much depends upon me,
the monk thought, performing an instinctive sign to Botahara. The green flag
fluttered in the light breeze as Shuyun held it high, moving it slowly back and
forth so that it would be seen.
He made his way across a
green field, walking deliberately but without haste toward the waving banners
of the pavilion. Horsemen broke free of the great mass of humanity before
Shuyun and galloped out toward him. They stopped at some distance and examined
the monk, and then one turned and spurred his horse back toward the barbarian
position. The remaining three riders kept their distance, matching
Shuyun’s pace and not taking their eyes from him.
Fifty paces from the dais
Shuyun stopped and waited. As this Khan aspired to the throne of Wa, Shuyun was
unsure what protocol might be expected and so decided it was best to wait and
see how the barbarian responded
to his presence. He
chanted quietly to himself, a prayer for tranquility of purpose.
Perhaps an hour passed
and then there was a sudden stirring on the perimeter of the barbarian
position. Warriors in crimson-laced armor rode out toward the dais, forming two
lines facing in. Every second rider carried the Khan’s golden banner on a
lance.
Time passed and then a
group of horsemen appeared at the far end of the path formed by the mounted
guards. In a rustling of many silk banners the riders came forward, their pace
unhurried. Shuyun held his position. Meditation had focused his will and he
felt no reaction to the Khan’s approach. He waited.
The riders halted behind
the dais and it was a moment before they emerged. Six armored men appeared from
behind the awning and knelt upon the dais to either side of the throne. Guards
appeared then, kneeling on the ground in straight rows. One of these took two
steps toward Shuyun and waved him forward.
As he walked toward the
dais, a man in a robe of Imperial Crimson and black and gold stepped around the
dais and mounted the throne. All present bowed but for two guards who watched
Shuyun intently as he approached their leader.
Moving closer, Shuyun
could see that the men who knelt on the dais were barbarian chieftains, armored
in the style of warriors of the Empire but with surcoats of tiger skins and
ornate helmets.
The man who sat upon the
throne was bearded and wore his hair pulled back in the style of the desert.
His face was dark and lined like all men who lived in the harsh world north of
the border of Seh, but as Shuyun came closer he realized this was a young man,
older than Komawara, perhaps, but certainly he had not seen thirty years.
The face was handsome in
its way, and not unpleasant to look at, with a strong jaw and a full mouth. A
few paces more and Shuyun realized that what he thought was an ornament was in
fact a patch of white hair at the temple—the sign of the Tokiko blood,
the same mark that Prince Wakaro had inherited from his mother.
Sitting with a sword
across his knees the Golden Khan
regarded the small monk
who approached, contempt obvious on the chieftain’s face.
Shuyun walked until a
guard signaled him to stop ten paces from the dais. As there was no mat set
out, Shuyun decided that he would stand and bowed from that position, placing
the butt of the flag standard on the ground at his side.
The Khan sat for some moments
staring at the monk and then nodded to one of the chieftains who knelt on the
dais.
The man cleared his
throat and then addressed Shuyun in the language of the Empire, though heavily
accented. “The Khan wishes to know why so few have come forward on such
an important occasion. This displeases him.”
Shuyun addressed his
answer to the Khan, speaking the tongue of the tribes almost without flaw.
“I have been charged to speak for the Empress of Wa. It was not thought
that more than one was required—our message is simple.”
The Khan looked at Shuyun
for a moment and then spoke himself, his voice deep and strong and at ease in
the language of the tribes. “The ringing of bells— Akantsu no
longer possesses the throne?”
Shuyun shook his head.
The Khan cast a glance at
one of his chieftains. “Who sits the throne now,
monk—Shonto’s daughter?”
Shuyun nodded again.
“The Empress Shigei,” he answered quietly.
Shaking his head, the
Khan spat out, “The council of Wa are fools if they believe I will be
satisfied to be the consort of a Shonto Empress.”
The monk said nothing.
The Khan waved his
scabbard at Shuyun. “Komawara—does he still live?”
“He does.”
“This man is a
formidable swordsman… for a man of Seh. He felled a warrior—a
chieftain of great deeds, and drove into my own guard before disappearing into
the fog. My warriors call him the Cloud Rider.” The Khan fixed Shuyun
with a long stare from which the monk did not flinch. “I will have Lord
Komawara’s head brought to me when the Empress formally surrenders the
Capital. Have her come to
me in person to offer me her throne. I am told she is a great beauty, this
Shonto daughter. Is this true?“
Shuyun said nothing but
stood returning the Khan’s stare.
*‘I have not come
to arrange the surrender of the Empire,“ he said softly. ”I have
come to save you from the plague, which is silently killing the men of your
army as we speak.“
The Khan glanced at the
men around him and then addressed Shuyun, changing to the language of Wa.
“We cleansed our
army with fire, monk, unless you have been sent to carry the disease to us
again as the nun was sent among us bringing disease to every man who touched
her and a thousand more besides.” Tesseko, Shuyun thought, Botahara protect you. Shuyun nodded to one of the men sitting to the
Khan’s left. “That man,” he said, still speaking in the
language of the tribes, “he has contracted the plague. Look at the flush
on his face. He struggles to control his cough, but he will not succeed for
much longer.” The other chieftains cast uncertain glances at the man
Shuyun singled out. “You cannot cleanse the plague by fire, it is among
you and can only be stopped by the ministrations of my own Order. You may take
the throne, but it will not be yours for more than a few days.” Shuyun
let his words have their effect, seeing the arrogance of the men around the
Khan quickly dissolve. There was no honor or profit in death by disease.
“The Empress has
sent me to offer you your lives, for you will certainly lose them if you do not
listen. In return she asks only that you lay down your arms. Your safe conduct
to the northern border is guaranteed.”
The Khan pointed the tip
of his sheathed sword at Shuyun. “I sent an emissary to the walls of
Rhojo-ma before it fell. He carried a flag of peace as you do now—and
this man was murdered with an arrow because the lords of Seh did not like to
hear the truth of their own blunders. Does the Empress expect to save her
throne with a simple lie? She must believe I am some barbarian huntsman who has
never seen the inside of a city’s walls. When I have taken all of Wa and
sit upon the Dragon Throne she will know differently—will become one of
my con-
cubines willingly. I had
hoped to begin my reign by sparing the Imperial Capital.“ The Khan
shrugged. He looked over at the chieftain who had first spoken and nodded.
The chieftain hesitated
for the briefest second, then rose, drawing his sword. The guards who knelt
nearby did the same. Shuyun reached up and tore the banner from his staff,
lifting it to a guard position, pushing himself into a meditative state.
The guards spread out to
either side and then one leapt forward, aiming a blow at Shuyun’s hands,
but the monk’s staff moved in a blur and the man lay still on the green
field.
The men hesitated then
and Shuyun pounced upon their doubt. “Your Khan will sacrifice you to the
plague so that he may sit upon the throne for the last few days of his life.
The Brotherhood can save you…”
Another man lunged at
Shuyun, but his attack was thwarted brutally as another guard cut him down,
then turned on the man beside him. The barbarian chieftains leapt off the dais
and joined the struggle. Shuyun saved the man who sided with him from a sword
blow that would have meant his end. Suddenly the chieftains and the guards
rushed him at once.
The flag staff hummed as
it cut the air. Shuyun disarmed a man and rendered another unconscious. A
barbarian stepped inside his guard and Shuyun was forced to drop the staff. He
clutched the man’s sword as Ko-mawara had seen in the desert and
deflected the blow, driving another man back with what appeared to be a blow
that never landed. Another barbarian warrior was dealt with in this manner, and
suddenly the attack came to a halt. The barbarian warriors stood staring at the
monk as though he were a ghost.
A cough escaped one of
the chieftains and then, as all stood frozen, this man stepped forward and
drove the point of his sword into the Khan where he stood before the wooden
throne. The man who had gathered the tribes sagged slowly to his knees, staring
forward at Shuyun, his eyes losing focus. A guard stepped forward and plunged
his own point into the Khan’s chest so that he fell back and to the side,
his body limp.
No one moved to avenge
this action, and the chieftain
who had struck the first
blow was suddenly racked with a fit of coughing. The others took a step away.
Several fled then and horses were heard at a gallop.
When the man had
recovered, he turned to Shuyun. “That is the end of the man who brought
us here to die in a strange land for his greater glory. The others may do as
they choose, but my own people will lay down their arms, Brother. How will I
know that the army of Lord Shonto will not fall upon us once we are
defenseless?”
Shuyun did not answer for
a second, and then he reached into his robe and pulled out the jade pendant on
its chain. “I will swear by the Botara denu. The Empress will give you
safe passage to the border of Seh.” Shuyun gestured to the ground.
“Bring your weapons here. Separate the sick from the well and the monks
of my Order will come. Do not cleanse again with fire, it will save no one.
Tomorrow Brothers will begin to arrive. Others must come from there.”
Shuyun gestured toward the Mountain of the Pure Spirit. “It will take
some few days.”
The chieftains looked on,
saying nothing. An occasional glance was cast toward the Khan, but it was
obvious the men were stunned into inaction by what had happened. Shuyun took a
step forward, then hesitated. “I would see to your Khan,” he said
quietly. No one moved, so the monk knelt beside the fallen leader. Immediately,
he made a sign to Botahara. “His spirit has fled,” Shuyun said.
Pulling the robe off the man’s shoulder, he exposed the skin and pointed
there to three small lesions. “Your chieftain had the plague and did not
yet know it,” Shuyun said and then rose slowly.
“I will return at
sunrise. The Imperial army will not be allowed onto these fields, but do not be
alarmed if you see small patrols of armed riders. We must be certain that the
plague is not spread.” Shuyun bowed then and turned back toward the city.
As he went, he chanted a long prayer of thanksgiving.
A great cry went up
suddenly behind him and the monk spun around. The sounds of clashing steel
echoed across the open ground and Shuyun almost covered his eyes. The barbarian
fought among themselves. He could see the great army of the desert, a seething
mass of horses and men writhing like a great dying beast.
Footsteps sounded behind
him, but Shuyun did not turn. Komawara and Hojo arrived at his side and still
others stopped nearby.
“What has happened,
Brother,” Hojo asked, great wonder in his voice.
“Step away,
General, Lord Komawara, I have been in contact with the plague.” The
others did as Shuyun asked. “The Khan is dead, killed by one of his own
chieftains. They war among themselves now—those who would lay down their
arms and be cured and those who would avenge the death of their leader.”
“At least they
expend their energies upon each other.” Hojo said.
“It is the saddest
of days, General. The Kalam has always maintained that most of the tribesmen
followed the Khan against their will.” He pointed out toward the raging
battle. “The innocent are dying in numbers as great as those who came to
murder and burn.”
Komawara waved toward the
city. “We must retreat to the walls, Shuyun-sum. There is nothing we can
do and it is possible they may turn against us yet.”
Reluctantly Shuyun turned
and followed the young lord back toward the city.
Shonto guards held boats
at the canal and Shuyun waited while the others were whisked across the canal
to the open door, the sound of battle echoing off the walls. He would need to
bathe himself in the appropriate herbs and destroy his clothing.
The monk stood among the
trees, unable to block the sounds of the fighting from his ears. He knelt upon
the grass but an attempt to chant came to nothing so he was left, battered by
the sounds of the terrible battle. ‘ I have accomplished that which any
warrior of Wa would have willingly sacrificed his life to achieve—I have
caused the enemy to destroy themselves. Botahara forgive me, I meant only to
heal them and save the people of the Capital.
Shonto guards spread out
around Shuyun suddenly, keeping their distance, staring out at the raging
struggle. A light step stopped three paces away.
“Shuyun-sum?”
the Empress said softly. “Even a selfless act of charity may bring about
utter calamity. Know-
ing this cannot stop us
from being charitable. These tribesmen have their own karma which even the
Teacher may not control.“
Someone came forward then
and set the monk’s trunk a few paces away. Shuyun looked up to see the
Kalam, his face drawn as though in pain.
“Shimeko-sum,”
Shuyun whispered. “It was she who carried the plague to the
tribes.”
The Empress slowly sank
to her knees, covering her mouth as she did do. “She could not have done
such a thing… not knowingly.”
Shuyun shook his head
sadly. “She could hardly have acted so out of ignorance. The Botahist
trained…” He left the sentence unfinished.
“I cannot think
what karma this will bring,” Nishima said. “Life after life after
life…”
Shuyun nodded.
“Excuse my
interruption, Empress.” General Hojo stood some distance off. “This
is not a secure place. The battle is spreading over the fields. We must allow
Shuyun to perform his purification so that we may all find safety inside the
walls.”
The Empress nodded.
“Shuyun-sum. Only you tried to save the tribes. Do not forget the purity
of your intent. All others would have let them die, taking the population of
the Capital with them. Your purpose was pure.”
“Thank you for your
council, Empress,” Shuyun said.
The woman in crimson
robes stopped as she rose. “No one can hear our words, Shuyun-sum.
Please, do not banish Nishi-sum from the world entirely. I—I must exist
somewhere,” she said, her voice growing small, “in your company, if
I may.” She retreated then and guards surrounded her quickly.
Shuyun went to his trunk
and opened the lid.
By the time Shuyun
entered the Capital, the barbarian tribes had divided themselves into distinct
camps and, for the most part, the fighting had ceased although it flared up
again for brief moments between one group and another.
Shonto guards escorted
the monk into the nearby guardhouse where he found the Empress accompanied by
Lady Kitsura. Lord Komawara, Lord Shonto Shokan,
Hojo, the Kalam, and
Rohku Saicha had appeared, taking charge of the Empress’ personal guard.
All bowed low to Shuyun
as he entered and he found this disturbing, considering the results of his
recent action.
“We have a boat
awaiting in the nearest canal, Empress. It is a short walk. I apologize, we
have no sedan chair,” Hojo said.
“Apologize only
when you have a sedan chair, Masakado-sum,” Nishima said. “I will
have the council pass an edict ordering all sedan chairs in the Capital be put
to the torch.” She nodded toward the door.
Guards formed a tight
circle around the Empress, Kitsura and Shuyun, and the monk found himself
hemmed in and close to his sovereign.
Out in the avenue two
long lines of warriors held back the jostling crowds. Shuyun saw the black of
Imperial Guards, Shonto blue, Butto purple—the remains of Lord
Shonto’s army assuring the safety of the woman they had placed on the
throne.
Once the Empress was
seen, the people bowed low and a whisper passed down the street like a cool
breeze. Both the name of the Empress and his own became almost a chant.
Suddenly flower petals of all colors were strewn before the party as they made
their way to the quay.
Lord Butto stood at the
head of the stairs where several boats were moored, and he knelt and bowed low
as the Empress approached. Quickly the small group embarked, Kitsura and Shuyun
into the same craft as the Empress, the others into boats both before and
behind.
Shuyun felt Nishima
breathe a sigh of relief as the boats gained the center of the canal. The banks
were thick with the thousands who had hoped to flee the war, and had come to
its very center. They began to cheer suddenly, their respect for their new
sovereign momentarily overcome by their relief at being delivered from the
barbarian army.
Shuyun heard his name
chanted now as he had heard the crowds chant Komawara’s name for the many
lives he had taken in battle. He felt a warm hand take his own and looked over
to see his young Empress turned toward him—a look of understanding, of
compassion.
The lords of Wa were
wise, he found himself thinking. Here sits the woman deserving to rule the
Empire. And yet her subjects will never understand that she has given up her
own peace so that theirs would be assured.
Sixty-two
In a small audience hall
near the Imperial Apartments the Empress had gathered her closest advisors,
which meant the only functionary of the Empire’s government present was
the Major Chancellor, Kamu.
It was late and the
sounds of movement on the fields outside the city had finally ceased. For the
second time an enormous fire burned outside the city as the barbarians burned
all those who had fallen that day. At last light it appeared the barbarian army
had split utterly and though this had caused a flood of relief throughout the
Capital, anxiety had not disappeared. Everyone waited to be sure the barbarians
would not reform their vast army under a new leader. First light would see
crowds gathered on the northern walls, there was no doubt of that.
General Hojo bowed low.
“The barbarian army has split into three parts,” he began,
addressing his remarks to the Major Chancellor.
Nishima almost grimaced
and waved a gold silk fan at the Shonto officer. “Masakado-sum, please, I
cannot bear this custom. We are not in a council of state… do not speak
to Kamu-sum as though I were not present.” She tried a small smile.
“Excuse me,
Empress,” the soldier said bowing. He returned to the kneeling position
and took a second to gather his thoughts. “Since the fall of the Khan
this morning, the barbarian army has split. One company, the easternmost tribes
according to Kalam, have begun to move north, some on the canal but many by
foot and on horse. This is perhaps a fourth part of those who survived the
battle between the tribes. A much smaller group has broken off and makes its
way northeast—we are not certain of their intent, Empress, but Brother
Shuyun has suggested they may make their way toward the temples
on the Mountain of the
Pure Spirit. They know the Bo-tahist Brothers possess a cure for their disease.
The third group—the majority by far—remain in the fields north of
the city, awaiting the healers we have promised.“
Nishima nodded at this.
“What is your advice, General Hojo. Large armed parties wandering through
our lands is a matter for concern.”
Hojo considered a moment.
“Combining all the men who remain from the Imperial Army and our own,
Empress, gives us a force of perhaps thirty thousand men. Certainly enough to
meet the threat of any of the three barbarian armies, though hardly enough men
to deal with them all at once. The barbarians outside the city have disarmed,
but we cannot leave them unwatched. If they do not receive assistance
soon…” Hojo shrugged. “Thirty thousand barbarian warriors,
well armed or not is a significant force. They will also need to be fed.”
Hojo stroked his graying beard. “The companies making their way toward
the Botahist temples are of concern. We have sent messages to the Brothers so
that they will be prepared, but still it would be best if these barbarians
could be reasoned with, though I would prefer to send out a force of some size
to emphasize the prudence of finding a solution that does not require swords.
“The army moving
north is of greater concern to me, Empress. It is both larger and its intent
less clear. Do they plan to take Seh and hold it as their own? Is it their wish
to simply return to the desert? The Kalam believes they hope to escape the
plague and do not trust the people of the Empire sufficiently to lay down their
weapons. Brother Shuyun is certain the plague will begin to show its hand among
these men very soon. We have sent patrols out to warn any citizens who are on
the barbarian’s path, but who knows what dying men might do? If the
Botahist Brothers agree to minister to the barbarians, then perhaps we will be
able to take some number of Brothers north in the wake of the retreating
barbarians in hopes that the men of the desert will see the futility of what
they do and allow the Brothers to help them.” Hojo bowed and fell silent.
Nishima nodded. “I
thank you, General.” She looked around at the others, raising an eyebrow
as they had often seen her father do.
Komawara touched his head
to the mats. “Empress. I agree entirely with General Hojo. May I suggest
that with the force that travels north we might send the Kalam? He is of an
eastern tribe himself and may gain their trust more easily than the leader of a
well armed force.”
Nishima looked over to
Shuyun who sat between Komawara and the tribesman. “Brother?”
Shuyun bowed low before
speaking. “I will ask the Kalam, Empress, if I may?”
She nodded and the monk
spoke quietly to the tribesman who responded in a whisper. Shuyun turned back
to Nishima. “The Kalam asks me to say that he will do anything within his
power to serve the Empress.”
Nishima gave a half bow
to the tribesman who touched his forehead to the floor in return, his
embarrassment obvious.
“General Hojo, we
remain in a state of war, so I do not feel the need to consult the Great
Council in this matter. Who would you suggest to carry out each of these tasks?
We must send no one who is bent on revenge upon the tribes—we have had a
thousand years of raids and war because of a barbarian vendetta, let us do
nothing to fuel their anger.”
Hojo looked over at Kamu
as though the two consulted silently. “I would send Lord Butto to pursue
the barbarian army north on the canal. The lord has his own interests to
consider there and I must say, Lady Ni… Empress, that he is a young man
of great political skills. Kamu-sum has made the same assessment.
“Certainly Lord
Taiki would be the correct choice to defend the temples, his devotion has been
great since Brother Shuyun saved the life of his son. If I remain in the
Capital, I will see to the barbarians beyond the walls, with Brother
Shuyun’s counsel, if he will be so kind.”
Nishima looked at Shuyun
who nodded. Lord Butto and Lord Taiki were out in the fields patrolling beyond
the barbarian encampment. “General Hojo, I will leave this in your hands.
I wish to be kept constantly informed. We must restore peace and security to
the Empire before we can begin to address the other ills the Yamaku have left
us.”
Nishima turned to Kamu
who consulted a small scroll.
“The matter of the
Brothers, Empress,” he said. The young sovereign turned to Shuyun.
“I have spoken to
the Primate of the Imperial Capital, Empress.” Shuyun said.
“Brother Hutto and the Supreme Master of the Botahist Order sailed from
Yankura recently. They should arrive in the Capital very soon, perhaps
tomorrow.”
“The Supreme
Master?” Nishima opened her fan. “Does he not sequester himself on
an island in the sea?”
“He does,
Empress.” Shuyun answered. “Events in the Empire may have convinced
him his presence would be required.”
“How are we best to
proceed to gain their support?” Nishima asked.
“I would speak with
the Supreme Master and Brother Hutto myself, Empress, if that is
acceptable.”
Nishima nodded. “I
will concern myself with this matter no more, Brother Shuyun, if I know that it
is in your capable hands.” She turned back to the Shonto steward.
“Kamu-sum?”
“There is a
shortage of grain in the Capital, Empress, and many other things as well.
Crowds have begun to gather at the gates of the palace asking for food. As of
yet they have been orderly, but if they grow desperate this will change.”
“They must be
fed,” Nishima said. “Certainly we did not destroy all the grain in
the Empire as we came down the canal?”
Kamu nodded in response
to this, glancing over at Hojo, whose face remained grave but whose eyes
smiled. “There is perhaps someone more suited to dealing with this matter
than any present, if you will excuse me for saying so,” he hastened to
add, addressing his remark to all present. Turning back to Nishima; “We
have had word from Tanaka, Empress. He comes from Yankura even now.”
Nishima greeted this news
with a great smile, something her retainers had not seen in recent days.
“The barbarians did not find him after all!” she said happily.
“Colonel Tadamoto was mistaken.”
“No, they did
not,” Hojo said. “Our good merchant is unscathed, or so he says.
There is certainly food in the Empire despite the attempts of many to hide it
away.
Tanaka will know the best
method to bring it forth, and he will not empty the Imperial Treasury to
accomplish it, either.“
Nishima looked over at
Shokan who shook his head in mock dismay. “My steward, my senior general,
my guard captain, and now my merchant. Will you leave my personal servants at
least, and perhaps my gardener? But what do I say? Anything for my
Empress.”
“Lord
Shonto,” Nishima said gravely. “I wish only to borrow
Tanaka-sum—for indeed I shall raise his rank so that he is addressed as
he deserves, as my father always addressed him. In a brief time I’m sure
he will have rooted out all of the corruption in my government. For this
service I will pay you well, brother—and I shall pay Tanaka-sum well
also. As to your gardener…” Nishima said, as though this thought
had not occurred to her. She moved her head back and forth, weighing the idea.
“Perhaps not at this time, thank you.”
Shokan nodded.
Nishima turned to Kamu
who became serious immediately. “My list is without end, Empress, but may
I suggest that we have all done much this day. Brother Shuyun must prepare for
his meeting with the senior members of his Order, for their cooperation is
crucial to the peace we have arranged. We have, after all, pledged the
Brotherhood’s assistance without consulting them. This may please them
less than we hope, Empress.”
Nishima tapped the edge
of the low dais with her fan. “You are no doubt correct, Major
Chancellor. There are so many matters to consider and so many who have risked
so much in these last days, yet I can hardly begin to think of this until we
are assured of peace and the plague is contained.” She nodded to all
present. “I thank you. Brother Shuyun, I wish to discuss your coming
audience with your superiors, if it is convenient.”
Nishima rose and everyone
bowed their heads to the mat as she left.
Nishima did not feel a
desire to live in the apartments that had been the quarters of the Yamaku nor
was she comfortable with the thought of moving into the abandoned rooms of the
Hanama Emperors—ghosts or no— they had fallen to bad luck in the
end and Nishima did
not want be reminded of
that. Fortunately the palace had any number of rooms to choose from and she was
soon settled, if only temporarily, in apartments meant for visiting relatives
of the Emperors. These apartments had been left in the Hanama style,
uncluttered, almost austere in their simplicity and Nishima had the rugs she
had brought from Seh spread over the straw-matted floors. With her own servants
and retainers about, her situation did not feel as strange as she expected.
Occasionally she even forgot that her father was no longer part of this present
in which Nishima found herself, though these moments were brief.
A warm evening had
arrived, creeping silently up the river from the sea, and with it came cloud.
The sound of falling rain seemed comforting to the new Empress as though it
formed a protective barrier from the world beyond. Outside her rooms a terrace
with small trees situated carefully about it looked out to the west. The soft
cadence of the spring rain on the terrace stones and the leaves of
trees—a sound in harmony with the mood of the young aristocrat.
Nishima wore her own
familiar robes, avoiding Imperial finery, though her clothing was of
white—not of her choosing. She sat near a partially open screen that led
onto the terrace and rubbed a resin stick over the blackened surface of her
inkstone. A bead curtain of water drops had formed from the rain as it ran off
the tile roof, and this caught the light from her lamp and glittered like
strings of bronze colored jewels.
So many things had
occurred in the past two days that Nishima did not feel as though she were part
of it somehow—her life was changing more rapidly than she was able to
change herself, there was little question of that. Only the day before she had
been lost in the fog with Kitsura and Shuyun and the Empire had been poised on
an edge, about to slide into the abyss of the complete unknown. That morning
Lady Nishima Fanisan Shonto had lit a torch to the pyre of Lord Shonto Motoru.
She closed her eyes tightly. And now, miraculously, the Empire had been
delivered. A half-barbarian chieftain who had been destined for the throne had fallen
to the sword of one of his own followers… and Nishima had as-
cended the throne left
empty by the passing of the Ya-maku. Ascended against her most profound
desires.
“I am the
Empress,” she whispered, as though saying these words aloud would force
her mind to accept this information, help her understand the truth, for she did
not feel like an Empress, she was sure of that.
Certainly she had heard
the crowds repeating her name as though it were a litany. Nishima could not
remember an experience that had left her feeling so cold, so isolated.
Closing her eyes she
tried to conjure up another time, and an image of walking along the cliffs
above the sea on the Shonto fief came to her. She could see the bleached copper
grasses, their color so carefully complimenting the blues of the summer sea and
the whites of the lazy, drifting clouds that spread across the far horizon. The
breeze was soft and warm, welcoming her to the shore.
Eyes still closed,
Nishima rubbed her inkstone, reaching out to that time, trying to hold
it—but she could not. The chanting of the crowd came back, mixed with the
sound of the funeral pyre as it began to blaze.
Opening her eyes Nishima
picked up her brush, dipped it in ink and with great care selected a piece of
mulberry paper.
The wind blows
And the grasses bow to my passing.
Perfect golden grasses
What do they know of my thoughts?
Or of the heart
They have torn asunder.
For some time Nishima sat
looking at the lines she had written, wondering, for they seemed to have come
unbidden, as poetry often did. The rain washed the world outside her rooms.
A knock sounded then and
Nishima swirled her brush in water and set it on its rest. “Please
enter,” she called out.
A woman bowed low in the
opening and then rose. The round, girlish face of Lady Kento appeared, looking
more serious than Nishima had ever seen it.
“Kento-sum!”
Nishima broke into a smile. “It lifts
my spirits to see you.
Miracle after miracle has occurred this day. How is it you are here?“
Kento bowed. “It is
a brief story, Empress, and less interesting than one might think especially to
one who has experienced what the Empress has these past months.” Kento
cast a glance over her shoulder. “I would certainly tell my tale though
at the moment Lord Shonto awaits your favor.”
“Cha and a tale you
must certainly tell me. Please, invite Shokan-sum to join me.”
Nishima set a small jade
paperweight on the edge of her poem and moved her cushion a pace away from the
table. The screen slid aside and Shokan knelt in the opening, head bowed low.
Even my stepbrother must offer obeisance, Nishima thought, for an Empress has
no equals—how very sad.
“Shokan-sum,
please, enter.” Nishima gestured to a second cushion as her brother rose.
The lord had the powerful
build of his father and a similar talent for making his presence felt in a
room, even when he was not the center of the situation. Dressed in rich robes
of white with the blue edges of under-robes showing at his sleeves and neck and
hem, Shokan struck Nishima as a handsome figure. The sadness she could see in
his face and the white robes of mourning only added to his nobility.
Taking his place, Shokan
regarded his sister with a look of concern. “It has been a day that will
occupy the historians for a hundred years. May I say that the Empress has begun
her reign auspiciously, showing both skill and wisdom.”
“You may say that
but only if you will stop calling me Empress with each breath. We are in the
privacy of my rooms. Nishima, please, Shokan-sum, Nishi would be preferred though I hold little hope that you
will breach this foolish etiquette to such a degree, no matter how much I
desire it.”
Shokan gave a half bow.
“Excuse me for saying so, Empress, but these formalities have been the
tradition in the Imperial Palace for our entire history. It is difficult for me
to ignore that.”
Nishima stared at him in
exasperation. “In the Great
Council,“ she said
with deadly seriousness, ”I shall insist upon referring to you as Shoki-sum.“
The young lord broke into
a smile and bowed low— the name Nishima had called him as a child.
“The Empress has proffered a most convincing argument… excuse
me—Nishima-sum.‘’
“Nishi-sum.”
“Nishi-sum,”
Shokan said, his voice suddenly thick.
Reaching out, Nishima
took her brother’s hand. They were silent for a moment.
“He saved my life,
Shokan-sum—my life and my mother’s also,” Nishima said,
addressing what was unspoken in both their minds. “It is wrong to say
this, but he was more dear to me than my true father who was distant and
formal. Your father—our father, did not just save the Fanisan House from
destruction, he brought me into your family. I treasure the time I spent in his
company, treasure it…”
“You were his
delight, Nishi-sum,” Shokan said, his voice subdued though under control
now. “It was you who were closest to his heart, who brought him
joy.‘’
Nishima looked down, she
brushed her fingers over the shinta blossom embroidered in white on
Shokan‘s sleeve.
The two sat, not
speaking, listening to the rain, each lost in their own memories, comforted by
the other’s presence.
A bell sounded the hour
of the owl and both stirred. Nishima looked up at her brother. “You are
the senior lord of the Shonto now, Shokan-sum. You are a lord of great
influence and wealth. I shall have to consider who it would be best for you to
wed. We have alliances to think of, entire provinces of young women to
consider.‘’
Shokan smiled again.
“Entire provinces… it gives me hope, Nishi-sum. Perhaps, with your
guidance, I shall not live my life a lonely man.”
Nishima laughed and
squeezed his hand. “Your adventures are not as secret as you may think,
brother. Never forget that every young woman in the Capital pours out her heart
to Kitsu-sum. And I have recently been told that you have come from the
mountains in the company of young woman of the mountain race.” She looked
up slyly at her brother. “This cannot be true?”
Shokan shook his head.
“Quinta-la.”
“Quinta-la?”
“She has been sent
by her elders… I confess I do not know why, but she has come to the
lowlands for some reason… perhaps she is an emissary from her people.
Certainly she has come to learn all she can, there is little doubt of
that.”
*‘You have not
asked her?“ Nishima said, surprised.
Shokan smiled. “I
have, but convincing a dweller to speak of something they are not inclined to
discuss is more difficult than one might think. There is also a language
problem—we understand each other imperfectly.”
Nishima nodded.
“Shuyun-sum speaks their tongue. Perhaps we can arrange to have them
meet. I would be most curious to meet… Quinta-la?—to meet her
myself.”
“Anticipating the
Empress’ desire, I asked Quinta-la to wait
nearby—Nishima-sum,” he added.
“You have left her
waiting this entire time?”
“The dwellers are
very patient, sister.”
“Still… we
cannot leave her waiting like this. She is your guest, brother.”
“Guest is perhaps
not the word she would use herself, Nishima-sum, but certainly, I will call for
her.”
A maid was summoned and
sent to ask Quinta-la to join them. Almost immediately the maid returned,
accompanied by a young woman who bowed her head to the floor, obviously
nervous, perhaps even frightened.
“You may rise and
come forward, Quinta-la,” Shokan said, speaking slowly and with
exaggerated clarity. Nishima thought Shokan’s voice wanned perceptibly
when he spoke to this young woman.
Quinta-la was dressed in
the robes of her people, too warm, Nishima thought, for the weather. She was
very small but well formed and appeared healthy and strong. Delicate of feature
could hardly be said of this woman from the mountains, but despite the
roundness of her face she was fair and her mouth was beautifully formed.
Nishima immediately wanted to see her smile.
“Empress,”
Shokan said, “it is my honor to introduce Khosi Quinta-la.‘’
Nishima nodded.
‘ ’Quinta-la,
the Empress of Wa.“
The young woman bowed
stiffly.
“We are honored
that you would come so far, Quinta-la-sum. There is so little commerce between
our peoples,” Nishima said.
“La is an
honorific, sister,” Shokan said quietly making Nishima smile at her
mistake.
Shokan gave the dweller a
tiny nod.
“The honor is mine,
Empress, entirely,” Quinta-la said in the studied manner of a child
reciting lines. “You live in a lovely village.”
“You are
kind,” Nishima said with all seriousness. She had never heard the Capital
or the Island Palace referred to as a village.
Shokan shrugged.
“My language lessons have not all
been successful.“
Cha was brought by
servants and Nishima felt a pang when she realized it would not be correct for
her to serve this herself—they were entertaining a guest from what
amounted to a sovereign nation.
Though the mountains in
which Quinta-la dwelt were contained within the Empire, only the mountain
people lived there and the people of Wa did not think of the lands beyond the
foothills as being their own. Only a few passes were used by the lowlanders and
there was a lake here or a spring there that, due to its ease of access, was
thought of as part of the Empire proper.
A servant ladled the cha
into bowls, retreating a few steps when she was done and sitting absolutely
still.
“I am told there
are many springs in the mountains and some are very hot and healthful,”
Nishima said,
sipping her cha.
Quinta-la smiled and
darted a glance at Shokan. The lord said the word he had learned for the
springs and the young dweller nodded.
“Hot,” she
agreed. “Shokan-li red like an Emperor’s flag.” She said
gesturing to the lord and then touching
her own chest.
Nishima cast a look at
her brother who sipped his cha
deliberately.
“I see,”
Nishima said. “I hope my brother has found
suitable quarters for
you?“
Shokan said another word
in the mountain language and Quinta-la smiled again, which pleased Nishima.
“Dragons and clouds, Empress.”
“One of the rooms
the Yamaku decorated,” Shokan said. “She likes the painted
screens.”
A tap on the door frame
preceded Lady Kento’s reappearance. “Excuse me, my Lady. Were you
expecting your Spiritual Advisor?”
“Of course. Please
bring him to us.” Nishima turned to Shokan. “Please, brother,
I’m sure Quinta-la would enjoy an opportunity to speak her own language.
Stay a while. Shuyun-sum is your Spiritual Advisor now, Shokan-li. He is a
remarkable young man. Someone you would do well to know.‘’
The lord gave a half bow.
“Brother Shuyun is dedicated to the Empress, there is little question of
that,” Shokan said and smiled, “like so many others who traveled
the canal from Seh in your company.”
Shuyun appeared in the
doorway, saving Nishima from having to answer. “Please Brother Shuyun, be
at your ease.”
At the sound of the
monk’s name Quinta-la’s eyes went wide. She turned half around
toward the approaching Brother but then prostrated herself on the rug, causing
the monk to stop as though he confronted a terrible sight.
“Quinta-la,”
Shokan said, “please. This is unseemly. You are in the presence of the
Empress.”
Unaffected by the
lord’s entreaties the young woman remained facedown on the rug, mumbling
rapidly in her own language.
Nishima looked over to
Shuyun, her question unspoken.
“I do not
understand, Empress.” Turning to Shokan he asked, “This is the
young woman from the mountains?”
Shokan nodded as he
tugged gently on Quinta-la’s sleeve.
Shuyun spoke softly to
the woman in her own tongue. Her mumbling stopped, but she did not answer nor
did she move from her position on the floor. Whispering again Shuyun reached
out and touched the girl’s wrist, causing a shiver to pass through her.
“Will you not rise
up, Quinta-la?” Shuyun said. There was no response. “You are making
the Empress and Lord Shonto most uncomfortable and I myself am somewhat
disturbed. Please, will you not rise?”
A whisper so low it could
almost have been a sigh escaped the young woman.
Nishima raised an eyebrow
at the monk.
“She says she is
not worthy, Empress,” Shuyun said his face showing the tiny signs of
strain that Nishima had come to recognize.
“Excuse me,
Brother, Empress,” Shokan said, “I had no reason to expect anything
like this. I apologize.”
Shuyun spoke again in the
woman’s tongue, a bit more forcefully this time, and very slowly she rose
to a kneeling position where she sat with her eyes cast down.
“Will Quinta-la not
explain this?” Nishima asked the monk.
Shuyun spoke a few words
in the mountain language but the young woman only closed her eyes and remained
silent.
“Quinta-la,”
Shokan said. “The Empress would like you to answer Brother Shuyun’s
question. Will you not?”
The young woman from the
mountains opened her mouth as if to speak but no words came forth. After
several seconds of effort she managed, “Cah Shu-yung.”
Nishima looked up at
Shuyun, but it was Shokan who translated. “The bearer.”
The monk nodded.
“Do you understand
this, Shuyun-sum?” Nishima asked. The young woman’s reaction
disturbed her deeply, though she was not sure why. Nishima realized she felt an
inexplicable anger toward Quinta-la.
“I do not, my lady,
I apologize. The bearer: that is my name, taken from the mountain tongue, as
you know. What it means to Quinta-la or why she has reacted in this way, I
cannot say.”
“When I traveled in
the mountains, Brother,” Shokan said, “I met a woman—an elder
of Quinta-la’s village, perhaps of her people. It was my impression at
the time that this woman was considered a seer among her people. They were
somewhat afraid of her, though in awe would perhaps be a better description. I
sensed no animosity toward her. It was very unusual. As I do not speak their
tongue nor understand their ways, I did not know what to think of this woman.
Alinka-sa, for that was her name, questioned me about the situation in the
Empire. She also
asked about you, Brother
Shuyun. She knew you by name.“
Shuyun sat for a moment,
his face unreadable even to Nishima who believed she was learning the tiny
signs that betrayed what he truly felt. “Alinka-sa,” he said
quietly. “Sa is an honorific: a sign of the greatest possible respect.
There is no equivalent in our language.
“Alinka means
ginkyo, more specifically, the leaf of the ginkyo. This tree, though common to
us, does not grow in the mountains and is thought to be almost a legend to the
mountain people. Alinka is also the word for fan. I remember our fortunes being
cast in your garden, my Lady,” Shuyun said to Nishima. “The coins
of Kowan-sing have descended to us from the same race that Quinta-la’s
people call their ancestors. The meaning of Alinka is somewhat similar to the
prime Kowan; the fan: that
which is hidden.
In our world it also means temptation or desire. To know the future is one of
our greatest desires.” Shuyun turned to Shokan. “This woman, Lord
Shonto, did she speak of what was to come?”
Shokan shook his head.
“No, Brother. If she saw the future, she did not tell me of her
vision.” The lord fell silent, lost in thought. Finally he looked up at
Nishima. “If she knew of our father’s fall, she said nothing to me
though now I am left to wonder. She released me from my debt—the debt I
owed her people for rescuing me in the snows—but I do not know
why.”
Cha had grown cold in
everyone’s bowls and Nishima suddenly remembered the servant kneeling nearby.
She gestured to the maid to leave.
Shokan looked up, slight
embarrassment showing. “Excuse me, I was lost in my thoughts.” He
glanced over at Quinta-la. “Perhaps it would be wise for me to take
Quinta-la back to her rooms for now. Alone she may speak of this.”
Nishima gave a slight nod
and Shokan bowed accordingly, touching Quinta-la’s sleeve. She prostrated
herself before Shuyun once again and backed to the door at Shokan’s
urging, forgetting to bow to the Empress entirely.
Nishima looked over at
Shuyun. She wanted to speak of what had happened with Quinta-la, but she could
not. What she might learn frightened her.
“Must everything
change?” she asked quietly instead.
“Botahara taught
that change was inevitable and to resist it…” He did not complete
the quotation. “Sadly, it appears to be so, Nishima-sum. You are an
Empress now. A great empire is dependent upon your wisdom.”
She almost asked the
question that grew in her mind but could not. / have become an Empress, Shuyun-sum, and what of you?
What have you become?
She reached out and took
his hands in hers. I cannot bear it she thought. Let us not speak of it. Warm
arms encircled her and she pushed her cheek up against Shuyun’s own.
Nishima closed her eyes and the image of Quinta-la, prostrated on the floor,
came to mind.
That young woman was far
more in awe of Shuyun than of the Empress of Wa, Nishima thought. She had been
worshipful.
Sixty-three
Sister Sutso walked
slowly beside the sedan chair bearing the Prioress. The scale of the halls that
led through the Imperial Palace was more impressive than the largest temple she
had seen and the materials and design infinitely richer.
Palace officials, Imperial
Guards, lords and ladies, and soldiers in blue passed the Sisters or stood
aside to let the party by, though it was hardly necessary, the halls were so
wide. Looking into the faces of the people she saw, Sutso realized there was a
mood in the palace that she could not quite describe. Elation and sadness
seemed to dwell under the same roof and the people who inhabited the palace
appeared to be caught up in both at once.
She glanced back and
found Sister Gatsa watching the passage of two ladies of high birth. Gatsa-sum
looks no less regal than they, Sutso thought, perhaps more: would they look as
regal dressed in the plain robes of the Bo-tahist nuns? Of all the nuns in the
party Gatsa certainly looked the least out of place here.
Morima, on the other hand,
looked terribly lost and at odds with all around her. Sutso cast a look at the
large nun who brought up the rear of their party. Morima’s appearance may
not have been due entirely to her present situation, however—the
nun’s crisis had not yet passed and Sutso had begun to wonder if it ever
would. It was a surprise to Sutso that Morima-sum had been invited at all.
Sutso resisted an urge to
open the curtain to assure herself that the Prioress was well. The pretense
that the Prioress was stronger than she actually was must be maintained,
especially here.
The Empress had summoned
the Sisters the previous evening after the Sisterhood had sent their official
bless-
ing to the new sovereign.
It was only upon their arrival in the palace that they had learned the Supreme
Master, Brother Hutto, and other senior members of the Botahist Brotherhood
were to attend the same audience as the Sisters.
Only the Prioress had
taken this information calmly, smiling her beatific smile and closing her eyes
as though she would sleep and dream dreams of great peace and beauty. May
Botahara walk beside her, Sutso thought.
Outside the palace wall
the barbarian army, or part of it, had lain down their arms and now they
waited, watched from a distance by patrols from Lord Shonto’s army.
Rumors flew through the city. It was said that Lord Shonto’s Spiritual
Advisor, Brother Shuyun, had gone out into the field and defeated the Golden
Khan in single combat and the tribes had then battled among themselves, some
retreating north, others surrendering. This young Initiate monk had become an
even greater object of speculation among the Sisters. Sutso knew the
Prioress’ hopes regarding this young man and this worried the
Prioress’ secretary. She was concerned with the effect it might have if the
Prioress’ hopes were dashed entirely. Desire, Sutso thought, it is as Botahara said. And the
Prioress is so much closer to Perfection than any I know.
The official who led them
turned to the right into a hall that ended in a set of double doors. Shonto guards
knelt in two rows before the doors and two young neophyte monks swung incense
burners before them.
The guards and the
neophytes all bowed as the Sisters passed. The official had the doors opened,
and gestured for them to enter.
Beyond the heavy doors
was an audience hall of medium size, no doubt, by Palace standards, though it
was as large as the largest hall of the priory. The entrance to the great room
was not at the end opposite the dais, as Sutso expected, but to one side of the
hall. Perhaps a dozen senior Brothers knelt in a row directly across from the
opened doors and as Sutso entered she saw a single ancient monk sitting to her
right, opposite the dais. Brother Nodaku, she thought, the Supreme Master of
the Botahist Brotherhood. The identities of the others she could not guess.
As the official directed
them to silk cushions laid out
on the polished wooden
floor, the Brothers bowed. Sutso returned this gesture and then tapped lightly
on the sedan chair that bore her superior.
“Open my curtains,
child,” came the dry voice of Sister Saeja.
Sutso slid the silk
curtains aside and found the Prioress propped up on her pillows. The old woman
bowed to the Supreme Master and then his party who all did the same in return.
Sutso moved a cushion and knelt close to her superior. The official who had
brought them to the hall retreated and the doors were closed behind him. No one
spoke—no one showed a sign of the surprise or resentment they felt at
being forced into this situation. All waited patiently.
A door opened to one side
of the dais and an official wearing the dragon fan of the Empress’ staff
entered. He shuffled quickly to a place directly before the dais and bowed to
the assembled followers of Botahara.
“Supreme
Master,” he said with great dignity. “Prioress, Sisters, Brothers:
the Major Chancellor of the Empire of Wa.‘’ He bowed again and
moved off to one side.
Sutso watched as an old
man with one arm entered. He wore the elaborate ceremonial robes of his station
but somehow did not seem to belong in them. Despite his age this man would have
looked more at home on horseback. To add truth to this, Sutso noticed that the
man’s face showed signs of having recently been exposed to the wind and
sun.
Kamu, Sutso realized.
This is the Shonto steward. A capable man by all reports and completely loyal
to the Shonto. She wondered how many other key positions in the government were
now filled by Shonto retainers. The Yamaku nightmare had come true.
Kamu bowed to all present
and took up a place kneeling just before the dais as his position dictated. He
produced a scroll from his empty sleeve and unrolled it with obvious skill
against his thigh using his only hand.
“I regret to say
that the Empress will not join us. As you might imagine, the situation in the
Empire at the moment requires much of her attention.” It was the closest
thing to an apology one received from a sovereign. People of lesser position in
the same situation would be expected to apologize for arriving when the Empress
had
pressing business
elsewhere—despite the fact that they had been summoned.
Kamu consulted the
scroll. “The Empress has instructed me to assure you that the attitude of
the previous Imperial Family toward the Botahist Orders will not continue. The
Empress Shigei is a devout follower of Botahara and, as you know, the Shonto
have long employed Spiritual Advisors of the Botahist faith and, until
recently, the Empress’ personal secretary was a former Sister. There will
be no untoward taxes upon property held by either Order and the Yamaku laws
restricting public religious ceremonies will be rescinded.” Kamu lowered
the scroll.
Brother Hutto, the
Primate of Yankura, bowed to the Chancellor. “May Botahara smile upon the
Empress Shigei and her line. May the Perfect Master walk beside the Daughter of
Heaven in these difficult times.”
Kamu acknowledged this
with a half bow.
Sister Gatsa took her
cue. “It was with great joy that we received the news of the investiture
of the Empress, Major Chancellor. Botahara has answered our prayers for a
sovereign who will protect the followers of the Way. In our prayers we will ask
Botahara to bless the Empress Shigei and the reign of the Fanisan House. May we
also express our regrets for the Empress’ recent loss. Our prayers will
not fail to ask the Perfect Master to look with favor upon the spirit of Lord
Shonto Motoru who was a great lord and a friend to the Botahist Orders.”
She cast a cold glance toward Brother Hutto as if to say, that is fair speech, Brother.
Kamu nodded to Gatsa.
“Both your blessings and your prayers are welcome in this troubled time.
It is the desire of the Empress to make the Empire secure again so that all may
travel the roads and canals safely and all may come freely to the temples of
your Orders with the blessing of the sovereign. This is the desire of the
Empress, though it is a great task and one which cannot be accomplished without
the contributions of many.”
Ah, Sutso thought, they
have summoned us to ask for money. She did not smile. This new Imperial family
may be easier to deal with than the Sisters had hoped. Money was never given
without expectations of return.
“The Empress has
asked Lord Shonto’s Spiritual Ad-
visor, Initiate Brother
Shuyun, to speak of the needs of the Empire.“
Kamu nodded over toward a
screen which opened immediately. Sutso’s eyes moved there as did the gaze
of everyone in the room. A small monk, almost a boy, entered. If not for his
pendant chain she would certainly have mistaken him for a Neophyte. She glanced
over at the Prioress, but the old woman did not notice. Her focus was on the
young monk, and nothing else. The old woman made a sign to Botahara.
Sutso turned back in time
to see Shuyun complete his bows and kneel before the dais, facing the Supreme
Master. She glanced over at the head of the Brotherhood and then back to the
boy who sat so calmly across from him. It is impossible to say whose eyes are
more ancient, Sutso thought, and she felt the smallest surge of wonder.
Shuyun gave a half nod to
Kamu and then began to speak. His voice was as soft as the wing of a butterfly.
“It is a great honor to be here among those who are charged with the
protection of the Way. If I may quote the Perfect Master to those who have
studied His Words longer than I have lived this life: Lord Botahara said that
the beginning of wisdom was compassion. And so I was instructed by my
teachers.” He gave a half bow to Brother Sotura who sat with the other
senior monks.
The words Brother Shuyun
speaks have been chosen for simplicity, Sutso thought, though not as a child
selects from a limited vocabulary but as an artist chooses the simplest lines
and yet renders complexity.
“I do not claim to
have achieved wisdom, but I am learning compassion and therefore I have made a
beginning. Recently Botahara tested my compassion in a manner I would never
have expected. It was written in the sacred scrolls that compassion could not
be limited to one’s family or to one’s fellow villagers. True
compassion would encompass strangers. True compassion would be extended to
one’s enemies. Remembering this, I was able to act as Botahara had
written. I was able to act compassionately toward the enemies of Wa.”
Shuyun looked at each face in turn, holding everyone’s gaze for a second.
It was an act of some disrespect from one so young, yet no one seemed to
notice.
Touching his palms
together as though he would pray,
Shuyun continued.
“Among the barbarians outside the gates of the Capital the plague has
begun to work its terrible destruction. In return for laying down their arms, I
promised that we, the followers of Botahara, those who practice compassion,
would heal them of this disease.” He let his words hang in the air.
“The Empress has asked that you assist me in this endeavor,” he
said simply.
Silence in the hall. And
though many looks were exchanged, no one spoke a word. Finally, after a long
awkward moment, the Supreme Master deigned to speak.
“These are not
followers of the Way, Brother Shuyun. You have promised much without the
consent of the seniors of your Order. Initiate monks do not speak for the
Botahist Brotherhood. Even Initiates who have the ear of the Empress. You may
have learned something of compassion, but you have certainly forgotten much of
humility.”
Before Shuyun could
respond, the Prioress spoke, her voice rasping out into the tension that
charged the air. “We will assist you Brother Shuyun, in any way within
our power, but the cure for the plague is the guarded secret of the
Brotherhood.” She looked over at the Supreme Master, an eyebrow raised.
He did not respond to her
but kept his attention on Shuyun as though the head of the Sisterhood had not
spoken. “Brother Shuyun, we would do much to assist the new sovereign. It
is our sworn duty to minister to the followers of the Way. But caring for
barbarian invaders who have put many followers of the true path to the
sword… This will not be a popular act of charity among the people of the
Empire, let me assure you. The Empress asks much of us.” The ancient monk
turned his attention to Kamu, dismissing the Initiate who sat opposite him.
“Major Chancellor,
the Empress understands the ways of the Empire, as do her advisors who have
many years of experience in such matters. It is difficult for me to believe
that the Council of the Empire expects Botahist Brothers to cure barbarians
when so many of our own faith are in need of our ministrations…”
Sister Sutso did not miss
the fact that the Supreme Master let the sentence hang in the air, the
implications clear. What coin
is the Empress willing to exchange for
such a service? And the Sisterhood has nothing
to bargain with in this exchange, she thought. Only the Brothers will gain
concessions from the throne and we will sit silently and bear witness to this.
What a moment of triumph for the Brothers.
Karnu did not respond or
even acknowledge that he had been spoken to but only looked over to Shuyun.
“Prioress?”
came the soft voice of the Initiate. “Do you mean what you say: in any
way within your power?”
“Yes, Brother
Shuyun, but we do not know the secret of the cure.”
“I know the
cure,” Shuyun said simply.
“I forbid
it!” the Supreme Master almost shouted. “I forbid it! You break the
laws of the Botahist Order.”
Shuyun stared at the old
man who had gone red with anger.
“If I act according
to the word of Botahara, how is it possible to break the laws of our Order? I
act according to the dictates of compassion, Supreme Master.”
“Where have you
learned such arrogance, Shuyun-sum?” Brother Sotura asked quietly.
“The well-being of all who follow the Way must be considered here. Do not
attempt to make decisions that are beyond your ability. Pride, Brother Shuyun,
will hinder you on your path. Please apologize to the Supreme Master and let
the Major Chancellor speak.”
Sister Sutso’s
heart sank as she watched Shuyun bow in deference to this monk. But then Sister
Saeja spoke. “They do not know who you were in your previous life,
Brother Shuyun. It is
unheard of that a Brother with your
skill so young cannot be
identified.“ Sutso could hear
the controlled excitement
in her superior’s voice. “Do
you know what this means,
Brother?“ Shuyun turned back to the woman propped up in her
sedan chair. “It
could mean many things, Prioress Saeja.
How quickly can you
gather the Sisters to minister to the
barbarians?“
“You will be
expelled from our Order,” the Supreme Master said loudly. “Stripped
of your sash and pendant.”
“Immediately,
Brother,” Sister Saeja answered quickly. “Some will come this very
day. Two hundred
will arrive tomorrow.
Three hundred more in three days, if you require it.“
“Expelled from our
Order,” the Supreme Master said with finality. “The light of
Botahara will be hidden from you.”
Shuyun nodded. “May
Botahara walk beside you, Prioress.” Saying this he lifted the pendant on
its gold chain over his head.
“You will be
shunned by all who follow the Way.”
“Shuyun-sum,” Sotura said, his
voice rising. “Think what you do…”
Sotura watched as Shuyun
dropped the pendant and chain into the palm of one hand. The young monk stared
at the gold and jade in his hand with a look of deep sadness.
“You will be cursed
by the Perfect Master,” the Supreme Master intoned.
Shuyun looked up at these
last words. With a look of great regret he set the pendant on the floor and the
chain slid out of his hand to make a pile beside it.
“I will be blessed
by Botahara,” Shuyun said, and Sutso felt the conviction of these words,
saw even the Supreme Master hesitate when he heard them.
Shuyun rose slowly to his
feet so that he stood above all the senior members of his Order. Sotura watched
as he did the unthinkable: Shuyun pointed
at the Supreme Master.
“Pray that the
compassion of Botahara encompasses you, Brother, for if it does you may yet be
returned to the wheel.”
Brother Sotura was on his
feet, lightning quick. Three blindingly fast strides toward the young monk and
then suddenly he stepped back off balance for an instant as though he had been
struck. Shuyun stood with his hand raised, palm out, yet he had not touched the
senior Brother.
“Forgive me
Sotura-sum,” Shuyun said quietly, his voice full of compassion.
“Separate yourself from those who have lost the Way. Do you remember the
lesson you taught when I was but a child? The butterfly enclosed in your chi
strong fist?” Shuyun reached into his sleeve and removed something. When
he opened his hand a white blossom lay upon his palm. “Brother Sotura,
your Order
has lost
compassion—the beginnings of wisdom. To find the True Path you must leave
them.“
The Senior Brother stood
looking at the blossom in Shuyun’s hand. “You did not touch
me…”he said.
Shuyun nodded once.
Brother Sotura looked up
from the blossom into the eyes of his former student. The chi quan
Master’s face was deeply troubled.
Sister Sutso heard a
noise to her right and then a thin hand gripped her shoulder. The Prioress
stepped out of her chair and came to her knees beside Sutso. The secretary
turned and saw the Prioress was crying. The old woman bowed her head to the
floor and began to chant the prayer of thanksgiving.
Shuyun turned at the
sound of this and Sutso thought she saw a look of horror cross the Botanist
mask. The young monk turned back to his former teacher, holding his gaze for a
second, and then almost fled from the hall.
Sutso looked down at her
superior who still bowed her head to the floor, and then she realized that
others did the same—both Sisters and Brothers.
Botahara help me, she thought, have I been in the presence of the Teacher and not
known?
Sixty-four
The Empress of Wa stood
alone on a balcony looking north across the small part of her vast Empire that
could be seen from the Island Palace. The morning’s rain had let up,
leaving the air clear and the sky hung with retreating clouds that twisted slowly
in a clearing breeze. The shadows cast by the clouds flowed slowly across the
fields and flanks of distant mountains creating an ever changing pattern no
artist could hope to capture.
The barbarian encampment
spread in mottled grays and browns across the green grass and came by turns
into shadow and light. Outside the protective circle maintained by the Shonto
soldiers, people from the Capital and surrounding areas had begun to gather.
Nishima could see knots of them collecting here and there, staring with fascination
toward the encampment. Many brought food, Nishima had been told, and she was
surprised to hear this for there was still little enough to be had in the
Imperial Capital.
This sudden generosity
did not necessarily indicate a great change in the attitude of the people of Wa
toward their invaders: the rumor was spreading that the Shonto Spiritual
Advisor, the gifted monk who had defeated the barbarian army, was the Teacher so
long awaited. Only the Shonto soldiers and the fear of plague kept the people
away from the man they hoped was the one foretold.
Nishima felt a deep
uneasiness when she looked down at the gathering crowds as though they were
another force intended to keep her and Shuyun apart.
For three days now the
monk had been away tending to the barbarians and Nishima had grown more and
more restive as though each day took him farther away and made his return less
likely. She paced across the short balcony to its end, stopped, and looked out
again. Fore-
ing herself to give up
the futile searching of tiny figures moving through the barbarian encampment,
Nishima fixed her gaze on the northeast.
Kamu had said that the
barbarian army that traveled there would begin to raise a dust cloud once the
wind dried the land, but there was no sign of this yet nor of Lord
Taiki’s pursuing force. This part of the shattered barbarian army had
razed a village the previous day though the villagers had fled before the
tribesmen descended. Nishima pressed her fingers to her temple. No one was
really certain of the purpose of these barbarians, loose upon the land as they
were. The suggestion that they made their way toward the Botahist temples on
the Mountain of the Pure Spirit still appeared the most likely explanation.
Obviously these barbarians could not know that the Brothers would never succumb
to force, nor would they be likely to simply offer a cure.
Shuyun had said that the
plague would take hold among the fleeing barbarians by the third day so that
only a few would remain strong when they arrived at their probable destination.
Lord Taiki, she hoped, would convince these to surrender.
Her attention was taken
by a line of men on foot who passed the Shonto soldiers who guarded the barbarian.
Botahist Brothers, Nishima realized. A growing number were leaving their Order
to come serve the one said to be the Teacher—to practice compassion
rather than politics.
The Botahist Brotherhood,
her advisors surmised, were locked in internal struggle. They had stripped
Shuyun of his pendant and turned their backs on him, and only after this rash
decision had they realized their error. They had alienated the new sovereign,
surrendering the advantage of Imperial favor to the Sisterhood—and they
might have forced the Teacher from their Order.
Nishima shook her head.
As her father often noted, Brother Satake would never have acted so foolishly
had he become the leader of the Botahist Brotherhood. It made her wonder if it
was not as Shimeko said—the Brotherhood had become decadent.
A full report of the
meeting between Shuyun and the Seniors of the Botahist Orders had been supplied
by Kamu. He spoke of Shuyun’s actions and speech with
pride. The Brothers made
few miscalculations as great as that. It must have been impossible for them to
imagine that a young Initiate could act independently, ignoring their gravest
threats, offering one of the Order’s greatest secrets to their rivals.
Only a few months away from Jin-joh Monastery and Initiate Brother Shuyun had
rebelled against them—far more openly than Satake-sum ever had. In part,
Nishima viewed this as almost a personal triumph, but it also filled her with
fear. Brother Shuyun appeared to be under no one’s spell.
Shokan was utterly
convinced that the Brotherhood would recant their refusal to assist the
barbarians and would scramble to preserve some shred of the advantage they had
surrendered when the Sisters offered their services to Shuyun and the throne.
It was perhaps a sign of how fractured their Order had become that this had not
yet occurred.
A knock on the screen
that led from the balcony startled Nishima, and a Shonto guard appeared at her
response. “The audience, Empress,” he said, keeping his eyes cast
down.
Nishima took a last look
out to where Shuyun ministered to the army of the desert and then left the room
she had begun to use so that she might look out over the barbarian encampment.
Her guard fell into step around her immediately.
She had managed to break
the tradition of the sedan chair, though this shocked more than just a few
officials. To ameliorate this somewhat, she agreed to use the chair for
ceremonies—the struggle now was focused on semantics—which events
could be considered ceremonial? There was, Nishima was sure, a definite move
afoot to broaden the strict definition of the word.
As Shokan had suggested,
Nishima tried to view the situation with humor, but it was difficult. The
officials of the Island Palace were completely obsessed with tradition and
ceremony and matters too trivial to believe. It was obvious that the running of
the Empire had not been their concern for a very long time—not since the
days of the later Hanama Emperors. This would have to change, if it meant
replacing every senior member of the government.
She descended a massive
set of stairs, courtiers and
officials bowing as she
passed. A private audience hall off Nishima’s official rooms was their
destination. Until Nishima had peopled the Great Council to her liking, there
were still a number of things that needed to be done beyond the view of the
officials. Their interference in certain things would not be helpful. Nishima
was beginning to realize that she had learned more than she ever realized about
leading men from years of watching her father. There was no one more skilled
than Lord Shonto at winning loyalty and achieving ends through the efforts of
others. It was the intention of the new Empress to bend Imperial protocol as
much as possible so that she could run her administration upon the Shonto
model— something she knew was effective.
Returning the Empire to a
state of stability was her immediate task and to do this she would need the
assistance of many. Shokan and Kamu had pointed out that rewarding those who
had followed her father from Seh, and supported him when it meant defying the
Emperor, was the beginning. Let it be said that the new Empress understood and
rewarded loyalty. It was the Shonto way.
She had been informed
that there were rebellions in Chou, and a Yamaku cousin there had declared
himself Emperor and began to gather an army—a fool’s rebellion,
Hojo assured her, but it indicated that speed was necessary to establish the
validity of her rule beyond contesting. The previous day a report had come that
the Yamaku Imperial family dwelt no more on this plane, caught by the people
who fled the barbarian invasion. It was a sad thing and, though Hojo had
breathed a sigh of relief, Shokan had told Nishima privately that this was not
as significant as others hoped. Pretenders could easily arise claiming to be Yamaku
sons or daughters or cousins— even distant relatives of the Hanama might
make claims, for that was the basis of Nishima’s own. Imperial blood was
not terribly rare among the peers of Wa.
They reached the rooms
that Nishima had made her own and the Empress nodded to bowing Shonto guards as
she passed. The audience hall was empty and Nishima took her place on the low
dais, arranging her robes with care—white over crimson. She was glad that
she had not met resistance from Shokan or the others to this. It was customary
for those who performed great deeds for the
sake of the Empire to
receive their rewards in great ceremony, but Nishima did not feel such a
ceremony was appropriate at this time. Perhaps when the Empire was more
settled. The people she would speak with this day were not courtiers or
officials of the Palace. They would not demand that the smallest of their
actions receive public recognition. As callous as it sounded, some part of
Nishima knew that to strengthen the ties to those who had supported her father
she needed to treat each as a private favorite of the Empress. This knowledge
embarrassed her somewhat, but it did not stop her from acting accordingly.
I have a rule to
consolidate and legitimize, Nishima told herself, but may I not walk too far
down the path of the cold manipulator. Botahara save me from that.
Kamu entered and knelt
before the dais, bowing his head to the mat. The Empress nodded to her Major
Chancellor. The officials of the palace were no doubt still stinging from
Kamu’s appointment but, along with the other stands she had made, this
was having its desired effect—the officials were realizing that they
would not rule the Empress.
“Kamu-sum. It is my
hope that the constant whispers of the Palace officials do not make the
performance of your duties too difficult.”
“The buzzing of
flies, Empress. I have long since learned to ignore such things.”
“Perhaps it is
another of your many skills that I may one day acquire myself, for I confess
this buzzing sometimes drives me to the ends of my patience.”
The old man smiled, the
great wrinkled raincloud of his face creasing in a thousand small lines.
“Patience was not something I learned in my youth, Empress, it grew
slowly as the years passed. Thus it was that, in my younger years, I fought more
duels than perhaps even Lord Komawara.” Kamu gestured to his empty
sleeve. “Here is my great teacher of patience, Empress, otherwise I may
have been too foolish by nature to have ever acquired this most valuable of
traits. But you are wiser than I, my Lady,” he hurried to add,
embarrassed suddenly by what he implied.
Nishima hid a small
shudder. “Let us hope that I may learn from you, Kamu-sum. I would
certainly live with
my loss less skillfully
and with less grace than my Chancellor.“
Kamu looked down, perhaps
embarrassed. He consulted a scroll.
“I am ready to
begin,” Nishima said, giving her father’s steward a small smile.
“Lord Butto Joda of
the province of Itsa, Empress,” Kamu said. “The lord readies
himself to go north in pursuit of the barbarian who retreat along the great
canal.”
Nishima nodded. Kamu
clapped his hand upon his thigh once, producing a surprisingly loud sound, and
the doors to the hall opened. It was a small hall, chosen intentionally so that
those arriving for their audience would not have to traverse a vast room on
their knees to approach the sovereign. But despite its size it was a room of
some beauty. The posts here were not lacquered but left a rich natural
red-brown, and the sweep of the ceiling beams that supported the massive tile
roof gave the otherwise static space a feeling of motion. Painted screens of
courtiers walking in the Palace gardens decorated one wall, and Nishima was
thankful they were not scenes of battle.
The small figure of Lord
Butto bowed in the doorway and then approached the dais. At an appropriate
distance he stopped and bowed again.
“Lord Butto, please
be at your ease,” Kamu said quietly. The old man withdrew then, slipping
quietly out through a screen. Nishima was paying Lord Butto the ultimate
compliment of favor and trust—meeting the sovereign of the Empire
privately.
Nishima turned her
attention to the young lord kneeling before her. Like a boy, Nishima thought,
all of his features are small though his eyes are very fine. But belying this
look of youth was the lord’s great poise. He was as sure of himself as
many of her officials. Here will be a great man, the Empress found herself
thinking, trapped for now in the body of a child. She smiled warmly.
“Lord Butto,”
she began, and was surprised to find her voice become thick with emotion. She
paused for a few seconds. “Lord Butto,” she began again, “it
is my honor to express to you and the Butto House the gratitude
of the government and the
people of Wa. In the recent turmoil in the Empire you have shown the greatest
wisdom and exemplary judgment, placing the interests of the Province of Itsa
and the Empire of Wa before those of your House. To have fought beside my
father against the invading barbarian army, and to have risked being judged a rebel
House for this, displayed both courage and conviction. In the subsequent
battles, Lord Butto, your courage did not falter nor did the warriors of your
House ever shrink from their duty.“ Nishima took a long breath. ”If
there is anything within the power of an Empress to provide, you have but to
ask.“
Lord Butto stared down at
the floor.
The young warrior looked
up, meeting his Empress’ eyes for a second. “Empress. It was my
greatest honor to ride at the side of Lord Shonto Motoru as he fought, unsupported
by the Imperial government, to stay the barbarian invasion. It is a tale equal
to any in our long history and shall be told for a thousand years. The Butto
name shall ever be sung in that tale, though in truth my part was small. What
greater gift could I ask? I am honored by your words, as is the Butto
House.”
Nishima bowed low in
response. “You are fair spoken, Sire, and your words touch me. Please,
Lord Butto, accept these tokens of our regard.” She clapped her hands
twice.
Shonto guards appeared,
carrying a saddle of beautiful leather. It was not decorated with silver or
stones but was a saddle a warrior would choose, perfectly made of the finest
materials. Upon the right side below the pommel a shinta blossom was embossed
and on the left the flower of the warisha. Resting upon the seat was a bridle,
also of leather, but with silk reins woven of crimson and blue. An armor chest
was borne forth on a pole and set beside the saddle. Guards opened the lid and
revealed a suit of armor laced in Butto purple and trimmed in the same pattern
of crimson and blue.
Finally, a guard carrying
a silk cushion, upon which rested a warrior’s helmet, emerged and laid
this before Lord Butto.
“It is my
father’s helmet, Lord Butto,” Lady Nishima said. “May the
crimson and blue always remind you of the gratitude and loyalty of the Shonto
and of the Fanisan
House. May the shinta
blossom and the warisha symbolize the growing bonds between our families and
the great esteem in which you are held.“ Servants set a low table beside
the Empress and from this she removed a brush.
“Lord Butto, Itsa
Province needs a governor of great wisdom to repair the ravages of the
invasion. I would offer this position first to you, for there is no other I
would trust more.” This was a formality only, for the governorship of
Itsa had been offered to Lord Butto, in private by Kamu, so that he could have
refused without rebuffing the Empress.
Lord Butto bowed again.
“Empress, this is a great honor for the Butto House. I accept and hope
only that I may prove myself worthy of your great trust.”
“Lord Butto,”
Nishima said warmly, “of this there is no doubt.” With a flourish
Nishima signed the scroll of investiture, making Butto Joda the Imperial
Governor of Itsa.
A memory of the Emperor
speaking to his new governor of Seh in the Palace garden appeared in
Nishima’s mind and she hesitated before setting the brush down.
Pushing this thought from
her mind, she forced herself to continue.
“You will pursue
the retreating barbarian army, Lord Butto?”
“I set out in the
morning, Empress.”
Nishima nodded.
“May Botahara go with you, Lord Butto.”
The young man bowed low.
“I thank you, Empress,” he almost whispered.
Kamu had returned almost
silently, nodding to Lord Butto who retreated back to the great doors. The old
man gave Nishima a smile of reassurance and then looked at his scroll.
“General Hojo Masakado,” he said, clapping his hand to his thigh
once.
The senior Shonto general
knelt in the open doorway and came forward at a gesture from Kamu.
Nishima noted that Hojo
looked rather less at ease here than she had seen him appear before a battle.
The General wore robes of white embroidered in the palest shades with falling
cherry blossoms—a man in mourning for his liege-lord.
With his gray beard
neatly trimmed and his hair drawn
back Hojo was a man of
great presence despite his lack of ease in such formal surroundings. This man
will be less happy in the new Empire, Nishima thought, for if Botahara smiles
upon us the Shonto will have little need of his warrior’s skills.
“Masakado-sum,”
Nishima said as Kamu retreated again. “Were I a great poet, I could not
find words that would convey my gratitude or do you the honor you
deserve.” Nishima felt her heart begin to break as she looked at the face
of the man kneeling before her. These are the men who loved my father, she
thought, glancing over at Kamu’s retreating back. These are the people
who share my loss and have walled their feelings away for the sake of the
Empire and their new Empress. She remembered both these men from her arrival in
the Shonto house—massive, intimidating strangers they had been then. But
how quickly that had changed. They teased me as a child and indulged me and
adored me as though I were a member of their own families. She closed her eyes
tightly and took three slow breaths.
“General, your
loyalty to Lord Shonto Motoru and the Shonto House and its causes has been as
unwavering as the loyalty of Fugimori to his outcast prince—as constant
as the seasons. Without your wisdom and bravery, my lord’s effort to slow
the barbarian advance would have faltered, I have no doubt. Anything you ask of
me I will grant, Hojo Masakado-sum, for the Empire’s debt to you is
great.”
“Empress,” Hojo began but his voice came out a whisper
and he cleared his throat before beginning again. “Empress, I have served
two Shonto Lords and it is my wish to serve a third. I believe this is what I
am meant to do. If I may, I will go with Lord Shonto Shokan.”
“But this is a
small thing, General—it is your present position. Is there no other favor
an Empress may grant?”
Hojo shook his head.
“I thank you, Empress. I am honoured by your words—that is
enough.”
“Masakado-sum, my
father would never see you go unrewarded and I cannot change the tradition of
my family.” As before, she clapped twice and a Shonto guard appeared
carrying a small stand upon which sat a single scroll. This was set before
Hojo.
‘ ’It is the
deed for a house in the Capital near to the
home of your liege-lord,
General—a property I have been told you admire. This, so you may visit
the Capital often and so come to the Palace that I may not lose the pleasure of
your company.“ Before Hojo could respond, a second guard appeared bearing
a sword in both his hands as though it were a valuable artifact.
Nishima beckoned the
guard to her and, to his great surprise, took the sword into her own hands.
With the grace of a Sonsa she rose and descended from the dais. Holding the
sword in both her hands, she offered it to Hojo who was so taken aback he
hesitated for a moment.
“It was my
father’s favored weapon,” Nishima said as though to reassure him.
“My Lady, it is the
Mitsushito,” Hojo said, still not
reaching for it. An Empress did not descend from her dais to offer a soldier a
gift from her own hands—it was unheard of.
“So it is,
Masakado-sum. My brother and I hope that you will accept it.” She held it
out again.
Hojo took it gently from
her hands, and Nishima saw him close his eyes. She thought tears would appear,
but the general was a warrior and maintained control with effort. Nishima
reached out for a second, touching his hard wrist, and then she returned to the
dais, unable to bear his discomfort any longer.
Hojo bowed but no words
came, and he retreated even before Nishima had called an end to their audience.
Nishima sat for a few
moments before she would continue. Nodding to Kamu, she again followed a
breathing exercise taught to her by Brother Satake.
“Captain Rohku
Saicha,” Kamu said quietly.
Nishima nodded. The
Captain of the Shonto Guard approached. He wore the light duty armor she often
saw him in and carried his helmet under his arm. A white sash was worn for Lord
Shonto and in this he wore no sword, making Nishima realize that the Shonto
Captain had not been granted permission to wear a sword in the presence of the
Empress. A grievous oversight with a man so proud.
Except for the white sash
and the missing sword Rohku had been dressed exactly so when he had argued
against Nishima’s decision to journey to Seh.
What a position I placed this
poor man in, she thought.
“Saicha-sum,”
Nishima said, “Though unintentional I assure you, I have paid you a
terrible insult.” Clapping her hands a guard appeared, for the second
time bearing a sheathed sword. “Of my father’s extensive collection
of blades there were only three that he chose to carry into battle. The
Mitsushito I have given to General Hojo. This is a Kentoka, Saicha-sum. It is
my wish that you will wear it in my presence.”
Rohku Saicha set his
helmet gently on the floor and took the sword in both his hands. “My
Lady, I did not for a moment believe you had lost trust in me but only focused
on affairs of the Empire and struggled with grief. I will wear this always for
your protection.”
Nishima nodded.
“That is my hope, Captain Rohku, for I have spoken long with my brother
of this very matter. Too many rulers have been deposed by disloyal guard
commanders and in an unsettled Empire this is a matter of grave concern. Lord
Shonto has suggested, if you would agree, that you take command of the Imperial
Guard, Saicha-sum, and, if you do, I will sleep easily. It is a choice left
entirely to you. If it is your wish to stay with the Shonto, it would be with
my blessing.” Nishima found her mouth suddenly dry. She had said Shonto as though they were another family—not her own.
Nishima watched the
captain’s face as he considered this offer. Neither she nor Shokan had
been sure of his decision. Certainly she had proven a difficult charge in the
past, but Nishima needed someone she could trust completely and that left very
few with the proper experience—it was not enough to be a warrior or a
great general, a guard captain must be born suspicious, and yet reveal this to
no one. He must have the mind of an assassin for this was how security was
created without weaknesses.
“Empress, I am
concerned for Lord Shonto… He is my liege-lord and my charge. It is
difficult for me to abandon him.”
“If your heart
cannot, Saicha-sum, then you must stay with Shokan-sum. I will say only
this—your lord has said that Shonto security could best be served by
making the Imperial household completely safe. Please consider this. I will
accept either decision in your own time.”
Nishima waited, trying to
read the look of the captain,
but he kept his face
hidden by staring at the floor, cradling his sword across his knees.
“Saicha-sum. My
father chose to ride into the midst of a battle. You did not make this choice
for him. An arrow—in a battle there is no way to guard against an arrow.
No one bears responsibility for Lord Shonto Mo-toru’s death.”
Rohku nodded.
“Thank you, my Lady.” He did not look up.
Nishima had more to say,
more praise for the guard captain for his part in the war against the barbarian
and compliments for his son as well but she thought these things better said at
another time.
She gave a signal to
Kamu, who watched through a crack in the screen and the Major Chancellor
returned, clearing his throat and then nodding to Rohku who retreated.
“Kamu-sum, if
giving rewards is this difficult, how will I survive making even the slightest
criticism?‘’
“Empress, if I may
say… this is a difficult thing you do. These men supported your father
while the rest of the Empire watched the Yamaku attempt to bring about his
fall. They fought a barbarian army of a size never before seen with a small
force and acquitted themselves in a manner that can only be cause for awe. They
have become figures in our history.” Kamu gestured out at the empty hall.
“This audience signals an end of sorts. How will these warriors live up
to the reputations that have been created? The captain who knelt before you
will be a greater figure in history than all but a few lords who live in our
Empire today. Hojo Masakado-sum will be mentioned in the same breath as the
Emperor Jirri. I believe that they no longer know who they are, Lady Nishima.
Until only a few days ago they were the men who resisted a barbarian invasion
against impossible odds. Their lives had no other purpose. And now?
“You are releasing
them from the purpose that has guided them, Empress. They do not know where
they will go or who they will be. Not one had previously thought of himself as
becoming a character of importance in our history. You praise them, Empress,
and rightly so, but also you send them into the unknown. How does one act as a
living historical figure, a legend?”
Nishima nodded. “I
do not know, Kamu-sum,” she said quietly. “In this matter I know as
little as they.”
Kamu smiled. “My
Lady, excuse me for saying so, but Lord Shonto always said that you have long
denied your place in our Empire.‘’
Nishima nodded slowly.
“If you will lecture me regularly with quotations from my father, I will
give you the wealth of a province in return, Kamu-sum.”
“Excuse me,
Empress, I did not mean to step out of my place.”
Nishima looked up at this
remark, unable to hide her distress. “Kamu-sum, I did not intend to criticize.
To hear my father’s words spoken by a true friend… It breaks my
heart and is a comfort at the same time.” Nishima looked over at the
peaceful scene depicted in the screens. “Please, Kamu-sum, ask Lady Ken
to if she will join me for my meal.”
Kamu bowed low and
retreated almost silently.
Nishima rose from the
dais and crossed the room. There was no balcony, but unshuttered windows looked
out to the west as did her own rooms. The sprawling barbarian camp could not be
seen from here and this bothered her. What does he do now? Nishima wondered.
What are his thoughts of me? More and more the last days she had begun to admit
the true question to herself. How
long will he stay?
Shuyun is no longer a Botahist monk, she told herself, but this provided little
comfort. He is something more, she was forced to admit. Who am I to interfere
with the course that has been set for him? It was not a question she could
answer.
A knock behind her
brought Lady Ken to into the hall, followed by servants bearing tables and trays.
“Kento-sum,”
Nishima smiled at her lady-in-waiting and then held up her hand to stop the
woman from her deep bow. “If you address me or treat me as an Empress in
any way, I shall throw myself off the balcony.‘’
Kento gave a slight nod.
“As you wish, my lady, though may I point out that this room has no
balcony?”
“I shall throw
myself from the spiritual heights I have attained, then. With such a small
distance to fall, I shall not risk much injury.” She smiled again and
then gestured suddenly to the painted screens. “We have been invited to
join these fine and generous people.”
Kento broke into a broad
smile. “Have we, indeed? How kind of them.‘’
Like girls playing at
make-believe the two women moved their tables closer to the screen and ate
their entire meal as though they were in the company of the people depicted in
the painting. Many received absurd names and Nishima and Kento gossiped about
them shamelessly, attributing the most shocking behavior to one and all.
In the midst of this a
letter arrived from Kitsura that contained a poem, written in a mock romantic
style, which made the women almost howl with laughter. The guards outside the
doors must have wondered what their Empress and her lady-in-waiting could be
doing.
It was as though a dam
had burst in Nishima’s spirit and released a flood in the form of
laughter, though it was not necessarily joy at this river’s source.
Only toward the end of
the meal did the tone of the conversation become sober.
“When Lord Shonto
was declared a rebel lord,” Kento explained, “the Imperial Guards
broke down the doors to the house and took the servants to be questioned. I had
escaped before they arrived. The gates were guarded by the Emperor’s men
and it was not until it became apparent that the battle had been lost that they
abandoned their post. Our own brave guards returned to the house as soon as it
seemed possible to do so, Lady Nishima. I cannot criticize them—no one
was certain what transpired in the Capital and if they had come out of hiding
too soon… Less was lost than I had feared though more than I hoped. Even
so, the house will soon be much as it always was.” Kento toyed with her
cup, looking down as she spoke. “There for your pleasure whenever the
Palace does not enhance your harmony, my Lady.”
“Kento-sum, I would
move back tomorrow if I could, but it is truly Shokan-sum’s home
now.” Nishima reached out and touched the woman’s sleeve.
“But Kento-sum, you are a lady-in-waiting to one Nishima Fanisan Shonto,
presently masquerading as an Empress. You would be welcome to join me here,
though I can say little to recommend this place.” The corners of
Nishima’s mouth turned down. “It is devoid of humor and joy, bound
by senseless conventions, inhabited by men and women
whose concerns and
thoughts,“ Nishima gestured at the painted figures, ”have a depth
not unlike our present companions‘.“
“Lady
Nishima,” Kento said, “I do not presume to involve myself in
matters of the Empire, but as to this campaign we must wage against convention
and…” she searched for a word, “the stultification of the
spirit, I will take up my sword by your side.‘’
Nishima clasped her
companion’s hand. “Kento-sum, you lift my spirit. I will make you
the unofficial Minister of Joy, and for this service you will earn my undying
gratitude.”
“To begin, in my
new capacity, I believe we should find a husband for your cousin. This will
make her more joyful, I’m certain.”
“Kitsura-sum?”
“Of course. She
does not grow younger, my lady,” Kento thought for a second,
“though it does appear she grows fairer. A husband, unquestionably. She
will be searching for a consort for you even as we speak. This is
self-defense.‘’
“Huh,”
Nishima said—her father’s response. “Who would be suitable,
do you think?”
Kento replaced her cup on
the table. “Your brother is certainly the most appropriate of the lords I
know, my lady.”
“But Shokan-sum has
known Lady Kitsura all her life,” Nishima protested weakly.
“Does he not find
her enchanting?”
Nishima weighed this for
a second. “It would seem unlikely that he is the only man in the Empire
unaffected by her charms. Certainly he does not confide such things to
me.”
“If not Lord
Shonto, then perhaps Lord Komawara?”
“Really, Kento-sum,
that is not likely.”
“But Lady Nishima,
consider—Lord Komawara is the hero of the barbarian war. Certainly he
will be rewarded richly for this; larger estates, Imperial Favor, a
governorship one day. Every young woman in the Empire will be burning incense
and chanting his name at sunrise each first day of the month. I have only met
him briefly, but is he not noble and kind and quick of mind? So everyone
says.”
Nishima smiled.
“Less than a year ago our brave hero was thought to be the most
provincial lord in the Capital.”
“In less time one
can change from a lady into an Empress, my lady. I have seen it myself.”
Nishima laughed with
delight.
“Then he was
thought provincial, Lady Nishima, but now he is viewed as having been an
innocent—noble of spirit, perhaps even pure.”
“Botahara save us!”
Kento laughed now.
“You do not seem disposed to let Lord Komawara go, so I return to
Shokan-sum.”
A bell sounded and
Nishima threw up her hands, relieved to end this conversation. “I must
return to my duties. I will meet with the hero of the barbarian war this very
hour. It is my belief that, offered anything he would desire, rather than ask
for Kitsura’s hand, a sword, a suit of fine armor, and the greatest horse
in the Empire will satisfy Lord Komawara.”
“Certainly the
Empress knows best,” Kento said humbly.
Nishima favored her with
a look of exasperation.
Returning to her dais as
the servants cleaned away all signs of the meal, Nishima sat considering the
words of both Kamu and Lady Kento. It seemed to be true—the men who
followed her father and fought the barbarians when the odds were impossible had
become heroes on a scale that one found only in scrolls of ancient history and
tales of times beyond history. To think, she said to herself, Komawara has
become the object of desire for the women of the Empire. Komawara.
Kamu entered and bowed,
kneeling before and to one side of the dais as his office required. “A
letter has come from Lady Okara, Empress.” He took it from his empty
sleeve and went to place it on the edge of the dais, but Nishima intercepted
it. As always, she was surprised by the simplicity of the great painter’s
hand. Nishima slipped the letter into her sleeve pocket—my reward for
completing my duties, she thought.
She raised an eyebrow at
Kamu.
“Colonel Jaku
Tadamoto, Empress.”
Nishima nodded. Ah, yes,
the brother of Katta. Tad-
amoto had been the
subject of a lengthy debate among Nishima’s advisors.
As one known to have had
the ear of the Yamaku Emperor, Tadamoto certainly warranted exile from the
inner provinces, or at least the Capital. Yet his case was not that simple.
Jaku Tadamoto had corresponded with his brother Jaku Katta when the Black Tiger
was ostensibly a Shonto ally and, according to Katta, was the man who had
convinced the Emperor to raise an army when the barbarians invaded. Many
thought him a man loyal to the throne, even though he had grown to despise the
Emperor. In the end, Tadamoto had tried to stop his brother from committing
regicide and then had thrown himself between Katta and a sword blow that was
intended to end Katta’s life. This Tadamoto was a man of many
contradictions, Nishima realized. Rohku Saicha was of the belief that the young
colonel’s knowledge of the machinations of the Imperial Government alone
made him too valuable to lose.
Nishima did not yet know
what should be done with this man. She was not ready to trust him, yet there
was no evidence that he was a threat.
Shonto guards entered and
stationed themselves close about the dais just as the doors at the hall’s
end opened.
A man in the black
uniform of the Imperial Guard knelt in the opening. When he rose, Nishima felt
a catch in her breath. She had seen Tadamoto before, the night of the
Emperor’s death, but he had been injured and in a daze and she had been
much occupied with other things. She was surprised to find that he looked so
much like his brother Katta.
But Tadamoto was Katta
refined. His features were certainly not weak, but they were significantly less
strong than his older brother’s. His presence was also unlike his
brother’s. Where Katta was all instinct and desire and strength, Tadamoto
appeared to be a person deep in thought, caught up in things that had little
connection with the everyday world. In truth he looked like a scholar, handsome
and sincere. And then there were the famous Jaku eyes: and here the difference
was profound. Unlike the cold, gray gaze of his famous brother,
Tadamoto’s eyes were the green of the earth—warm and verdant.
He bowed low before the
dais and knelt with his hands
resting on his thighs.
Nishima could read nothing on his face except perhaps a sense of sadness, which
was so common among her subjects that it seemed normal. Here is one who has
learned to wall his true self away, she thought, and she wondered if life in
the Palace would soon make her the same.
“Colonel Jaku
Tadamoto,” Kamu stated formally. The old steward stayed in his place for
this audience.
Nishima hesitated a
second, trying to catch the young man’s eye, but she could not. He seemed
like a man defeated—incongruous in one so young.
“Colonel
Tadamoto,” Nishima said softly, for gentleness seemed the tone needed
here. “I hope you received my letter?” She had sent him the death
poem, unopened, that Jaku Katta had entrusted to her.
He stirred himself to
speak but did not look up. “I did, Empress. I am in your debt.”
“Certainly that is
not so, Colonel. General Katta was an ally of my father when few believed there
was a barbarian threat at all.” She paused but saw no reaction.
“Colonel Jaku, may I express my regrets at your loss.”
Tadamoto nodded.
“You are very kind Empress. I thank you.”
“If there is
anything that I may do… You are the brother of my father’s
ally.‘’
“Empress, I was the
loyal servant of the late Emperor. I accepted the surrender of Lord
Shonto’s army and would certainly have fought my own brother’s
forces if I had been so ordered. In the end Katta-sum and I crossed
swords.” She saw his shoulders sag.
“Loyalty, Colonel,
is something the Shonto understand. Honor and loyalty cannot be split apart,
but that is not so with love. One can honor one’s liege-lord but not love
him—I have seen it many times. One can love one’s own brother, but
honor may not allow you to act in a manner that would indicate loyalty. I must
ask you, Colonel—were you loyal to the throne or to the man, Yamaku
Akantsu?”
Tadamoto hesitated for
some seconds. “I began with loyalty to both, Empress, but I could not
maintain my loyalty to the man. In the end, I am not certain that I remained
loyal to the throne, for how can one be loyal
to the throne when the
man who possesses it has thrown the Empire into ruin? What is the loyal act
then?‘’
“When you went to
the rooms of the Emperor the night he died, what did you intend?”
Tadamoto shook his head,
pain written across his face. “In truth, my lady, I do not know. To face
him, to face the Emperor with his treachery, his betrayal of his office. I do
not know beyond that. I do not know.”
Nishima regarded the
young man before her. “What you have said is wise, Tadamoto-sum. Loyalty
to the throne and loyalty to the person who sits upon that throne are
synonymous—until the sovereign betrays his office. I do not criticize
you, Jaku Tadamoto-sum, for you acted from intentions that were honorable. Few
would have acted with more wisdom.”
Tadamoto bowed.
“These are comforting words, Empress.”
“My father’s
vassal-merchant has spoken highly of you, Colonel. Tanaka-sum believed that you
suffered much from the Emperor’s betrayal of his office. Tanaka-sum is a
man whose judgment I value.”
“He is a remarkable
man, Empress. If the Emperor had been as wise as your merchant, the Empire
would have been well governed, indeed.”
This almost made Nishima
smile. “I have no doubt that would be so, Colonel. I have many questions,
Colonel Tadamoto, if you don’t mind. Many things have occurred that are
not entirely clear to me.”
“I am the servant
of my Empress,” he replied like a reflex.
“As you are aware,
no one knows the circumstances under which the Emperor died. The woman who was
found with him—she was his mistress?”
Tadamoto took a long
breath before answering. “Yes, Empress.”
“She was a Sonsa
dancer, was she not? I believe I saw her dance in a program created for Lady
Okara’s paintings.”
“That is correct,
Empress.”
“How very
sad,” Nishima said, obviously touched by yet another death. “She
was a beautiful dancer.”
“Very beautiful, my
lady.”
“Did they go to
their end together? A lovers’ ending?”
Tadamoto took a long
unsteady breath as though he fought down physical pain.
“Are you well,
Colonel? You were badly injured.”
“I am well,
Empress.” He paused again. “There were signs in the room that the
Emperor was about to escape. A suit of Imperial Guard armor. The Emperor
himself was dressed as a guard without rank. Those who guarded him said a boat
was being prepared to leave the Capital.” Tadamoto stopped again and
Nishima wondered if he indeed spoken the truth when he said he was well. “It
is my belief that Osha-sum pushed the Emperor from the balcony and he dragged
her after him. I do not believe that she intended to make her end with the
Emperor.”
Nishima was quiet for a
moment. “But she was his lover, Colonel. Do you know something that my
advisors are not aware of?”
Tadamoto sat stiffly,
controlling pain, certainly, but Nishima realized now that it was not physical
pain. He met her eye briefly and Nishima herself looked away.
“She did not love
him, Empress,” he said quietly but with great certainty.
Nishima gave a single
nod. “I see. Her family, where are they?”
“I do not know,
Empress,” he moved a hand in the tiniest gesture. “The Empire is in
chaos, everywhere. It is difficult to know where anyone might be.”
“Sadly true,
Colonel. Someone must see to her ceremony. Is there someone you might suggest?
Did she have friends in the Capital?”
Tadamoto clasped his
hands together on his knees. “I would see to Osha-sum’s final needs
if that would be acceptable, Empress.” He fought to keep his tone even,
but it was not a successful battle.
“That would be
acceptable, certainly.” She looked at Kamu who gave a small nod.
Nishima gave Tadamoto a
moment to recover his surface of calm. “I will tell you honestly, Colonel
Jaku, that my advisors do not agree on what should be done about you. Most of
those who supported the Yamaku do not pose this problem—they will be
exiled to far corners of the Empire and their power stripped away. Opportun-
ists are not to be
trusted. But you, Colonel, there are some who believe you were loyal to Wa and
to the throne and, as I have said, the Shonto value loyalty. You are also a man
renowned for your intellect and knowledge of the court and its intrigues. Was
it you who convinced the Emperor to restore order to the roads and
canals?‘’
Tadamoto nodded.
“Why?”
“The dynasties that
provided stability have invariably held the throne longest, my Lady. It is as
though history has passed its own judgment, sweeping away those Imperial
families that do not care for their charges, though often not quickly enough, I
fear.”
Nishima produced a fan
from her sleeve and tapped it in slow rhythm against her palm. ‘
’If you were offered a position in the new government, Colonel, would you
accept it?“
Tadamoto did not hide his
surprise, though his deep sense of sadness did not lift. “I am honored
that you would ask, Empress.” Language failed him for a moment and
Nishima spoke to cover his lapse.
“You have suffered
great losses, Colonel. You have sacrificed love for loyalty to principles. Your
brother…” She did not complete the thought. “If the
principles of the sovereign were the principles you were loyal to, it is
unlikely that you would find yourself in this position again, Colonel. Let us
speak of this when you have dealt with the other matters that occupy you. If
you will swear loyalty to me, Colonel, I will not require guards to be present
when next we speak.”
Tadamoto’s head
rose, Nishima could see the surprise in his green eyes. The look on his face
said that he had not expected the world to ever bestow another act of kindness
upon him. “Empress, I have knelt before the ruler of Wa more often than I
am able to count, yet only today have I heard words of wisdom and compassion. I
will swear loyalty, Empress—I would lay down my life that your rule may
not falter, for the people of Wa need wisdom and compassion no less than they
need food and water.‘’
Nishima gave the scholar
a half bow. “We will speak again, Colonel Tadamoto. If you would offer
the benefits
of your experience to
Captain Rohku Saicha of my guard, I would be in your debt.“
“Empress, I will be
in your debt, always.” Bowing low, Tadamoto retreated from the room.
“She who
renews,” Kamu said softly, “renews honor and hope.”
Nishima pretended she did
not hear, but Kamu’s words gave her pleasure. “This Sonsa dancer
was his lover,” Nishima said.
Kamu nodded.
“Have I let
compassion blind me, Kamu-sum? I fear it is my weakness.”
“I believe, as you
have said, that Jaku Tadamoto was an honorable man torn between honor and
loyalty and love. In a lifetime of service to the Shonto I have never once felt
so torn.” He made a sign to Botahara that would have been out of place if
Nishima had not known him so long. It was for her father and she did the same.
“May I suggest
that, once you have spoken to Lord Komawara, it would be appropriate to speak
with others tomorrow or at a later date.”
“You coddle me,
Chancellor,” she said.
“Not at all,
Empress. One cannot rebuild an Empire in a day and, if driven to the point
where one’s tranquillity is destroyed, one can do no good at all.”
“You sound now like
Brother Satake.”
“It is a compliment
I shall always cherish, Empress.”
She smiled. “I will
meet with Lord Komawara, please, Major Chancellor.”
Kamu slapped his thigh
once and then retreated, the Shonto guards in his wake.
The doors opened and Lord
Komawara, dressed in white robes, knelt with his head touching the floor. His
hair has grown back sufficiently, Nishima thought, and then smiled at the
triviality of this.
The hero of Wa came
forward stiffly as though he suffered from the performance of his deeds. The
agony she had seen in his face at her father’s funeral had not faded and
there was no doubt in Nishima’s mind that this pain had no physical cause.
So shaken was Nishima by what she saw that she could not speak immediately. The
hero of Wa, she thought, his spirit destroyed by the horror of his own deeds.
Suddenly she was ashamed of what she
had said to Lady
Kento—a sword, a suit of
fine armor, and the greatest horse in the Empire will satisfy Lord Komawara. I have given up the life I
dreamed of, Nishima thought, but, Botahara save him, Komawara has sacrificed
his soul.
“Lord
Komawara,” Nishima began, intending to express the gratitude of the
Empire, but suddenly she found it was a pose she could not continue. Her voice
quavering unexpectedly, Nishima said, “Your spirit, Samyamu-sum, it is
like a stone in water. How has this happened?”
“Have you not
heard, Empress?” he answered, his voice as cool as rain, “I have become
a great hero. To accomplish this I have written no poetry, played not a song,
nor proposed laws indicating great wisdom. Instead I have become the greatest
butcher in ten generations. And so I am honored throughout the Empire.”
Nishima put her hand to
her face. It will be easier to rebuild an Empire than to heal the wounds of
this man, she thought. Oh, father, look what we have done.
“Samyamu-sum,”
she said as gently as she could, “what may I do?”
A bitter smile passed
across his face like the shadow of a quick flying bird. ‘ ’I am
told Lord Butto prepares to pursue the barbarians who retreat north. I would
accompany Lord Butto, Empress.“
“Do you not feel
you have done enough? Will you not leave this to others now?”
Komawara moved his
shoulders. “But Empress, there is not a warrior in all of Wa more suited
to this than I. There is not a trace of my humanity that has not been washed
away, washed away by the blood of others.”
“Lord Komawara, I
would ask you to stay in the Capital. Please, you have done more than any
sovereign has a right to ask.” Shuyun, she thought, perhaps he would know
what to do for this man. But Shuyun could not be reached and Komawara knelt
before her asking to be sent back to war—sent to search for his own
death, she was sure.
“Empress,”
Komawara said firmly, meeting her eye, “it would be better if you gave me
a blade, as you have the others, and sent me north.”
She felt her face grow
hot at this but forced herself to
meet his gaze. He did not
look away. Are you unreach-able, then, Nishima asked silently. Is there no
trace of the young man I knew that I can appeal to. “Lord
Ko-mawara,” Nishima began, “I will not order you to stay in the
Capital… but I will beg you to remain.”
“Empress,”
Komawara said, taken aback by this. “You cannot say such a thing. You do
not understand— it is what I am intended to do.”
Nishima shook her head, a
tight gesture. “I will beg you. I do beg you. I will bow my head to the
mat before you…”
“My Lady, you
cannot!”
Nishima stepped down off
the dais into the space between them, placed her hands on the floor, and began
to bow.
Komawara leaned forward
and caught her shoulders. “You are the Empress. This is beneath
you.”
Nishima came back to her
knees facing him, catching his hands. “If I let you go, you might find
the death you are seeking or you will complete the destruction of your spirit.
I could not bear it, Samyamu-sum, I could not bear it.”
As though overcome by
turmoil he did not speak for a moment. “Lady Nishima, I am of no use to
you here…”
She felt a tear streak
her cheek at these words and he stopped at the sight of this. “I will
stay. If it is your wish, I will stay.”
Nishima squeezed his
hands. “I know you have seen terrible things…”
He shook his head as
though there were something he tried to cast off. “No,” he said,
and the word came out like a moan. “I have done terrible things. You should not even touch my
hands.”
Hearing this, she took
the hand that wielded his sword and raised it to her lips and then pressed it
against her cheek. “You have a fine and noble spirit—we will find
it,” she said, “I do not know how, but we will.”
“I do not know
myself, Empress,” he said in a hoarse whisper.
Nishima returned his hand
gently to his lap. “I do know how we will begin,” she said
suddenly. Turning
back to the dais she
removed the brush, inkstone, and brush-stand from the table.
She pressed the inkstone
into his hands. “This belonged to my mother,” she said.
“Lady Nishima, I
could not accept this.”
She stopped him as he
tried to return it, saying firmly, “I am not above begging.”
“But it is a
treasure.”
“Nonsense,”
she said with a sly smile, “I gave Hojo a palace and Lord Butto a
province. You can certainly accept a much used inkstone.”
It did not bring a smile
to his lips, but there was something different about his eyes for a second as
though whatever haunted them had released its grip briefly.
She held out the
brush-stand on the palm of her hand— a swan, delicately carved of jade.
“This was a gift from my adopted father.”
Almost timidly, Komawara
took it up, turning it slowly from side to side.
“And this
brush,” she said pushing it into his hands, “is a gift from a woman
who might have been a poet had not duty forced her into other pursuits. If you
write poems to me, I will answer them.”
“Empress, you have
more important things to do than trade verses with a poet of little
ability.”
“I remember your
poem in my father’s garden, Samyamu-sum. Do not speak to me of your lack
of skill. And I have nothing I would rather do. Will you not help me keep a
tiny part of my former life alive?”
Looking down at
Nishima’s writing implements, he nodded. “I thank you,
Empress.” Komawara did not look less distraught, but she thought the hard
edge of bitterness and the struggle with suppressed rage were less evident.
Sadness is not
destructive to the soul, she told herself. We all have reasons for sadness.
“Everything that
can be restored to you, Samyamu-sum, I will restore, ten times over.”
He nodded. “Thank
you, Empress.” His discomfort was acute, Nishima could see, but she was
also sure she could see signs that he responded to her words. He cares for me,
this young man, she realized. And this touched her.
“You have
duties,” Komawara said, quietly, bowing low. Nishima thought it best not
to protest and let him go, clutching her mother’s inkstone. When the
doors closed, she sat staring at them for a moment before rising and crossing
to the windows again. She expected Kamu to enter; when he didn’t, she remembered
that this was the last of her official duties.
The day’s
interviews had not been what she had expected. She had been so young during the
Interim War that she had been shielded from its effects—had not seen the
cost. I thought I would give out accolades and rewards. The faces of Tadamoto
and Komawara were not easily erased from her thoughts. They were too young. Not
hardened veterans like Hojo.
She wished Kamu had
returned. His council had been wise. Another who must be thanked for his part
in this mad war, she thought. Touching the frame of the window, she felt Lady
Okara’s letter in her sleeve and took it out. Returning to the cushion on
the dais, Nishima broke the seal and read.
My Empress:
Upon hearing the news of your ascension
my heart sang, for I knew the Empire would need the wisdom of your open heart
if it was to heal. If I do not presume too much, my heart then became heavy for
I was aware of your desire for a life of contemplation and art. This is a great
sacrifice you have made, and greater so for it is no small talent that you have
been given. How is it that fate would call a great artist to govern the Empire?
It is my belief, Empress, that Wa
requires your artist’s soul to heal from the betrayal of the Yamaku and
from the loss and ruin of the war. Art, true art is a force for compassion and
tranquillity. Let us have an Empire ruled by compassion rather than greed and
warfare. Let us have art in the fabric of our lives.
And then, Empress, came the sad news of
your great loss. Motoru-sum was an old and trusted
friend and his passing is a loss to all
of Wa. May Botahara protect his soul.
Out of the gray winter mists
An Empire in blossom
Spring
Drawn from the pigments of the soul.
May Botahara walk beside you, Okara
Nishima folded the letter
with great care, and then offered a prayer asking Botahara to protect all those
she loved.
Sixty-five
Brother Sotura moved
slowly through the barbarian encampment, and though he searched with a
practiced eye there were no signs that Shuyun had made even the slightest
error.
He is a marvel, Sotura
thought. He was never taught to manage an outbreak of plague such as this, and
yet… The tribesmen the senior monk saw appeared well, if somewhat
underfed.
Tents off to the west
housed the sick. Sotura made his way in that direction, receiving many bows
from the barbarian warriors who lazed about in the warm sun. Among some crude
shelters he found a Botahist Sister praying with three tribesmen. She is making
converts here, he thought, not sure why this bothered him.
Nearby, men cooked by a
dung fire, apparently impervious to the smoke and the smell. Horses were being
moved about the area and staked where there was less-trampled grass. Nowhere
was there evidence of weapons—skinning knives were all the monk saw.
Quiet, Sotura realized, it is so strangely quiet here. And it was true any who
spoke did so in subdued tones; there was no laughter, no calling out. A
military camp and it was as silent as a temple.
The population of the
camp thinned noticeably as Sotura approached the tents of the sick, but there
were tribesmen standing guard here, watching him warily.
Why would they guard the
tents of the sick, Sotura wondered and then realized the answer. It was Shuyun—
some would brave the plague to meet the Teacher.
Many Brothers of the
Faith had forsaken their vows to come to Shuyun and minister to the barbarians,
so the tribesmen who stood guard did not question Sotura as a stranger in the
camp.
The sound of men coughing
came to the monk as he stepped over ropes guying a barbarian tent. A Sister
hurried past and Brother Sotura spoke to her. ‘ ’Brother Shuyun,
Sister—where may I find him?“
She stopped and eyed him
carefully, suspiciously even, and then pointed toward a tent across an open
area. He bowed his thanks. To Sotura’s surprise he found himself nervous
as he crossed the sward.
Four barbarian warriors
bearing staffs guarded the tent and stopped Sotura as he approached. Speaking
in their tongue, he asked for Brother Shuyun.
“The Master is at
his labors, Brother,” one warrior answered. “If you require
instructions it is best to speak to Sister Morima.”
Morimal Sotura almost said aloud, she has become
Shuyun’s shadow.
“I have come with a
message from the Botahist Brotherhood. It is important that I speak with
Brother Shuyun.”
The tribesmen exchanged
glances. “I will ask,” one offered and retreated toward the tent.
In the dim light inside the door Sotura saw the man gesturing to a young
Sister. She stared out at Brother Sotura for a second and then hurried off.
A moment later Shuyun
appeared, drying his hands on a scrap of cotton. If he was surprised to find
his former teacher, he did not show it.
“Brother
Sotura,” Shuyun said, bowing low. “This is a surprise and an honor.
Please.” Shuyun gestured off to one side and ushered the senior monk away
from the tent, out of hearing of the young Sister.
A breeze ruffled the
heavy fabric of the tents and overhead a plague banner fluttered on a tall
staff, adding its staccatto to the eerie silence of the encampment. Once
assured of privacy Shuyun did not hesitate, as though matters of great
importance required his attention. Yet he was unfailingly polite.
“Do you truly bear
a message, Brother Sotura, or have you found compassion in your soul?”
Sotura gave a small
frown, not easily adjusting to being addressed as though an equal. “I do
bear a message, Shuyun-sum—a message of compassion.” He met the
younger man’s eye. “The Supreme Master will send our
Brothers to meet the
barbarians who ride toward the Mountain of the Pure Spirit. We will offer to
heal them if they, too, will lay down their weapons.“
Shuyun gave the senior
monk a deep bow. “May Bo-tahara chant your name, Sotura-sum.”
Sotura remained
impassive. “I was also instructed to give you this.” He held out
his clenched fist. Shuyun hesitated for a moment, then extended his open hand.
He half expected Sotura to release a small blue butterfly into his palm, but
instead he felt the cool weight of a jade pendant and chain.
“Never before has
one been returned, Shuyun-sum. It is my hope that you will not refuse.”
The young monk looked
down at the pendant in his palm. “Why, Brother?”
“Many felt the
Supreme Master may have acted in some haste,” Sotura said, embarrassed to
be admitting fallibility on the part of his Order. “We have swayed him in
this matter.” Sotura waved a hand at the camp. “Think of the other
Brothers who have followed you here. If they see you wearing your pendant,
Brother Shuyun, it will cause them to reconsider their decision. I am concerned
for their souls, Shuyun-sum—for theirs and yours.”
The younger monk broke
into a smile that seemed to arise from joy. “Your concern would be better
focused elsewhere, Brother. Those who have come here to cure the barbarians of
the plague live the word of the Perfect Master.” He held the pendant up
by its chain so that it hung between them. “No stone can change
that.”
“Brother
Shuyun,” Sotura said, his voice carrying an edge of desperation,
“they come because they believe you are the Teacher. What do you tell
them?”
Shuyun reached out and
took the senior monk’s hand, lowering the pendant into it and then
closing Sotura’s fingers, holding the Master’s hand thus as though
expressing great affection. “I tell them I do not believe I am the
Teacher.”
Sotura shook his head in
confusion. “If this is true, what will you do? You have turned your back
on the Bo-tahist faith.”
“But the Teacher is
among us, Sotura-sum. I will go to him and hear the Word from one who has
attained that which we can only dream of.”
Sotura reached out and
gripped the younger monk’s shoulder, staring steadily into his eyes.
“Do you know where the Teacher dwells?”
Shuyun nodded.
“Where?”
Shuyun shook his head
slowly. “When the Teacher wishes you to find him, he will send you a
message, Brother Sotura.”
Sotura gave Shuyun a
gentle shake. “You have had such a message?” he almost demanded.
“I believe I have,
Brother.” Shuyun, stepped back so that Sotura released him.
The older monk stared
down at the grass for a moment. “How can this be true, Brother? Why has
he not sent for the Supreme Master, for Brother Hutto?”
“Their karma is
their own, Brother,” Shuyun said with great gentleness, his face full of
concern. “Ask why he has not sent for you, Sotura-sum. It is the question
that will lead you to wisdom.” Saying so, he bowed to the senior Brother
and returned to the tent where he labored to heal the enemies of Wa.
The following day Shuyun
was interrupted in his work by Sister Morima. She stood silhouetted by the sun
as Shuyun bowed over a young tribesman who lay on blankets on the grass.
“Brother
Shuyun?”
Like all the
Botahist-trained in the encampment, she still called him Brother though the tribesman called him the Master.
He looked up, squinting.
Though he could not see her against the light, he knew and was glad that Sister
Morima had returned to her previous appearance of good health. Her step had
grown light as she went about her work—her crisis of spirit had been
resolved by an act of compassion.
“Sister?”
“On the edge of the
encampment,” she waved to the south. “The Prioress, Sister Saeja,
has come. She asks for you, Brother, and will come to you if you will allow her
to enter the camp.”
Shuyun said a few words
to the tribesman and then rose quickly. “I will go to her, Sister.”
He hurried off
across the encampment,
nodding to the many bows he received.
Emerging from the edge of
the camp, he saw that a small pavilion had been erected on the invisible border
maintained by the Shonto guards. He set out toward this immediately, unprepared
for the reaction. There was a surge among the people who had been gathering
around the encampment. He heard his name over and over and people offering
prayers of thanksgiving. The soldiers were not caught off guard by this,
appeared to have anticipated it, in fact, so the crowd was restrained.
Steeling himself, he
moved forward. Looking at the press of the crowd and the hope in the faces
Shuyun thought, this will become my life, I cannot turn away. Approaching the
Sisters, Shuyun noticed some of the faces he had seen in the Palace. The one
with the strong jaw and the haughty manner, the small one who tended the
Prioress.
When Shuyun was three
paces away, the Sisters knelt and bowed low. The Prioress stayed in her sedan
chair this time but managed a bow all the same.
Before Shuyun could
speak, the dry rasp of the Prioress’ voice broke in. “It is our
shame to admit that we do not know how to address you.”
“I would be honored
if you would call me Shuyun-sum, Prioress,” Shuyun said without
hesitation.
The ancient woman
considered this for a moment but then rejected it as inadequate. “Master
Shuyun, we seek the Teacher,” she said simply.
Shuyun looked into the
ancient eyes and saw the hope there and it saddened him. “He will be
found by few, Prioress,” Shuyun said, his voice carrying a note of
concern.
The Sisters exchanged
uneasy glances.
“Master
Shuyun,” the old woman said, the hope in her eyes replaced by growing
uncertainty, “are you the one who was spoken of?”
Shuyun slowly shook his
head, sorry that he must do so.
The Sister took a long
breath, her face growing soft, like a child whose hopes have been
dashed—who would dissolve into tears. “Then how is it that you have
powers unheard of in all our history?”
Shuyun looked down at the
grass and when he raised his head his eyes seemed moist, his voice almost
overcome with awe. “I am the bearer, Prioress. I will serye Him.”
There was a long silence
then, the nuns not taking their eyes from the monk as though he were a myth
come to life. “The few who will find the Teacher… who?” the
Prioress asked, her question tentative as though she feared the answer.
“I am not certain,
Prioress.”
The Prioress nodded.
“Master Shuyun, will you not take one of us with you?”
Shuyun looked down again,
but only for a brief second, and then he raised his head, saying, “If I
may, I will send word to Sister Morima, Prioress. I will ask her to join me, if
it is possible.”
In some of the faces
Shuyun saw a hint of anger, resentment, but the Prioress smiled suddenly, like
the sun emerging from behind a cloud. “I have not been wrong in all
things, at least. Botahara bless you, Brother. I will pray for you.”
“Prioress?”
Shuyun said, deeply serious. “Shimeko-sum—the one whom you called
Sister Tesseko—it is her soul in need of your prayers.”
The Prioress paused for a
second, her face grave. And then she nodded once and the smile returned.
The Empress sat on the
balcony overlooking the vast barbarian army. She had finished reading a letter
written by Tanaka—a report on the state of the Imperial Treasury. The
situation was not as desperate as her worst fears had whispered it might be.
Hojo had secured so much of the Palace when the Yamaku fell that few officials
were able to slip away with stolen fortunes. Over many years Tanaka had made an
exhaustive study of corruption in the Imperial Government, though it had never
been his intention. The Yamaku way of governing had forced him to it. Tanaka
had paid for information, bought influence when necessary, bribed Ministers and
bureaucrats. As a result he had a long list of those who could not be trusted
and was quickly purging the civil service. It was an irony her father would
have appreciated, Nish-ima thought.
The Empress smiled. She
had talked with Shokan regarding Tanaka and discovered the poor man was
consumed by guilt. He had given Colonel Tadamoto a detailed list (though
incomplete) of Shonto holdings and now felt he had betrayed every trust he had
ever been given. As this ploy had quite possibly kept the merchant alive,
Shokan applauded it as wisdom. But Tanaka was not reassured and suffered all
the same.
Duty, Nishima thought. He
thinks he has failed in his duty, though absolutely no harm came of his action
and much good—he preserved his very valuable life. It occurred to her to
send the merchant a charter, raising him to a minor peerage, and citing his
betrayal of Shonto trust as the reason for this. She was not sure he would see
the humor in this, however.
A knock on the frame of
the open screens drew her attention inside.
Lady Kento knelt in the
opening.
“Kento-sum,”
Nishima said, smiling, for pleasure came to her easily that day.
“My Lady. Captain
Rohku is satisfied with the security in the block of your apartments, the
private Audience Halls, and the Imperial guest chambers. He feels it is
perfectly safe for the Empress to move through these areas without
guards.”
“This is good news
indeed, Kento-sum. I was going mad being followed everywhere. Please commend
the Guard Commander for his diligence.”
“And, Empress, Lady
Kitsura has arrived.”
“Please, do not
keep her waiting.”
Lady Kento bowed and
disappeared.
Nishima quickly rolled
the scroll and pushed her work table to one side. She gazed out over the fields
again. A message had arrived from Shuyun earlier that morning. He would come to
the Palace that evening and Nishima looked forward to this visit with both
excitement and dread. How long
will he stay?
she asked herself again. The question had become a litany.
Kitsura appeared, bowing
in the opening to the inner rooms.
“Kitsu-sum, you are
as welcome as the arrival of spring and as lovely.”
“Empress, it is
good to see you well.” The eleventh
day of mourning had
passed and the only white Kitsura wore was a sash, in memory of those who were
lost during the recent turmoil and for Lord Shonto, of course. Her robe was
deep green embroidered with a pattern of gold-edged sea shells.
“You have seen your
family, I am told. I trust they are well?”
“It is kind of you
to inquire, cousin. They are indeed well. My family send their highest regards
to the Empress.”
Nishima leaned over and
squeezed her cousin’s arm. “Kitsu-sum, your father—how is he
truly?”
Kitsura gave her cousin a
tight smile, thanking her for her concern, and began to turn a ring on a
finger. “It is true that he is less well than he appeared when I left for
Seh, but he is a miracle, truly, Nishi-sum. Speaking of your ascension, he told
me that Wa has lost a great artist but gained a greater Empress. I think he
wanted you to hear that.”
“Lord Omawara is
too kind.” Nishima felt her heart go out to her cousin, for she had twice
lost a father and knew what it meant. She did not press the matter further.
“Cha,
Kitsu-sum?” Nishima asked, moving the conversation away from the area
that caused her cousin pain. “Or shall we sample some of the
Palace’s fine wines. There is a trove of rare vintages, I am told.
Shokan-sum has said the wine cellar is of greater value than the
treasury.”
“Cha would be
lovely, cousin, thank you—though I would gladly sample your rare wines
another time.”
Nishima clapped for a
servant and asked for cha.
“I was able to
speak with Lady Kento when I arrived,” Kitsura said casually. “She
is determined to find you a suitable husband, Nishima-sum.”
“Me!” Nishima
said, taken aback. “It is you she is searching for.”
“As I
suspected,” Kitsura said, laughing. “I tease, cousin. She said
nothing of husbands for you.” Kitsura tried not to look too pleased with
herself. “Who has my Empress chosen for her loyal and humble
servant.”
“Your Empress has
not yet decided.” Nishima answered, shaking her head at how easily she
had been
tricked. “It will
depend on how loyal and humble the Lady Kitsura is able to demonstrate herself
to be.”
Kitsura laughed. “I
fear for the happiness of my marriage, cousin.”
They both laughed.
“I will admit that
we had not progressed beyond the obvious choices: Shokan-sum and Lord
Komawara.” Nishima eyed her cousin as she said this, wondering what her
reaction might be, but Kitsura showed no sign of what she felt.
Cha arrived and Nishima
shooed the servant out so that she might complete the preparations herself.
“The hero of Wa,
Empress? I did not realize you thought me that loyal and humble.” She
considered for a moment. “Though I would have to live in Sen, far from my
beloved Empress.”
“… and the
pleasures of the Palace,” Nishima added, ladling cha into bowls.
Kitsura’s face
turned suddenly serious. “Meeting Lord Komawara here in the Palace garden
only last autumn, I would never have believed his name would one day be on
everyone’s lips. People kneel down and bow to him in the
streets—peers! I have seen it. Lord Tbshaki, who almost forced Lord
Komawara into a duel in Seh, is now his shadow. And all the young women of the
Empire are mad to meet him. Your first social events will be attended by more
lovesick young women than either of us can imagine.” She held out open
hands and shrugged. “Our shy Lord Komawara. Who ever could have
guessed?” Kitsura sipped her cha. “Of course I tell all the women
who ask that I—that we—saw this in him from the beginning. I admit
that I am a most shameless liar, Empress.”
Nishima stared into her
bowl of cha. ‘ ’Does this mean that you will accept Lord Komawara,
Lady Kitsura?“
Kitsura laughed, but
Nishima thought it was somewhat forced. “I believe our young hero must
make his own choices, Empress.”
Nishima looked out over
the barbarian camp. “Lord Komawara has suffered a serious wound to his
spirit, Lady Kitsura. I am not quite sure what can be done for him.”
“I can think of a
number of things,” Kitsura smiled, “if I am not being too
bold.”
“I was thinking of
something more spiritual, Lady Kitsura.”
“He is a warrior, Nishima-sum.
A spiritual cure may not be what is required.”
Nishima shaded her eyes
and looked out toward the mountains. Was that a dust cloud? She had received
news that morning: the Brothers had met the wandering barbarian army and, with
Lord Taiki’s assistance, convinced them to lay down their arms. Shokan
had been right, the Brotherhood were scrambling to recover from their mistake.
The barbarian force
retreating north on the canal was not faring so well. They were dying in
numbers, leaving a trail of burial mounds behind them. There would not be a
handful left when they crossed the border into their own lands. It was a
terrible thing. The Kalam had returned to the Capital the previous day, sent by
Lord Butto. He was convinced the barbarian army would not surrender. Imagine
such pride, Nishima thought.
Kitsura was speaking
again, and Nishima had not been listening.
“… everyone
says it is so, Nishi-sum. Is this true?”
“I’m sorry
Kitsu-sum, my thoughts wandered. Please excuse me.”
Kitsura looked at Nishima
with some concern but must have been reassured by what she saw, for her concern
faded. “Brother Shuyun? Is it true, as everyone says, that he is the
Teacher?”
Nishima took a moment to
ladle more cha and stir up the embers of the burner. It was the question she
had been avoiding for days, though somehow late at night it became more
persistent and troubled her both waking and dreaming.
“I do not know,
Kitsura-sum. Brother Shuyun denies it, but Tesseko, may Botahara rest her soul,
believed he might be the Teacher and not yet know.”
“What is your own
belief, Nishi-sum? What does your heart tell you?”
“My heart?”
Nishima said, with the tiniest hint of resentment in her voice. “I am an
Empress, cousin, I am not governed by my heart.”
Kitsura was quiet for a
moment, watching her cousin
who stared out toward the
fields, her mood suddenly changed.
“Excuse me,
Kitsu-sum,” she said turning back, catching Kitsura looking at her
closely. “Please accept my apology. It is unworthy of me to become bitter
because of the part I have chosen to play.‘’
Kitsura reached out and
took Nishima’s hand. Her skin was so perfect and soft. “Where will
Shuyun go now? Will he go with Lord Shonto?”
Nishima shook her head.
“Shokan-sum has released him.”
Kitsura pressed
Nishima’s hand. “Then surely he will stay with you.”
Nishima squeezed her eyes
closed.
“Cousin?”
Nishima wanted to give a
neutral answer, but she could not and she felt Kitsura move closer. A hand
rested on her shoulder, stroking her gently. Then Kitsura came still closer and
embraced her. They stayed like that for some time.
“If you marry,
Kitsu-sum, you must promise to remain in the Capital. I cannot bear to lose
anyone else.”
“You have my
word,” Kitsura whispered. “Shuyun-sum is out among the barbarians?”
“He returns this
evening.”
“What may I do,
cousin?”
“Nothing. You have
done so much already. Often, when we traveled on the canal and in Seh, you were
my strength. I have not forgotten.”
“Do you
know,” Kitsura said, and Nishima could hear the smile in her voice,
“Okara-sum told me that we must learn not to compete with one
another?”
“Us, cousin?”
Kitsura nodded.
“But, of course, now you are the Empress and therefore have won
everything. There is nothing left to compete for.”
Nishima did not smile.
“I feel that becoming the Empress has meant more loss than gain.”
Kitsura nodded.
“Okara-sum is wise,
cousin.”
“I agree,”
Kitsura said after a few seconds, “I agree entirely.‘’
Gently they disentangled.
“I am certain that
sovereigns are not supposed to require such coddling,” Nishima said.
“They require
nothing but, cousin. Have you not read the histories? You are the exception in
that you don’t require such treatment all the time.”
The tea had grown cold and
what was in the cauldron was too strong. “I will call for more,”
Nishima said.
“Thank you, cousin,
but—I know it is improper to excuse one’s self from the presence of
the sovereign… My father often awakes in the late afternoon and is strong
enough for a visitor.”
“You must take him
my warmest regards.”
Kitsura bowed low and
with a squeeze of her cousin’s hand slipped into the inner rooms.
Nishima stood and paced
across the balcony. She sat on the rail for a moment, looking out over the
encampment, but then rose and returned to her work table suddenly. Rubbing a
resin stick over her inkstone Nishima began to breathe in rhythm.
When Shokan heard that
Nishima had given her mother’s inkstone to Komawara, he sent her a stone
that had belonged to Lord Shonto. She recognized it immediately. The inkstone
was very old and had seen much use and she adored it.
Nishima added a few drops
of water. Shuyun would not come for some hours. As she had not yet received a
poem from Lord Komawara, she decided to force a response. The Empress would
write to him.
By the time dusk arrived,
Nishima was pleased with the poem she had,composed. But after making many drafts
she chose to send one that showed less skill than the final version. She did
not want to intimidate him entirely. And then she laughed at her own vanity. A
few moments later, however, she convinced herself that she was simply being
considerate of Komawara’s present state. In the future, when the lord had
begun to heal, this would not be required of her.
Nishima read the poem a
last time. She hoped her memory for the verse Komawara had composed in her
father’s garden so long ago was correct.
Distant horizons glimpsed in the autumn
garden
Casting the ancient coins
Among the mist-lilies and new
friendships.
The Boat setting forth
Into uncertain winds
As unwavering as the constant heart.
Does the Open Fan of temptation
Appear to you
Spread against a white sky ?
We all stare into green water
Seeking the passing cloud
Knowing it appears only to the tranquil
soul.
Calling for a lamp and
wax Nishima folded and sealed the poem, then hesitated before she stamped the
soft wax. After a moment of consideration she chose the shinta blossom rather
than the five clawed dragon circling the sun—she had asked Komawara to
help keep a part of her former life alive, after all.
The sun had sunk into a
line of clouds above the distant mountains, appeared briefly in a blaze of copper
between the cloud and the peaks, and then dissolved into embers, leaving the
clouds glowing like hot coals. Nishima turned and watched the scene slowly
fade.
A maid knocked on the
frame to the opening, bowing low.
“Yes,”
Nishima said, distracted.
“Brother Shuyun,
Empress.”
Nishima returned from her
brooding immediately, trying to hide her pleasure from the maid. “Please,
I will see him here.” Quickly she reached over to the cushion Kitsura had
used and pulled it closer.
Although it was hardly
expected of an Empress, Nishima could not stop herself from staring at the
opening, waiting for a glimpse of the monk. She could barely wait to see his
face, as though the answer to the question that had become her litany might be seen
there even before they spoke.
Coming through the
opening, kneeling, Shuyun bowed immediately, hiding his face. The last light of
the day lit the room in a warm, golden light and when the monk rose, his
features appeared softer, less severe than Nish-
ima had come to expect.
And the light seemed to illuminate him, light him from within.
Something has occurred,
Nishima thought. Look at him—he has had a revelation. A feeling akin to
panic began to rise inside her and she struggled not to give in to it.
“Shuyun-sum,”
she said, trying to give her voice warmth, but the words came out of a
constricted throat and sounded so. “Please join me.”
Shuyun came forward with
the grace that always delighted her, and though his manner was as serious as
usual, she sensed a lightness in him that she had not seen before. To her
surprise, Shuyun reached out and took her hand in his own. For a moment she
found herself carefully scrutinized by those eyes that seemed at once ancient
and innocent.
“You are well, my
lady?”
Nishima nodded, her voice
suddenly deserting her. She did not take her gaze away from his eyes, still
looking for the answer to her question.
Shuyun took her hand
between both of his suddenly and she felt a warm tingle of chi-flow. ‘
’Has something distressed you?“
With effort she found her
voice. “I am well, truly. Learning to govern has taken some toll,
perhaps.” She made a gesture as though dismissing this as minor. ‘
’The barbarians have been cured?“
“The healing takes
some time, Nishi-sum. It will be many days yet. But it is not too soon to
consider what will be done with them when they are well.”
Although the conversation
led away from the discussion she desired, Nishima found herself taking it up
with some relief—the news she feared would be delayed. “Kamu-sum
has begun the arrangements. We will send the barbarians north up the canal,
returning them to their own lands.”
Shuyun nodded.
“Excuse me for saying so, but I believe we should do more. We must
establish regular commerce with the tribes and open relations. We must send
ambassadors and gifts when chieftains are named and allow the barbarians to
trade across our border more freely. If we do not…” Shuyun bent his
head toward
the barbarian army,
quickly disappearing in the growing darkness. “We shall have another Khan
one day.”
“I am sure you are
correct, Brother.” Nishima responded. “It will be difficult to
convince the Council that this is the path of wisdom—the anger toward the
barbarians is great—but I will speak to my advisors. There must be a way
to convince the Council.”
“May I also
suggest, Nishima-sum, that the Kalam could become an ambassador between the
tribes and Wa.”
This surprised Nishima
and she felt herself drawn further away from the true questions that she must
ask. “Is it not true that he is obliged stay with you until death ends
his servitude?”
“It is true,
Tha-telor is a strict law, but so much has changed in the world now. I have
spoken to the Kalam at length and he has agreed to act as I have suggested, if
it is the wish of the Empress.” Very quietly Shuyun continued. “The
Kalam realizes now that he cannot follow me on my journey.”
Nishima let out a long
breath, looking down at his hands around her own. “In your eyes I see
that you have made decisions, Shuyun-sum.” Nishima said quietly.
“You will make a journey?”
Shuyun stroked her hand.
“What you see, Nishi-sum, is tranquillity of purpose. Though I have been
told to seek it all my life, it is only now that I have found it. I will seek
the Teacher. It is my place to serve him, as it is yours to rule an
Empire.”
Nishima felt her senses
swirl into confusion—it was like numbness creeping through her body, but
it was not lack of feeling—it was too much. Too much and all at once and
she could not sort those feelings or control them. The reaction was not
unfamiliar, for it felt as though she had learned of yet another death.
“Will we never meet
again?” she managed to say.
“I do not know,
Nishi-sum,” the monk answered. Nishima could hear how gentle his tone had
become. He reached out and took her into his arms, but she remained limp as
though this last blow had robbed her of all remaining strength.
“You are not the
Teacher, then? You know this?”
Nishima felt
Shuyun’s head nod, close beside her own.
“When I first met
Quinta-la, when she prostrated herself and recited a prayer in her own
language. Later I realized some of what she said: he who bears the Word. Among the mountain people there is a seer—an
ancient woman. Your brother spoke to her. She questioned him about me.
”In the ancient scroll that speaks of the coming of the Teacher it also
says that one will come bearing the Word. Botahist scholars have long agreed
that this was another reference to the Teacher, but it is not so.‘’
Nishima felt the monk take a long breath. “It is a reference to me,
Nishima-sum. I will bear the Teacher’s Word. He has sent for me. He sent
for me some time ago and I did not realize it.”
Part of Nishima wanted to
offer an argument, dispute the logic of what he said but another part of her
believed he could not be wrong in this matter.
He walked out into the fields alone and
stopped the barbarian invasion, Nishima told herself. Among the senior Brothers he
inspires both awe and fear and the Sisters have followed him since the day he
arrived in Wa. And now he goes to meet one who has attained perfection—as
though Botahara has been reborn. It is no wonder that I have become unimportant
in his life. How could I think that he would stay with me?
“It is without
question, then,” Nishima said, trying to keep the feeling that she had
been slighted out of her words, “you must leave to seek the
Teacher.”
“Perhaps I have not
yet achieved perfect tranquillity of purpose,” Shuyun said, his voice
tender, “for I do not know how to leave when my heart is here with
you.” Nishima reached up and put her arms around him now, holding him
close. “Then you must stay until you know.” He wants me to release him, she told herself in a flash of
insight.
Shuyun reached up and
traced the curve of her neck with a finger. He did not speak as she expected
him to. Stars were beginning to appear in the sky, and even in the west the
light was all but gone. Nishima began to feel a deep sadness rising out of the
confusion of her emotions, overcoming all else.
It was completely dark
before they spoke again and it was Shuyun who broke the silence. “I wish
to take a gift
to the Teacher, but the
gift I desire is not within my power.“
“If it is something
I may provide, Shuyun-sum, you have but to name it,” Nishima said without
hesitation.
“Then I would ask
you to write a poem.”
“This is the gift
you will take to the Teacher?” She pulled back slightly so she could see
his face in the light of the lamp.
He smiled. “Yes. It
is the gift he will desire, I am certain.”
“Shuyun-sum, this
man is the living evidence of the Way. He is as close to being a god as one can
come. Certainly he does not want a poem from me.”
Shuyun touched his
forehead against her own. “A poem from you is what he desires,” the
monk said firmly.
“But what would I
write? What words could I send to the Teacher?”
“It does not
matter. Write about the sunset or becoming Empress or about your garden. It
only matters that it is from you and that it is signed Nishima-sum.”
“Really,
Shuyun-sum, this is an unusual request, to say the least.”
“Have I asked too
much of you?”
This stopped Nishima for
a second. “No. If it is a poem you desire, I will attempt to write a poem
worthy of one who has reached perfection—as impossible as that may
be.”
Shuyun pressed her close
to him and then, to her surprise, released her, waving toward her writing
table.
“You don’t
expect me to do this now? Really, Shuyun-sum, I must have time to think.”
“You do not need
time to think. Three lines would be adequate. I would venture that one would be
enough.” He smiled again and she began to wonder if he was serious. This
did not seem like an occasion for humor to her.
Throwing up her hands in
resignation, Nishima turned to the table and began to prepare her ink. As she
did so, she felt Shuyun’s fingers begin to explore the intricacies of the
fastenings that held her hair in place. Though this made concentration almost
impossible, Nishima did not want to ask him to stop, for to her it was a sign
that he
felt some sense of
intimacy as she always he hoped he would.
Her hair fell about her
shoulders and cascaded down her back, bringing a smile to her face.
“You are not
focused,” Shuyun said close to her ear. “Your teacher would be
disappointed.”
“You are not
helping, I must tell you.”
He laughed. “I will
leave and let you work in peace.”
“You certainly will
not! You must sit close to me and try not to be too much of a
distraction.”
“I can be as still
as a stone,” he said, and she felt the smile in his voice.
“Well that may be
more than is required.” It took a great deal of will power, but Nishima
removed a piece of mulberry paper from a folder and dipped her brush in ink.
Even a few years without change
Lull the mind
And then in a day
The world changes utterly.
Heroes appear
And legends come to life.
Things immutable are transformed:
War turns to peace, despair becomes joy
The living die
And are born again.
“You are
finished?” Shuyun asked.
“Finished? I have
hardly begun.”
“Let me see,”
the monk said and then leaned forward to read over her shoulder. “Nishi-sum,
it is perfect.”
“It is perfectly
awful. I will need hours to make this a poem.”
“No. Do not change
a word. That is the poem I will take to the Teacher. You must sign it as I
said.”
“But Shuyun-sum, I
would be ashamed to have anyone see this. And now you ask me to sign it in a
familiar form. This seems most unconventional.”
Shuyun put a hand on her
shoulder. “The Teacher is not as other men. Do not judge him according to
the standards of the Empire. Please, sign.”
Shaking her head, Nishima
did as he asked, wondering
if the culture of the
Botahist monks was perhaps more different than she had formerly imagined. She
blew gently on the ink until it dried.
“Now you must fold
it as gateway,” Shuyun instructed.
Through resisting,
Nishima did as she was asked, handing it to Shuyun as she finished. “I
hope your Teacher will not think me as poor an Empress as I am a poet.”
Shuyun smiled, putting
the poem into his sleeve pocket.
The night was growing
cool, as nights usually did in the late spring. Nishima reached out, touching
Shuyun’s wrist, then slid her hand up his sleeve past the elbow, feeling
the warmth there.
“Now you must do a
favor for me,” she said.
“I am your
servant,” he answered, his tone serious.
Rising, Nishima drew the
monk up with her and, taking him in tow, she walked into the inner room. She
opened a screen and entered the sleeping room. There was no lamp lit here and
only the starlight through the open shojis gave the scene light.
Releasing Shuyun’s
hand, she undid the complex knot at her back and unwound her sash. When she had
done this, the monk helped her remove her outer robes until she wore only a
single layer of silk. She felt the questions that consumed her being pushed aside
by growing desire. When she reached out to untie Shuyun’s sash, her
fingers were not inclined to obey and her breath was short.
Pulling back the quilts,
they almost tumbled into bed. Nishima slipped out of her robe almost
immediately and pressed herself as close to him as she could manage.
“If you did not
spend the night resisting me,” Nishima said close to his ear,
“I’m certain you would not be in such a hurry to leave. You might
spend a few days more, at least.”
“I fear that this
is so,” Shuyun answered.
They lay close for a
moment more and Nishima realized that she was not alone in having lost her
breath. She kissed the soft place at the corner of his eye and his mouth found
hers. For the first time, he returned her kiss. Nishima thought she felt a strange
sensation, almost vertigo, and then she realized that a kiss became endless
and her skin was alive to
the touch as it had never been before. Strong currents of emotion and energy
and chi seemed to flow through her. For a second she felt panic begin to touch
her, but it was swept away by a wave of tenderness and she abandoned herself to
the feeling without hesitation.
Much later, Nishima lay
bathed in the warmth of her companion.
“I do not want to
sleep. I want to say everything that is in my heart though I do not know where
to begin to find the words.”
Shuyun kissed her neck.
“There are no words. Everything has been said.”
Despite her desire to
stay awake, Nishima could not and she fell into an untroubled, dreamless sleep.
A breeze moved her hair
and this finally awoke her. It was early morning, but completely light. She lay
completely still for a moment, lost in memories and pleasure, and then turned
to find her lover.
But Shuyun was not there.
Where… she began to ask herself when awareness came. Burying her face in
the quilt she lay very still, as though moving would alter everything for ever.
If she could just not move…
A bell sounded and
Nishima opened her eyes to the light. On a table at the bedside lay a brocade
bag containing something angular. She sat up and found the most delicate blue
seashell on top of this and in the cup of the shell a bit of white paper had
been placed so that it could not blow away. On this was written a single
character which meant she who
renews. My heart
will break, she found herself thinking, my heart will surely break.
Setting the shell upon
the pillow, Nishima took the brocade bag and opened it, finding a plain wooden
box inside.
It is the blossom of the
Udumbara, she realized. For a moment she did not know what to do but then, with
great care, she set the box aside and rose from the bed. She found her robes
and slipped them on, belting them loosely. Taking up the box in both hands,
Nishima went out onto the balcony.
She perched herself on
the rail with her back against
a pillar and forced
herself to be calm. Performing a breathing exercise taught to her by Brother
Satake helped.
Finally, when her spirit
was as calm as she could make it, when the pang of Shuyun’s leaving was a
sweet sadness not a sorrow, she opened the box.
To her great surprise she
did not find a sacred blossom inside but a white butterfly, tinged with the
faintest purple. It fanned its wings slowly and then, in a single motion, took
to the air. It circled about the balcony once, then rose on a current, descended
again, and then fluttered off into the garden where it was soon lost from
sight. Nishima watched long after it had gone, hoping for a last glimpse, but
it did not reappear and she leaned her head back against the pillar and closed
her eyes.
My heart is both broken
and full of joy, she told herself. I do not know whether to cry or laugh.
Opening her eyes she
realized that a perfect paper shinta blossom lay on the silk of the wooden case
and she set the case on the rail and took it up. After a moment of searching,
she found the key and began to unfold the blossom. In the heart of the paper
flower she found a single line of characters written in Shuyun’s
beautiful flowing hand.
Beyond the future lies a future in which
we cannot be separated.
She thought of the
butterfly flying out of the case and she smiled.
“Things are never
what one expects,” Nishima said to herself, and she laughed. She laughed
until tears ran down her cheeks.
The guards led the
Empress along a path paved in stones. They stopped at a simple wooden gate
under a small arch and tile roof. Very quickly, one of the guards passed
through the gate and when he returned four other guards came with him. This man
nodded to the senior officer who in turn knelt and bowed to the Empress. The
garden was secure.
Nishima went through the
open gate and heard it close behind her.
It is a day for partings,
she told herself.
A few steps into the
garden Nishima stopped to look out to the north over the large encampment of
the tribes. She knew he was not there, but still her eyes searched for a moment
among the thousands of tiny figures before she turned away.
A few more paces brought
her to the shrine and she knelt on a mat that had been placed for her. Into the
face of an uncut stone had been chiseled the name character Shimeko.
Nishima offered up a
silent prayer to Botahara and then one also to the Teacher.
We will never know, Nishima thought, we will never know if you fell into their hands
without intending to or whether you chose to take your terrible weapon out
among our enemies so that others might live. When I think of your fate,
Shimeko-sum, I am gripped by its horror. Among all the brave, all the heroes of
this pointless war, you alone went into battle without armor, without
protection. Only you risked the destruction of your spirit. May Botahara rest
you and protect your soul.
Nishima offered up a long
prayer for forgiveness and then rose and went to her duties.
Sixty-six
They had slipped out of
the city at dawn, all three in disguise, and set out across country until they
found the narrow road they sought. Only then did they throw back their hoods to
the sunlight—a warrior, a monk, and a barbarian tribesman.
There was no indication
that they hurried to an appointed time or place—in truth, their pace
seemed almost leisurely. They stopped, it appeared, whenever whim struck and
often finished their day’s travel before sunset. In a time when a
significant portion of the population of Wa were on the roads and canals,
returning or moving to places where they would begin their lives again, these
three travelers hardly stood out. Except that they did not seem to be driven to
reach their destination as others did.
Of course the area the
three traveled through was not flooded with refugees the way the northern canal
and roads were aswarm with people returning to homes, or even the way the roads
to the south and the west were filled with people seeking places to begin anew.
The three set their course north by east and encountered few as they went.
Shuyun knelt cross-legged
on a mat by the edge of the stream. He had spent an hour in meditation upon the
sunlight falling through the leaves as the wind moved among the trees. He
watched the beauty of the movement and patterns as though they were dance.
Two dozen paces up the
stream bank Komawara sat bent over a letter, reading. Shuyun had seen the lord
take this same paper from his sleeve several times, to pore over it as he did
now, but Komawara did not speak of this and Shuyun felt it would be the worst
manners to inquire.
Shuyun was certain he saw
the beginnings of healing in Komawara, just a glimmer, but there, nonetheless.
He carries wounds as deep as any cut by a sword, Shuyun thought. One cannot
expect him to heal overnight.
What Nishima had done,
the gifts that she had given the young lord, showed great wisdom, Shuyun
thought. There was no question in Shuyun’s mind that Nishima was the
ruler that Wa needed in this time. Thinking of the Empress brought a sense of
warmth and joy. She was my teacher, he thought, though she did not know it.
He turned his attention
back to the light dappling the ferns and the forest floor across the stream. The Illusion, he had been taught and it had taken some time to
learn what that truly meant. He had labored under so many
misapprehensions—it made him wonder what was truly written in the scrolls
of Botahara.
The sound of the lightest
of footsteps sounded in the soft undergrowth and Shuyun turned to find the
Kalam bearing bowls of cha. With a bow, the tribesman set one on the edge of
Shuyun’s mat and then turned and took a second bowl to Komawara.
Shuyun caught the
lord’s eye then and waved an invitation. Folding his letter, Komawara
came and found a place on the corner of the monk’s mat. Yes, there it
was, around the eyes and the mouth, signs that Komawara was emerging through
the bitterness and anger.
Shuyun noticed that the
lord did not carry a sword in his sash, and had not during their
journey—highly unusual for a warrior of Seh. Of course, Komawara did keep
a blade strapped to his saddle, but Shuyun had not seen him touch it yet. The
Kalam removed the sword at each stop and kept it close at hand for the
lord’s use. There were brigands abroad in Wa, and many inclined to
honesty were being forced to this life. But all the same Komawara chose not to
carry a blade.
“We might reach the
foot of the mountain this afternoon, Brother, it is not as far off as it
appears.”
Shuyun nodded.
“Yes. In the morning I must proceed alone, Samyamu-sum, though I will
miss your company.”
“I fear my company
has been poor, Shuyun-sum. I apologize for this.”
Shuyun met the
lord’s gaze for a moment, searching
his eyes. “Lord Komawara,
do you suggest that one who will serve the Teacher would speak anything but the
truth?” he said, his tone mock-serious.
Komawara grinned.
“Please excuse me, Brother. I meant to imply no such thing. But, in
truth, I think my company has been less than joyful.”
“Perhaps, but it
has given me great joy even so. After our other journeys together, this one has
certainly been the most pleasant.”
Komawara gave a short
laugh. “What, Brother, you did not feel great joy climbing the walls of
Denji Gorge in the darkness? The legends will no doubt say that you did.”
Shuyun grimaced.
“It is your legend, Lord Komawara, that will speak of
fearlessness.”
“Huh,”
Komawara sipped his cha. “That is one of the many things I fear, Brother.
On the walls of Denji Gorge I was as terrified as I can remember being, yet no
song will tell that part of the tale.” And then quieter. “No play
will show the regret I feel for the lives I have taken.”
Shuyun stared at the
lord’s face, watching the anguish return. “I have taken a life as
well, Samyamu-sum. Lord Botahara was once a great general. The spirit can rise
above all things—it is possible. Do not think that your soul will carry
this stain forever—it can be cleansed. You are not a simple warrior,
Samyamu-sum, able to follow the way of the sword without question. It is the
terrible thing about war; it sends the most innocent into the field and strips
their souls bare of this innocence. We have both seen it. Lord Shonto, Lady
Nishima, Jaku Katta, you—we have all played parts in this terrible war.
None have escaped unscathed.
“Duty requires much
of us all. Of some it requires a life of drudgery. To rise above that is as
difficult as it is to rise above what you have done in the performance of your
duties. Yet souls of great enlightenment have arisen from the poorest
circumstances. I have faith that you will rise above this, Samyamu-sum, though
it may be as difficult as all the other feats you are celebrated for.”
Komawara took a long
breath. “Thank you, Shuyun-sum. It is my hope that you are right, as you
have been in so many other matters.”
The Kalam came and sat on
a rock a pace away, sip-
ping his cha silently.
The three stayed like that into the afternoon, preserving their company as long
as possible.
The next morning found
the three travelers at the base of the Mountain of the Pure Spirit. They rode
along a road that wound through a woods of birch and pine and golden slip
maple.
They did not speak as
they rode, for there was little left to be said. They had survived their
travels in the desert and the war fought the length of the Grand Canal-words
could not begin to say what these things meant. Riding out with Shuyun on the
beginning of his journey said all that was required.
At length they came to a
shrine at the road’s edge. The road narrowed here and began to rise more
steeply. As though this was a sign, Shuyun stopped and turned his horse so that
he faced his companions.
“I must go alone
from here, Samyamu-sum.”
The monk could see the
young lord struggling as he had often watched the Kalam do—looking for
the correct words. In this case, Shuyun thought, none would be found.
“May Botahara
journey at your side, Samyamu-sum,” Shuyun said.
With an effort, Komawara
managed to speak in a whisper. “May Botahara chant your name,
Brother.”
Shuyun reached out and
touched the lord’s arm. “He has, Lord Komawara. He has.” The
monk smiled.
Turning to the Kalam, he
spoke to the tribesman in the language of the desert, the tribesman bobbing his
head at almost every word. The monk reached into his sleeve then and removed
something that he placed in the Kalam’s hand. The final words Shuyun said
left the tribesman utterly still and silent.
With a bow that the
others returned, Shuyun turned his horse and began to climb up into the trees.
At a point where he was about to disappear into the woods, Shuyun turned his
horse and waved once to his companions. And then he was gone from sight.
It was a small gesture,
but it gladdened Komawara’s heart more than he could have guessed.
The lord and the
tribesman turned their horses back the way they had come, riding knee to knee.
It was sev-
eral rih before
Komawara’s curiosity got the better of him.
“If I may
ask,” the lord said, “what was Shuyun-sum’s gift?”
The barbarian dug into a
pouch at his waist and held out his hand. On his palm lay a deep blue stone,
the kind one might find in the bed of river—smooth and regular in shape.
“It is the soul of
a butterfly, Lord Komawara,” the Kalam said with apparent awe.
“Brother Shuyun said to me I would one day see that this was so.”
“Then that is no
doubt true,” Komawara responded and the two men rode on through the late
spring day, lost in their own thoughts.
Shuyun gave his horse to
three monks that he met, and this unexpected generosity allowed him to pass on
without also giving them his name. The road wound up through the trees, past
temples and monasteries belonging to both the Sisterhood and the Order to which
Shuyun had once belonged. There were many shrines and, like all good seekers,
Shuyun stopped at each one and offered a prayer.
Rather than sleep in the
lodgings provided for seekers near the monasteries and temples Shuyun slept out
under the sky, wrapped in the single blanket in which, during the day, he
carried a bowl and a few things required for him to act as a healer.
With each step up the
sacred mountain the monk felt he was breaking free of the earth, rising up onto
a different plane. Summer clouds sailed in from the ocean and occasionally one
seemed to attach itself to the mountain, clinging there until it stretched
itself out in the wind like a torn banner, then it would break its bond and
sail free.
They come to me, Shuyun
laughed to himself, the Gatherer of Clouds. Like the Brother in the ancient
play, it is my place to gather together the nebulous, the ambiguous. I will
dispel the Illusion, if only for a few.
On the second day Shuyun
came to the shrine he sought—the place where Botahara had given up his
army and renounced all property, the place mentioned in the scroll Shuyun had
received from Brother Hitara. Here the
monk found a place on a
large rock and began to fast and meditate. The shrine was just above the tree
line and only a few of the most hardy trees survived here. Though few in
number, these mountain pines were very old and each had been given a name, for
they had been there a thousand years before when the Perfect Master had walked
over these very stones.
Many seekers came to this
shrine but few spoke to Shuyun, for most had taken vows of silence and assumed
the same of others.
On the third day of
Shuyun’s fast, the monk he awaited appeared at last. Seeing Shuyun, he
approached, bowing in the manner of the Botahist Brothers.
“May the Perfect
Master walk beside you, Brother Hitara,” Shuyun said.
“May the Teacher
greet you by name, Brother Shuyun.”
The monk Shuyun had met
in the desert perched on the edge of the rock.
“It is my hope,
Brother Hitara, that you have come to show me the Way.”
“Only the Teacher
can do that, Brother—the Teacher and his bearer. But I will guide you
some short distance.”
Shuyun gave a deep bow in
answer. They set off, passing between two tall stones set like gate posts on
the stark landscape. The gray bones of the mountain were exposed here and
interrupted only occasionally by dusky-green lichen beds.
As they passed the
western shoulder of the peak itself, Shuyun was given a view of the Empire
stretching off into the distance. He was above the clouds now and could see the
masses of white, each trailing a shadow across the land, as they rolled off
toward the western horizon. The Grand Canal was a silver thread pulled straight
across the landscape and the Imperial Capital was a mound of white stones,
stark against the greens of the land and the blues of the lake. Shuyun stopped
for a moment, and Brother Hitara walked on a few paces to leave him in peace.
It was an easy thing to
fill himself with the presence of Nishima and he did so now—her humor,
her tenderness, her open spirit. Raising his hand at last as though
he waved to someone far
off, the monk turned and followed Hitara.
“Good-bye, my
teacher,” he whispered, “I go to meet another.”
At dusk they had passed
around the shoulder of the mountain and Shuyun felt that they were in the
mountains proper now, for there was no sight of the Empire. They made a camp
after dark and meditated on the stars until a moon appeared and then they
continued, walking a narrow ridge that twisted and rolled like a stem of lintel
vine. By daylight they had gone many rih.
Brother Hitara was also
fasting, so they stopped only occasionally to drink. The late-spring sun beat
down, but the air remained cool and there was always a breeze from the sea,
making their relentless pace bearable. Toward the end of the second day Shuyun
realized that only his Botahist-trained memory would allow him to retrace their
route, so twisted was it, so devoid of distinguishing marks.
Working down a scree
slope late in the day, Brother Hitara began to search along the face of a
cliff. After some searching he located a break in the rock that could not be
seen from even a few feet away. Through this they came upon a ledge wide enough
for two to walk abreast. It wound up around the side of the cliff, its slope
gradual, disappearing into a white cloud that clung to the mountain side. The
stone here appeared to have seen so many generations of men pass along it that
it was worn completely smooth.
Hitara stood gazing along
the pathway with a look of satisfaction as though reassured somehow that it was
still here or that he had been able to find it. “You must not wear your
sandals here, Brother Shuyun—for you this is the beginning of the Way.
Give a prayer of thanks each time your sole touches the stone, for few have
walked this path.”
“Brother
Hitara,” Shuyun said. “My gratitude cannot be expressed.”
Hitara looked at him
oddly then, almost quizzically. “Brother Shuyun, certainly the honor is
mine. I have taken some small part in the completion of a prophesy. With each
breath I thank Botahara for this. Few can say
as much.“ He raised
his hands to encompass the whole world. ”What more can I ask of this
life?“
He knelt down and kissed
the smooth stone that began the path, then rose and bowed to Shuyun. “We
shall meet again, Brother Shuyun. May the Teacher bless you.”
“I must thank you
for delivering His message, though I confess it took some months before I
realized.
‘ ’It grows
dark, Brother, will you not make camp with me until morning?“ Suddenly
Shuyun felt it odd to be abandoned. The path he had sought for so long seemed
more daunting than he had imagined.
Hitara waved up the
slope. “The moon will light my way, Brother Shuyun, for I have many tasks
to perform. I would suggest you wait until daylight before you proceed,
however. The Way is narrow.” Bowing again, Hitara began to make his way
lightly up the loose rock.
Finding a flat stone,
Shuyun sat and began to meditate. Later, in the moonlight, he chanted, his
voice echoing among the mountains as though he were a hundred men.
At the first hint of
light he rose and removed his sandals. Like Hitara, he knelt and kissed the
stone before placing a foot upon it. If there had been water, he would have
bathed his feet.
The pathway led up the
shoulder of the mountain until it entered a draw between that mountain and the
next. Shuyun passed over the ridge that lay here, glad to find a stream of cool
water. The path then followed the narrow ridge, the stone sloping off on both
sides into green valleys far below. To his right Shuyun could see a small lake
the color of turquoise.
At the end of the day the
monk found a tiny rivulet of water that wound down the steep mountainside. A
rough stone shrine stood here and Shuyun spent the night as he had before, in prayer.
He set out again at dawn
and followed the narrow path as it wound its way deeper into the ancient
mountains. Here and there a twisted pine sprang up impossibly from the desert
of stone, and now and then he found a pond of clear water. Nowhere did he see
signs that others had passed this way, no remains of fires or camps, yet the
pathway remained as obvious and clear as a road in the
Capital. Who has passed
this way? Shuyun asked himself. How could there have been so many?
On the third day, the
sixth of his fast, he came into a hanging valley suspended between three
mountains, and here there was enough accumulation of soil that both grass and
trees grew—tall narrow firs of a type Shuyun had never seen. Rounding a
massive boulder Shuyun surprised a Botahist Sister. Immediately she recovered.
She smiled and bowed, making signs of welcome, but she said nothing. In a
basket she gathered the cones of the pine trees and some small plant that
Shuyun did not know. Obviously, she had taken a vow of silence, so the monk
smiled and passed her by, following the pathway.
This valley is my
destination, he realized, the awareness surfacing in him as though it was
knowledge he had always possessed. The Teacher is here.
He skirted the shore of a
tiny lake, and walked through a stand of trees. Here, without warning he came
upon a small, roughly built house surrounded by a fence of un-planed boards.
Two Brothers knelt at the
gate and they bowed low when Shuyun came into view, showing less surprise at
the arrival of a stranger than had the foraging Sister. One rose immediately
and slipped through the gate.
The Order’s missing Brothers, Shuyun said to himself. Brother
Hitara is one of these. The great mystery to the Botahist Brotherhood. They
came to serve the Teacher. But how did they know? How did they find Him? Had
they received messages like the one Shuyun had received from Hitara? Knowing
where the Brothers had come did not solve the mystery.
Realizing the remaining
monk did not intend to speak, Shuyun turned and gazed out over the lake,
breathing in the scents of the valley that drifted on the cool breeze. It was a
fine perfume.
/ have found Him, Shuyun thought, feeling his spirit lift as though it
took wing on the breeze. We have waited a thousand years…
“Brother
Shuyun.” It was a woman’s voice.
The monk turned to find a
Sister regarding him with obvious interest. She was older, though nowhere near
as old as the Prioress, and her bearing was that of a woman Shuyun’s age.
“May you be welcome
in our home,” she said in a voice as youthful as her movement. “It
is a place of great peace.”
“I feel that I have
arrived, Sister, but I do not know where.”
When the woman smiled,
the wrinkles at the corners of her eyes made them appear delightfully
mischievous and Shuyun could not help but smile at this contrast.
“This valley, this
lake, they have no names.” She waved up the slope behind the house.
“Nor is this mountain named. It is the home of the Teacher, kept ready
for hundreds of years. And now he has come. Please, Brother, walk with
me.”
Shuyun followed her into
a garden, stretching his time sense as he stepped through the gate to make the
moment last. A gravel path led to the porch of the house but the nun did not go
there. She took a second path, that wound among trees Shuyun could not name,
and came to a second gate. She opened this gently, peering inside, then held it
wide for her guest. “He awaits you, Brother.”
Shuyun was suddenly
light-headed and he forced control over himself with great discipline. When he
passed through the gate, the nun did something he did not expect—she
reached out and touched him. It was not a gesture of affection or reassurance,
she simply wanted to touch him. / am the bearer of the Word, Shuyun thought. I am part of a prophesy.
Stepping through the
gate, Shuyun swept the garden with his gaze but saw no one. He stood for a
moment, offering up a prayer, and then he began to walk along the path, his
bare feet alive in every nerve as though the holiness of the earth flowed like
chi.
The garden was small,
large stones set among trees and unusual shrubs. The elevation no doubt imposed
limits on what could be grown, giving the garden a sense of sparseness. All the
same, this was a garden of great artistry and Shuyun drank in every detail.
Rounding a boulder, he
found a man sitting on a cushion on a low, flat stone that formed a natural
dais. Before this was an area of raked gravel. Shuyun stopped suddenly, unable
to proceed. The Teacher bent over a scroll. He dressed in the man-
ner of Shuyun’s own
Order including a pendant and purple sash. He was not as old as many monks
Shuyun had known and this was a surprise, though it should not have been. The
Teacher appeared to have seen perhaps seventy-five years in this lifetime,
though Shuyun was sure that was at least ten short of the truth. He was of
average size with little about him, physically, to mark him. Perhaps his eyes
were wider apart than most and his cheekbones higher, making his face appear
less round than common among the people of Wa.
The Teacher looked up and
smiled at Shuyun, a smile like the Prioress Saeja’s—full of
compassion, though touched by humor and the perspective of great age—many
lifetimes in this case.
“Welcome,”
the Teacher said, his voice melodic. In that single word Shuyun was certain he
heard an echo of both Lord Shonto and Lady Nishima.
Gesturing as he began to
roll the scroll, the Teacher invited Shuyun to come forward.
Unsure of what was
expected, Shuyun chose to walk, though he knelt and bowed three paces from the
rock dais.
For several minutes the
Teacher did not take his eyes off the young monk before him and his expression
of great pleasure did not change. Somehow Shuyun felt like a favored son
returning after a long absence.
“Brother Shuyun, it
is with great joy that we welcome you into our home.”
“The honor is mine
entirely… Brother Satake.”
The older man’s
face lit up in a great smile. “Motoru-sum would never have told
you.”
“He did not,
Brother.”
The Teacher laughed.
“You will be most welcome. I only regret that I will stay but a short
time.”
Not quite sure what was
meant by this, Shuyun searched for something to say. “I bring you a gift,
Brother Satake,” Shuyun said. He felt his spirit calming as though he
were in the presence of someone he had known a very long time.
“It is most kind,
Brother Shuyun, though I have need of nothing.”
“It is a poem,
Brother.”
“Ah! A poem is
always welcome.”
Reaching into his sleeve,
Shuyun found the mulberry paper. He leaned forward to place it on the dais, but
Satake reached out and took it from his hand. Slowly the Teacher unfolded it
and read, the look on his face made Shuyun believe that never had the Teacher
received anything that delighted him more. He finished reading, and then he
laughed his laugh of great joy.
“Nishi-sum, Nishi-sum,”
he said, as though the Empress were there in the garden with them. Brother
Satake looked up. “This gift brings me great joy, Brother Shuyun. I thank
you. She is well?”
Shuyun nodded.
“How I miss her at
times,” the Teacher said with feeling.
Shuyun nodded. “I
fear I shall say the same.” The Teacher regarded him again,
unembarrassed, it seemed, to do this. “It has been many centuries since a
follower of the Eightfold Path walked the roads of Wa, Brother Shuyun.”
Shuyun broke away from
the man’s gaze with some effort. “I am not sure what the Eightfold
Path is, Brother Satake, but I have wandered far from the path taught by my
Order.”
The Teacher’s face
became grave. “You rode to war beside my former charge, Motoru-sum; were
stripped of your pendant and ejected from your Order; met the barbarian threat;
and took an Empress as your lover—all in the few months since you left
Jinjoh Monastery?”
Shuyun did not know what
to answer. Though the charges were most serious, the Teacher’s tone
seemed to lighten with each word.
Satake laughed suddenly.
“I spent decades accomplishing less, Brother.” He smiled his
beautiful smile. “Perhaps only Botahara has lived more fully before
finding His true purpose.” The Teacher laughed again. “Nishi-sum,
Nishi-sum,” he said as though he chastised a favored child, “my own
bearer.”
Brother Satake regarded
Shuyun again and the humor in the man’s eyes seemed to shine through.
“Here we have labored on other pursuits, Brother.” He gestured to
the scroll he had been reading. “We true-copy Botahara’s great
work.”
Shuyun looked up, certain
he had let his surprise show. “How, Brother?”
He was not sure this
question did not bring a glint of pleasure to the old man’s eyes.
“There are Faithful even among the Botahist Brothers, Shuyun-sum. Even
among the hypocrites and liars. The scrolls have been in the possession of the
faithful for some years.
“So we have
labored. It is a task more difficult than one would think, for the language has
changed and grown—but my special knowledge of the past has allowed us to
come near to the end of this. The Word of Botahara as it must be known.”
He smiled at Brother Shuyun. “And the word of Satake as I have written
it.” He hefted the scroll he had been reading as if demonstrating its weight.
“The word you will bear. Your way will be hard, Brother, never doubt
it.”
Shuyun stared openly at
the scroll in Satake held. The
hand of Botahara, so close I could reach out and touch
it.
Suddenly his face became
serious. “You have not yet stopped the sand, Brother Shuyun.”
“I have not,
Brother Satake,” Shuyun admitted. “I confess that I am
afraid.”
The Teacher nodded,
understanding in his eyes. “As was I, Brother Shuyun.” He set the
scroll down gently and wrapped it in brocade. “Tell me what it is you
have learned from your teachers, the Shonto.”
Yes, Shuyun thought, it
is as I believed. Nishima was my teacher as was her father. “I have
learned much, Brother Satake… and perhaps I have learned nothing. I do
not know.‘’
The Teacher did not
answer but gave his full attention to the young monk, waiting.
Shuyun stared down at the
gravel for a moment as though studying the patterns there, looking for order
among the randomness of the world. “It is the Illusion, Brother Satake:
what I was taught did not ring of truth. The world, it is not illusion, it is a
plane on which our spirits take form. I was taught that believing in the
Illusion would lead to great sorrow, and that joy and pleasure were not
real—things meant only to trap us in an endless cycle of rebirth into the
world of Illusion.” He looked up suddenly. “But I now believe this
was wrong. Joy and
pleasure are as real as
pain and sorrow and one must learn what they have to teach, just as a Neophyte
Brother must learn the Form. The Illusion exists in the minds of those who do
not truly believe they can progress beyond that plane onto another, who do not
know that there is a lesson to be learned. To progress beyond the world one
must give it up, finally. It will not disappear the day this is done—one
must still come to completion before one leaves it behind. The world will exist
for all the souls to come. But one must break free of the Illusion, perceive
the path to the next plane. I say this though I have not done so, Brother
Satake.“
The Teacher smiled and
Shuyun felt like a student who had pleased his Master. “You have other
duties, Brother. Your time will come.” He waved toward the mountains.
“When I am no longer among you, Shuyun-sum, you must go to the faithful.
The mountain people await you as the tribes of the desert await the rains. It
will be the beginning of your long task, Brother Shuyun. Your path will
eventually lead you among the hypocrites and liars-some whom you will know by
name.” He looked up at a passing cloud. “You will be the Bearer,
Shuyun-sum, you will be the Gatherer.” He smiled upon Shuyun, a smile of
great peace. “Botahara will walk beside you.”
I have gone to the base of the Sacred
Mountain And watched him ride up among the clouds, He of the tranquil soul.
Turning back then, My soul was a raging
torrent But tonight I dream of dark eyes Above the fan’s edge.
If peace can restore an Empire Will it
not a man’s spirit?
Lord Komawara Samyamu, Consort to the
Empress Shigei
The End
I
I