James Clavell - Gai-Jin
Page 125
"Thank all gods rich and poor, I successfully married her to a goshi so her children are samurai, she already has one son, but eeee, her husband is expensive!" Meikin shook her head from side to side, then laughed. "But I should not complain, I only convert the worthless dribbles of a few rich old men into a heritage we never dreamed possible. Neh?"
The sound of footsteps mingled with their laughter.
A tap on the shoji. "Mistress?"
"Yes, Tsuki-chan?"
The maiko slid the door aside a crack and, on her knees, peered up at them with an innocent smile. "So sorry, but Shoya
Ryoshi, the village Elder, begs to see you and your guest."
Raiko's eyebrows arced. "My guest?"
"Yes, Mistress."
Meikin frowned. "Does he usually greet visitors?"
"Only the most important and no doubt you are most important, your presence honors us all. Certainly he would have been told of your arrival. His web of informants is far-reaching,
Meikin-chan, he is absolutely to be trusted
--and also head of the Gyokoyama in Yokohama.
Shall we see him?"
"Yes, but only for a moment. I will pretend a headache then we can continue our chat until the evening meal."
"Little one," Raiko ordered, "bring the shoya here, but first tell maids to bring fresh tea and hot sak`e--and to take these glasses away and hide my brandy. Meikin-chan, if he knew
I had such a source he would be a daily pest!"
It was quickly done and the table made clean and perfect, their breath cleansed with herbs, before he was bowed in. "Please excuse me, Ladies," he said with untoward anxiety, kneeling and bowing and being bowed to. "Please excuse my bad manners arriving without an appointment but I wanted to bow to such an august person and welcome her to my village."
Both were surprised that he appeared so forbidding, for this was not a serious occasion. Meikin had never met him before but her own Gyokoyama official had mentioned him and that he was a man of integrity, so her reply was as polite and enthusiastic as befitted an eminent person from the biggest city in the world, complimenting him on the state of the
Yoshiwara, and the little she had seen of the village.
"You are a man of great reputation, shoya."
"Thank you, thank you."
"Tea, or sak`e?" Raiko asked.
He hesitated, began to talk, stopped. The mood in the room changed. Raiko spoke into the silence. "Please excuse me, shoya, but what is the matter?"
"So sorry..." He turned to Meikin,
"So sorry, Lady, you are a most cherished client for our company. I, I..." Shakily he reached into his sleeve and handed her the little piece of paper. She squinted at it. "What is it? What does it say? I cannot read writing so small."
"It's a carr... carrier pigeon message." The shoya tried to speak again, could not, numbly pointing at the paper.
Jolted, Raiko took it and moved to the light. Her eyes scanned the tiny writing. She blanched, wavered almost fainting, and sank to her knees. "It says, An assassination attempt on Lord Yoshi at dawn at
Hamamatsu village failed. Lone shishi assassin slain by him. Lady Koiko also dead in skirmish. Inform House of Wisteria our great sadness. More information soon as possible. Namu
Amida Butsu..."
Meikin had gone sallow. She mouthed,
Koiko dead?
"It must be a mistake," Raiko cried out in anguish, "Must be! Koiko dead? When did it happen? There's no date! Shoya, how did you
... It must be lies, must be lies..."
"So sorry, the date is in code at the top," he mumbled. "This happened yesterday, near dawn. The Tokaid@o way station,
Hamamatsu. No mistake, Lady, oh no, so sorry."
"Namu Amida Butsu! Koiko?
Koiko's dead?"
Meikin looked at her blankly, tears pouring down her cheeks, and fainted.
"Maids!"
They came running and brought smelling salts and cold towels and ministered to her and to Raiko as she tried to collect herself, groping to discover how this would affect her. For the first time she was uncertain if
Meikin was now to be trusted or had become a hazard to be avoided.
The shoya knelt motionlessly. It had been necessary, and was still necessary for him to pretend to be frightened and aghast to be the bringer of bad tidings, but he was glad to be alive to witness these amazing happenings.
He had not given them the second slip of paper. It was private to him and in code and read:
Assassin was Sumomo. Koiko believed to be implicated in plot, wounded with shuriken, then beheaded by Yoshi. Prepare to close Meikin accounts. Avoid mentioning Sumomo. Guard
Hiraga as a national treasure, his information is invaluable. Press him for more, his family is being refinanced as agreed. We urgently require gai-jin war plans at whatever cost.
The moment he had received the message he had checked his books for Meikin's accounts that his branch owed her, even though he knew the amount to the hundredth part of a bronze coin. No need to worry. When she was moved onwards by Lord
Yoshi, or if she wriggled out of the trap, either way the bank would profit. If she failed, another mama-san would take her place--they would use her residual wealth to sponsor the replacement. The Gyokoyama monopolized all Yoshiwara banking--an immense and permanent source of revenue.
How ironic life is, he thought, wondering what these two would think if they knew the reason for
Gyokoyama's unbreakable hold. One of the most inner secrets of their zaibatsu was that their founder was not only a mama-san, but a woman of genius.
In the early 1600's, with the enthusiastic approval of Sh@ogun Toranaga, she designed a walled district where, in future, all of Yedo's Pleasure Houses, high and low, had to conduct their business exclusively-- at that time brothels were spread all over the city-- calling it the Yoshiwara, the Place of Reeds, after the area Toranaga had allocated to her.
Next she created a new class of courtesan, geisha, those trained and qualified in the arts, who were not, routinely, available for pillowing.
Then she began moneylending, concentrating on
Yedo's Yoshiwara, soon to spread her tentacles to all others as they were institutionalized throughout the land, Sh@ogun Toranaga wisely having foreseen that in such districts the purveyors, and their clients, would be more easily monitored, and taxed.
Lastly, incredible in those days, somehow or another--no one still knew how--she persuaded
Sh@ogun Toranaga to make her eldest son samurai. In short order her other sons prospered: in shipbuilding, as rice dealers, sak`e and beer makers, their descendants today owners or silent controllers of a vast network of businesses. In a few years she obtained permission for the samurai branch to take the name
Shimoda. Now the Shimoda were hereditary daimyo of the small but affluent fief of the same name, in Izu. It was she who coined the inscription over the Yoshiwara gateway: Lust cannot wait, it must be satisfied. She was ninety-two when she died. Her mama-san name
Gyoko, Lady Luck.
"Shoya," Meikin said between broken sobs,
"please advise me what I should do, please."
"You must wait, Lady, be patient and wait," he said hesitantly, still wearing his mask of disquiet, noticing, at once, though the sobs were loud and heartbreaking, her eyes were more pitiless than he had ever seen them.
"Wait? Wait for what? Of course wait but what else?"
"We, we do not yet know, know all the details, Lady, what happened. So sorry, but is there a chance the Lady Koiko would be part of the plot?" he asked, twisting a knife in the ready wound for the sake of twisting it. Though
Gyokoyama had no proof, Meikin was suspected of dangerous sonno-joi affiliations and a connection with the Raven--against their oblique warnings--another reason why she had been advised to buy rice futures, not only as a wise investment but also as a bank-controlled hedge against her being accused and condemned.
"Koiko in a pl
ot? My beauty, my treasure? Of course not," Meikin burst out.
"Of course not."
"Meikin-san, when Lord Yoshi returns, surely as her mama-san, he will send for you. In case, so sorry, in case enemies have whispered against you, it would be wise to have... to have ready tokens of... of your respect."
There was no reason for either woman to ask, What enemies? Success bred jealousy and secret hatreds everywhere--particularly in best friends--and in the Floating World, a world of women, more than anywhere. And both were successful.
Meikin was over her initial shock now, her mind concentrating on means of escape--in case
Yoshi suspected, or Koiko had denounced her, or he had proof that both she and Koiko supported sonno-joi, shishi, and knew
Katsumata. There was no real way to escape, not into another identity or to another place,
Nippon was too well compartmentalized. Throughout the land, ten family heads formed the basic unit responsible for their own behavior and obedience to law, ten of these units formed another grouping equally responsible, ten of these the same and so on, up to the ultimate giver of law: the daimyo.
So she could run nowhere, hide nowhere. "What could I possibly give the great Lord Yoshi?" she asked her voice hoarse, feeling sicker than ever before.
"Perhaps, perhaps information."
"What kind of information?"
"I do not know, so sorry," he said with pretended sadness. Tomorrow could be different, tonight he must still pretend, to give them face, whatever he thought of their stupidity. Stupid to embrace sedition with a penis, particularly when the shishi possessors were few, most were being scattered or killed, and they continued to commit the unforgivable sin: failure. "I do not know, Lady, but Lord
Yoshi must be worried, greatly worried what the vile gai-jin fleet will do. They prepare for war, neh?"
The moment he said it he saw Meikin's eyes become even more flinty and fix on Raiko who flushed slightly. Ah, he thought gleefully, they already know--and so they should, bedding the loathsome gai-jin! By all gods if there be gods, what they know the Gyokoyama should of course be told quickly.
"That news might--would ease his pain," he said, nodding wisely as a banker would.
"And yours."
Half a hundred paces away in a dwelling within the walls, snuggled into gardens, Phillip
Tyrer was sitting cross-legged, bathed, replete with food and sak`e, naked under his yokata and in a state of rapture. Fujiko knelt behind him, her knowing hands massaging his neck muscles, finding the points of pleasure-pain.
She wore a sleeping yukata, her hair loosened and now she moved closer, delicately bit the lobe of his ear, near the center, where the erotic sites lay. Her tongue increased his pleasure dramatically.
Fingers slid sensuously to his shoulders, never slowing, taking away his cares, the conferences with
Sir William and Seratard, helping his chief to deal with that Frenchman and his constant, inbred devious attempts to gain a minuscule advantage when, let's face it, he had thought, the slimy rotter has only two mediocre ships when we have a fleet of ships-of-the-line, crewed by men, not sycophants!
Taking notes and then setting out two alternate battle plans into correct diplomatic English and French for their governments, and into more ordinary orders for the
Admiral and General to carry out, the time slipping away and his headache growing. But Andr`e had been an asset at the morning meeting, well prepared, and all the time suggesting ideas and dates, maneuvering the two principals into agreeing and making decisions, all four of them sworn to secrecy.
Then, at last, slipping out of the Legation and across the bridge, knocking on the door, instantly opened by Raiko herself and being bowed in and through the garden and bathed and fed but before that Raiko had at last begun to treat him as an important official should be treated.
About bloody time, he thought, more than a little pleased, every nerve tuned to Fujiko's fingers...
Most of her mind was concentrated on Raiko's warning: "Some vile and hungry low-class person at the Lily has seduced our gai-jin lord away from us. At great cost I have tempted him here, granting many concessions to go-betweens. Do not fail tonight, this may be your last chance to bind him to us with ropes of silk. Use every trick, every technique... even the Moon behind the
Mountain."
Fujiko flinched. She had never tried this before, even in the most heated embrace. Never mind, she told herself stoically, better a few queer moments of eccentric behavior--than no gai-jin pay tonight, and no pay for a year of leisure.
As her fingers moved closer and her soft murmurs began, daydream pictures of her farmhouse began to intrude, the children, her fine husband and their ripening fields of rice, so grand and kind and...
Firmly she put them away.
Until the client is asleep, she ordered herself.
Tonight you will snare the ungrateful dog forever!
It's a matter of face for the whole of the House of the Three Carp! Waylaid by a low-class person from the Lily?
Ugh!
The clipper Prancing Cloud swung at anchor with a change in the evening tide. "She's snug, sir," the First Mate said. Captain
Strongbow nodded and continued puffing his pipe.
They were on the quarterdeck. Wind creaked the spars and blocks above. Strongbow was a clear eyed, thick, tough man of fifty. "It'll be a fair night, Mister, crisp but not cold." He smiled, adding softly, "Good for our guests, eh?"
The First Mate, as tall and tough and weathered but half his age, was watching them too and grinned.
"Aye aye sir."
Angelique and Malcolm were on the main deck below, leaning on the gunnel close together, staring at the lights of Yokohama. Malcolm wore a topcoat over casual shirt and trousers and soft shoes, and had, for the first time, without too much discomfort, used only one stick while aboard. She wore a heavy red shawl around her shoulders and over a long loose dress. They were near a deck cannon. The ship carried ten thirty-pounders, port and starboard, and bow and stern chasers and their gunners were as good as any in the
Navy. That was Strongbow's boast. It did not apply to all their clippers or merchantmen or steamers.
"Pretty, isn't it, my darling wife?" Malcolm said, genuinely happy for one of the few times in his life.
"Tonight everything in the world is pretty, mon amour," she said, nestling closer. It was after dinner and they were waiting until the stateroom, the cabin they were occupying, was cleared of dishes and prepared. The cabin was large and used the whole of the stern, normally the Captain's quarters, unless the tai-pan was aboard--one of the many laws laid down by Dirk Struan, thirty years ago, the fleet still governed by his dictates to the last detail: best pay, cleanliness, training, and fighting readiness.
Strongbow was watching the tide, gauging it. In these waters a change in the tide could herald the coming, hours later, of a tsunami, a giant wave generated maybe a thousand miles away by a sub-ocean earthquake that would engulf anything in its path at sea, and coastal cities when it hit land.
When he felt that the shift had been normal, he looked back at Struan. He was glad to have him aboard, and new orders to sail early tomorrow with all speed for Hong Kong, knowing, as they all knew, Herself had commanded the young man home weeks ago. But he was troubled to be carrying the girl.
My God, damned if I can call her
Mrs. Struan--there's only one of them, he was thinking. Young Malcolm married? In spite of
Her orders? In spite of Her opposition?
He must be daft! Is the marriage legal?
By sea law, yes, if they were adults but they're not. Will it be overturned? A broken penny to a golden guinea She'll have twenty ways to null it without as much as a how'd'you do! Christ!
What about the girl then? What will happen to her?
And young Malcolm? How in the hell can he win against Her? I'm glad I wasn't the one who married them, thank God for that. Would I if he'd asked me? Not on your Nel
ly! Never!
Herself will spit blood, right about them being under age, and about her being Catholic. It's going to cause a battle royal, this time mother against son, a fight to the death with no rules and we all know she's a hellcat when aroused--worse than my Cat--though young Malcolm's changed, tougher than I've ever seen him, more determined than he's ever been. Why? Because of the girl? Only
God knows, but it'd be a welcome change to have a proper tai-pan again, a man.
No doubt in the world young Malcolm's overboard for her and who's to blame him? Not me!