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The Tokaido Road

Page 56

by Lucia St. Clair Robson


  Lord Hino knew that this mock funeral for a tub of fish was going to cost him more than a real one would have. To insure the head priest’s silence, Hino’s contributions to the temple would have to be generous to the point of ruin. And the timing was bad. The New Year would soon be upon him, bringing with it the annual plague of creditors swarming about his house.

  Hino felt embarrassed to be fretting about money. Warriors didn’t besmirch themselves with the coins that passed from hand to hand, among commoners and the ruling class alike. Besides, the young Lady Asano was the daughter of his old friend. Digging the pit of his debt deeper on her behalf was the least he could do. Hino even felt a bit bad about the fact that he had seen to it that she and her surly paladin would not reach Edo in time.

  CHAPTER 73

  CAN THEY SLEEP PEACEFULLY?

  Night filled Cat’s palanquin as though it had seeped out from the black peaks surrounding her, had flowed inside and solidified. She could feel the sides of the box closing in, pressing the darkness into a denser and denser block. She drew her elbows close to her body in anticipation of being crushed. The darkness was forcing the air out through the barred and curtained windows, and Cat began gasping, desperately drawing breath into her lungs.

  Cat always got sick in kagos and palanquins, but never this sick. Cold, hunger, exhaustion, nausea, and the spikes of pain in her skull begot hallucinations. The long night became death itself. The palanquin turned into a coffin. The hissing, grunting bearers were paired demons carrying her to Yomi, the Land of the Dead. The white nun’s robes were the shrouds of a corpse.

  Maggots. Cat could feel them wriggling under the haramaki wrapped tightly around her abdomen. She bit down on her knuckles to keep from screaming. No purpose would be served by it. She knew she was imagining the maggots. She knew that in the darkness her exhausted mind had tricked her into thinking she was the goddess Izanami traveling to the netherworld. Maggots were part of Izanami’s legend.

  The vision of Izanagi, Izanami’s husband and brother, floated, shimmering and transparent, as though trapped like a delicate insect in the amber of night.

  “I have eaten of the furnace of hell.” She clearly heard Izanami’s voice pleading with her brother when he followed her into the land of death. ‘ ‘Do not look at me.”

  But Izanagi had looked at his beloved sister. He had seen the maggots squirming in her body. And so Cat could feel them now. Bile rose again in her mouth at the thought. She fought the need to claw at the tight wrapping around her stomach. I have eaten of the furnace of hell. Perspiration beaded on her forehead and turned chill in the frigid mountain air.

  The narrow road had become steeper and rougher as it led into the rugged mountains north of Nara. Dense stands of cryptomeria blocked the light of the stars, and the moon had already set. Only the flickering lanterns lit the rocky track and reflected back from the arch of trees overhead. They caused the lantern bearers’ shadows to loom over them like dark ghosts, following. In spite of the darkness, the bearers kept up an astonishing pace.

  That was probably because when only the peak of the highest roof of Lord Hino’s keep had been visible in the moonlight, Hanshiro had ordered the men to stop. He paced along the line of march and spoke with each pair of them.

  He didn’t mention that he suspected Lord Hino of ordering them to set a slower pace. He offered them a bonus if they arrived in Tsuchiyama ahead of time. And he assured them that if they tried to impede Lady Asano’s progress, they would begin their next incarnation as food for the fish in the river at the bottom of the first deep gorge. The bearers knew they would be trotting along the rims of many gorges.

  The road wound upward into the remote fastness of the narrow valley of Kizugawa, Scar River. Perhaps it was just as well that night hid the scenery outside the palanquin’s curtained windows. The cliffs that towered over the trail were so precipitous, they seemed about to tumble forward under their own weight. They dwarfed the men and their burdens and their petty concerns with life and death, honor and shame and bonuses.

  The bearers’ eagerness to accommodate Hanshiro kept the palanquins bouncing and lurching violently. Cat’s sedan was big enough for her to lie down in if she curled up tightly, but she dared not sleep. All night she rode with her hand wound tightly into the cloth loop tied to the frame of the ceiling, but it wasn’t much use. Her shoulders and knees were bruised from hitting the sides. Her tensed stomach muscles ached from trying to maintain an upright position. Her feet and legs rested like fallen stone columns under her.

  And there was the delirium, the visions that came unbidden and unwelcome into her thoughts. Izanami. Izanagi. The maggots.

  At first Cat thought the loud panting just outside her window was more of the same. Then a more rational sort of irrationality took over. Lord Hino was a liar. He had planned all along to have her killed. When the rooftop plot failed he’d decided to do away with her in this demon-infested wilderness. Even now his assassins were chasing her.

  Cat rested her free hand on the butt of her sheathed dirk and tensed. She concentrated on opening her eyes. She had shut them in an attempt to banish the specters from her mind’s eye. When she finally coaxed them open, she saw that morning had come. The sun hadn’t risen above the mountains yet, but the darkness had receded, had itself drained out the windows. It left exposed the rich green of the palanquin’s silken upholstery. In the pale dawn light the silk gleamed softly like algae under water.

  Cat wanted to cry with relief. If she was going to die, she much preferred to do it in daylight.

  “A message, Your Ladyship.” A bamboo pole with a letter appeared through the center opening of the curtains. Lord Hino’s factotum trotted alongside the palanquin. He was carrying too much of his own weight, and his was the panting that had alarmed Cat.

  Cat took the sheets of paper, one folded inside the other, and the pole disappeared. The man stopped to catch his breath. When he did, the cold wind chilled the sweat on his body. Shivering, he resumed his dogged pace.

  Soon the small procession would reach the village that marked the farthest limits of the lands of Lord Hino’s closest neighbor and ally, and he could turn back. The servant thought wistfully of his tiny house backed up against Lord Hino’s castle wall and his bed piled with thick quilts. Before he slept he would have his wife bring him tea and rice and rub balm into his abraded and aching feet.

  Cat pressed the folded envelope against her thigh and tried to slide her nail under the wax seal, but the letter slipped back and forth with the motion of the palanquin. Disengaging her other hand from the strap would be useless. It had been wound into the loop long enough for her fingers to have stiffened into claws.

  Cat’s fingers trembled with the cold as she patiently unfolded the thick, pliant paper envelope. She pushed back the curtain to let in more of the dawn’s light. The letter contained a poem.

  Hanshiro must have written it before leaving Lord Hino’s castle. He must have been waiting until the last quarter of the hour of the Tiger brought enough light to read it. The effort of concentrating on the characters in the violent tossing of the palanquin sent bolts of pain into her eyes.

  Travelers shelter

  At the pass of Suzuka,

  Can they sleep in peace,

  Remembering days gone by?

  The poem was a thousand years old, composed on the occasion of Prince Karu’s night sojourn to this province. Hanshiro had made one change in it, though. He had substituted “pass of Suzuka” for “ plain of Aki.” Cat closed her eyes again to relieve the pain behind them as she tried to follow Hanshiro’s reasoning.

  If Hino had wanted to kill them, he could have ordered the bearers to dump them into a gorge. Not many people knew Cat existed. Most of those who did believed she was dead already, so he could have done it with impunity. Yet the dawn had found Cat only wishing she were dead. But Hino had given in too easily to Cat’s demands for transport to Edo. Both she and Hanshiro suspected him of trickery.

&nbs
p; If Hino wanted to keep Cat from becoming involved with Oishi’s plot, he would try to delay her. And he would have planned for the delay to happen as soon as possible. The farther Cat traveled from the center of his influence, the more difficulty he would have in arranging a mishap.

  Not providing fresh bearers at Tsuchiyama, where Cat would enter the TMkaidM, would be one way to do it. However, failure to have men standing by when palanquins arrived with Lord Hino’s crest on them would be a public humiliation. Lord Hino had already invited ridicule by staging a ninja raid. Cat doubted he would subject himself to another such loss of face.

  Causing problems at the barrier at Seki was another tactic. But that would mean involving the government, as well as losing face. Lord Hino was too smart for that.

  Staging a robbery to frighten off the bearers and leave her stranded was the most likely possibility. The TMkaidM was crowded this time of year. Many daimyM and their huge retinues would be trying to reach Edo to spend the New Year’s holidays with their families. Bearers and porters would be in short supply.

  Cat figured she was safe from a staged attack as long as she was on Hino’s neighbor’s land. Hino wouldn’t risk further criticism that he wasn’t in control of his own estate, nor would he call it down on his friends. Bandits were known to haunt the TMkaidM Road at Suzuka Pass, though, and no blame would fall on Hino if the mysterious nun and her companion were waylaid there.

  “Bow down. Bow down,” the crier in front shouted. The bearers slowed their headlong pace. The palanquin settled into a rhythmic jouncing that merely made Cat’s teeth ache.

  The edge of the sun finally rose above the peaks. It caused the yellow silk gauze curtains to glow the same pale gold as thin barley tea in firelight. Cat lifted the curtain so she could look out.

  During the night, snow had dusted the trees and massive outcroppings of rock. The jagged peaks of the Kasuga range, white as monkeys’ teeth, loomed on all sides. The village was a poor one. Very little smoke rose from the roofs of the flimsy hovels tottering up the steep hillside. They seemed about to slide down from their perches, across the narrow trail, and over the cliff to the river far below. If they stayed where they were, they would soon be covered to their eaves in snow. Straw-covered stacks of firewood towered above the rooflines.

  The road curved here, and Cat could see her escort’s slow, elaborate dance, alternating one arm out, opposite leg back, body horizontal with the ground as though swimming through the thin mountain air. He entered the forlorn hamlet as though he were passing through the gates of the Imperial Palace. He scattered chickens and brought to their knees the few sleepy inhabitants who happened to be caught outside with nowhere to hide.

  He twirled his long pole of office as he tossed it high in the air. As it rose, whirling, the thick ring of horsehair fringe at the top flowed like an eddy around it, then rose and quivered when he caught it. Hino’s factotum hustled forward to greet the hamlet’s headman, who was facedown in the snow, and to arrange a quick meal of cold barley gruel and millet tea.

  The bearers set down their burdens in the grove of trees that sheltered a shrine to Inari-sama, the Rice God. Drenched in sweat and shivering in the icy mountain wind, they squatted on their heels and wrapped their arms around themselves. The ropy muscles of their calves trembled. The strain of the night’s run contorted their faces. And they still had two ri to go before reaching the TMkaidM and their replacements at Tsuchiyama’s transport office.

  “Can you walk, my lady?” Hanshiro bowed as he slid open the palanquin’s door.

  “I wouldn’t notice if you carved my legs into chopsticks.” Cat held her sleeve in front of her face and managed to smile with her eyes above it. But she was struggling against the nausea that sent a vile-tasting tide up into her throat.

  She put her arm around Hanshiro’s neck. On legs heavy and ungainly as kindling, she hobbled into the bushes. The cold air revived her somewhat, but not enough. Hanshiro laid a gentle hand on her back as she heaved and gagged, vomiting up strings of acid and bile. When she finished he gave her his packet of paper handkerchiefs.

  “Can you go on?” he asked softly.

  “Yes.” She leaned against a cedar and panted for breath. She gulped the cold air as though it were water from a mountain freshet.

  The headman’s wife arrived with the millet tea, which Cat used to rinse out her mouth. Then Hanshiro left Cat to take care of her morning needs in private. He walked to the edge of the gorge, loosened his clothing, and urinated into the abyss.

  As Cat crouched, she saw the ice leaves under the nearby clump of bamboo. Rime had formed on the leaves. It had been imprinted with each threadlike vein and then had fallen away. The perfect, fragile copies, translucent and glittering, littered the ground. Cat wept at the intensity and transience of their beauty.

  CHAPTER 74

  TIME TO BEAT THE GRASS

  Hanshiro rested his right hand on the Barber’s hilt. He pulled his left hand back through his wide sleeve and out the neck of his jacket. He rubbed the dark stubble on his chin and stroked the long, ugly scab over the gash on his cheek. The sleepless night had left his eyes red-rimmed and puffy and particularly menacing.

  Like a falcon surveying plump mice from a great height, he stared around at the semicircle of fresh bearers who squatted on their dirty heels before him. Behind the bearers, the front and rear criers stood leaning on their poles. Beyond them rose the ascent to Suzuka Pass. The TMkaidM was crowded with early-morning traffic. The bells on the pack horses made a merry noise.

  “If any of you bolt”—Hanshiro’s tone, barely above a whisper, was far more effective than a harangue—”I will widow your wives and orphan your children.”

  He waited a few beats to let the message register. These were the men who had been waiting in the yard of the transport office in Tsuchiyama. Lord Hino’s advance man had hired them from the pool of local laborers. They weren’t Hino’s retainers, nor were the criers his warriors in disguise. In matters of defense Cat and Hanshiro were now on their own.

  “But if we reach Kameyama by midday,” Hanshiro added, “you’ll each receive a bonus.”

  From the corner of his eye Hanshiro saw Cat return from the roadside convenience. Her nun’s scarf hid her face and shaved head as she lowered herself into the rear palanquin sitting beside the road. Hanshiro grunted, and the men rose and trotted to their places at the carrying poles.

  “Ho-yoi-yoi.” The bearers used their sticks to heave the poles onto their callused shoulders, and the palanquins lurched forward. Only one of them held a passenger, though. Hanshiro chose to jog just behind the front crier.

  By the time Hanshiro had run one of the two nearly vertical ri separating Tsuchiyama and Sakanoshita, his heart was thumping like a frantic animal in his chest. His calves cramped with pain, but he was so relieved to be free of the confines of the palanquin that he didn’t care.

  The mist that had reached tentative wisps out onto the low lands had thickened into a dense fog by the time the bearers reached the suspension bridge, the detour over the deepest gorge. The crier gave his usual shout. The line of travelers waiting their turn to cross the narrow, swaying span parted and bowed. Looking out into the fog, Cat had the feeling that the rest of the world had disappeared. That these were the survivors, the last of earth’s mortals.

  The bearers stopped at the entrance of the bridge so Cat could get out. She untied her wide-brimmed hat from the side of the palanquin and put it on over her veil. Then she retrieved the naginata from the carrying pole and walked back to stand behind the rear crier. Hanshiro gave her the briefest of looks, but it sufficed. He was counting on her to help him keep the bearers from deserting.

  Hanshiro led the way out onto the lengths of bamboo lashed together to form the bridge’s floor. Five farmers had already started across carrying heavy wooden frames loaded with bales of rice and towering bundles of firewood. They were followed by a lightweight kago carried by two men. Their passenger followed them on foot. A larg
e party of pilgrims, several of them women, approached, single file, from Sakanoshita. The bamboo flooring clattered incessantly, and the woven bamboo hawsers creaked with the travelers’ weight and tread and the wind that blew in the gorge.

  The bridge’s concave arc hung below the tops of the cliffs on either side, and the chasm looked as though it had been filled to overflowing with thin, steaming rice gruel. When Hanshiro had almost reached the middle of the bridge, he could just make out the five disreputable-looking rMnin lounging at the other side. He smiled to himself. Hino was so predictable.

  But there were only five swordsmen. Hanshiro was offended that Hino thought so little of his skill and that of Lady Asano. Apparently Hino thought she had insisted on the naginata only as some foolish female whim, as an accessory, like a mirror or a tortoiseshell comb. Perhaps he thought that because she wasn’t a legitimate daughter, Lord Asano had neglected her training in self-defense.

  “Halt!” The leader of the rMnin moved to the entrance of the bridge.

  Suzuka Pass was famous for bandits. The people heading toward the rMnin wasted no time. They turned and began pushing back through those behind them. Those already moving away from the ruffians increased their pace.

  “We have a quarrel with the hirelings of the traitor Hino,” the man shouted. “The rest of you may cross in peace.”

  No one believed him for an instant. The women began screaming. Everyone bunched up ahead of Hanshiro as they tried to crowd past the kago. The kago’s bearers, however, were also trying to turn around, and their carrying pole had become entangled in the woven ropework that formed the sides of the bridge.

 

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