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Inuchiyo lowered his voice. "Well, that's the question."
They were strange rivals in love. Even though the two men loved the same girl, they had become friends. They did not display friends.h.i.+p in either word or deed but rather in a somewhat uneasy relations.h.i.+p; each knew the other well, and they had entered into a respectful fellows.h.i.+p. Today in particular, it seemed that the nature of Inuchiyo's visit one of genuine concern for Tokichiro.
"Have you thought about Yamabuchi Ukon's feelings?" Inuchiyo asked.
"He probably bears a grudge against me."
"Well, do you know what Ukon is thinking and doing?"
"I do."
Is that so?" Inuchiyo cut his words short. "If you can discern that much, then my mind will be at ease."
Tokichiro stared intently at Inuchiyo. Then he bowed his head in a way that seemed to indicate a.s.sent. "You're something, Inuchiyo. Whatever you set your sights on, you set them well, don't you?"
"No, you're the quick one. You're clever to notice about Yamabuchi Ukon, and there's-"
"No, don't say any more." When Tokichiro made as if to put his hand over his mouth, Inuchiyo cheerfully clapped his hands and laughed.
"Let's leave it to the imagination. It's better left unsaid." Of course, he was about to mention Nene.
Gonzo returned, and the sake and food were delivered. Inuchiyo was about to go home, but Tokichiro stopped him.
"The sake's just come. Drink a cup with me before you go."
"Well, if you insist." Inuchiyo drank freely. However, not one of the guests for whom the sake and food had been provided showed up.
"Well, n.o.body's coming," Tokichiro said at last. "Gonzo, what do you suppose happened?"
When Tokichiro turned to Gonzo, Inuchiyo said, "Tokichiro, did you invite the construction foremen here tonight?"
"That's right. We have to get through some preliminaries. To finish the construction work in three days, we'll have to raise the morale of the men."
"I really overestimated you."
"Why do you say that?"
"I respected you as being twice as quick-witted as other men, but you were the only one who didn't guess that this was going to happen."
Tokichiro stared at the laughing Inuchiyo.
"If you'd think about it, you'd see," Inuchiyo said. "Your opponent is a man of little character. He is, after all, Yamabuchi Ukon, a man with limited abilities, even among those ordinarily judged not to have them. There's no reason for him to be praying that you'll successfully outwit him."
"Of course, but- "
"So is he going to just sit there sucking his thumb? I think not."
"I see."
"No doubt he's planning some obstruction so that you'll fail. So we might be right in thinking that the foremen you invited here tonight won't be coming. Both the workmen and the foremen are thinking that Yamabuchi Ukon is a good bit more important than you are."
"Right. I understand." Tokichiro hung his head. "If that's so, then this sake is for the two of us to drink. Shouldn't we leave it to the G.o.ds and finish it off?"
"That's fine, but your promise to do this in three days starts from tomorrow."
"I say let's drink, come what may."
"If you're decided, sit down and let's drink."
They did not drink much, but talked at length. Inuchiyo was a ready conversationalist, and Tokichiro somehow became the listener. Unlike Inuchiyo, Tokichiro had no formal education. As a boy he had not had a single day to spend, as the sons of samurai did, devoted to book learning and manners. He did not think of this as unfortunate, but he knew that it was a hindrance to his advancement in the world, and when he thought about those who had more education than he or sat in conversation with them, he was determined to make their knowledge his own. Thus he listened eagerly to the talk of others.
"Ah, I feel a little drunk, Tokichiro. Let's go to sleep. You've got to get up early, and I'm relying on you completely." So saying, Inuchiyo finally pushed his cup away, rose, and went home. When Inuchiyo had gone, Tokichiro lay down on his side, crooked his elbow beneath his head, and went to sleep. He did not notice when the maidservant came slipped a pillow beneath his head.
He had never known a sleepless night. When he slept, there was no distinction between heaven and earth and himself. However, when he awoke, as he did early the next morning, he was himself immediately.
"Gonzo! Gonzo!"
"Yes, yes. Are you already awake, sir?"
"Bring me a horse!"
"Sir?"
"A horse!"
"A horse, sir?"
"Yes! I'll be going to work early today. I won't be returning home either tonight or tomorrow night."
"Unfortunately, we have neither horse nor stable yet."
"Dimwit! Borrow one from somewhere in the neighborhood. I'm not going out on a picnic. I need it for official business. Don't hesitate, go out and bring one back."
"It may be morning, but it's still dark outside."
"If they're sleeping, bang on the gate. If you think it's for my personal use, you'll probably hesitate. But it's for official business, so it's justifiable."
Gonzo put on a coat and hurried out in confusion. He came back leading a horse. Impatient to leave, the artless new rider galloped into the dawn without even asking where his mount had come from. Tokichiro rode round to six or seven houses of the construction foremen. They received stipends from the clan and belonged to the artisans' corps. Their houses were all built with a good bit of luxury, had maidservants and concubines, and were extraordinarily stately compared with Tokichiro's own house.
He went from house to house, beating on the gates and calling out to those still sleeping inside.
"Come to the meeting! Come to the meeting! Everyone who's working on the construction, be at the site by the Hour of the Tiger. Anyone who is late will be dismissed. By order of Lord n.o.bunaga!"
He gave out this message at one house after another. White steam rose from the sweat-soaked coat of his horse. Just as he reached the castle moat, light began to appear in the eastern sky. He tethered his horse outside the castle gate, took a deep breath, and stood blocking the Karabas.h.i.+ Gate. He held his long sword in his hand, and his eyes were s.h.i.+ning brightly.
The foremen who had been awakened while it was still dark all wondered what had happened, and arrived one by one, leading their men.
"Wait!" Tokichiro ordered, stopping them at the entrance. After they had given their names, the location of their work, and the number of their workers and coolies, he gave them permission to pa.s.s. Then he ordered them to wait silently at their work stations. As far as he could see, almost everyone was there. The workmen were standing in order, but murmuring among themselves uneasily.
Tokichiro stood in front of them, still carrying his unsheathed sword. "Quiet!" He spoke as though he were giving a command with the tip of his raised sword. "Fall in!"
The workmen obeyed, but smiled scornfully. It was obvious from the looks in their eyes that they regarded him as a greenhorn, and that they were laughing at the way he stood in front of them with his chest stuck out. To them, his sword waving was nothing more than impertinent posturing, and it did nothing but invite their scorn.
"This is an order for all of you," Tokichiro said in a loud voice, with what seemed to be complete nonchalance. "By the order of Lord n.o.bunaga, I, as unworthy as I am, will be in charge of the construction from now on. Yamabuchi Ukon was in charge until yesterday, but I will take his place from today." As he spoke, he looked over the ranks of the workmen from right to left. "Until a short while ago, I was in the lowest rank of the servants. But with the favor of His Lords.h.i.+p, I was moved to the kitchens and am now in the stables. I have spent only a short time on the castle grounds, and I know nothing about construction work, but I plan on being second to none when it comes to serving our master. Under an overseer like myself, then, I wonder if any of you will consider working as my subordinates. I can imagine that, among artisans, there is an artisan's temperament. If any of you dislike working under these conditions, please feel free to say so, and I will promptly dismiss you."
Everyone was silent. Even the foremen, who had hidden their scorn, kept their mouths shut.
"No one? Is there no one who is dissatisfied with me as overseer?" he asked again. "If not, then let's get to work immediately. As I've said before, in wartime it is unforgivable for this work to take twenty days. I plan to finish the work by dawn three days from now. I want to say this clearly so that you'll understand and work hard."
The foremen looked at each other. It was natural that this sort of speech would elicit derisive smiles from those men with receding hairlines, who had been doing their jobs since childhood. Tokichiro noticed their reaction but chose to ignore it.
"Foremen of the masons! Head carpenters and plasterers! Come forward!"
They stepped forward, but as they looked up, scorn floated across their faces. Tokichiro suddenly struck the head plasterer with the flat of his long sword.
"What insolence! Do you stand there in front of an overseer with your arms folded? Get out!"
Thinking that he had been cut, the man fell down screaming. The others turned pale, their knees shaking.
Tokichiro went on severely, "I'm going to a.s.sign you your posts and duties. Listen carefully." Their att.i.tude had improved. No one looked as if he was only half listening. They were quiet, though not reconciled. And even though they were not really cooperating, they looked scared.
"I've divided the two hundred yards of the wall into fifty sections, giving each group responsibility for four yards. Each group will consist of ten men: three carpenters, two plasterers, and five masons. I'm going to leave those a.s.signments to the foremen. You foremen will each be supervising from four to five groups, so make sure that the workmen are not idle and pay attention to the distribution of men. When any of you have men to spare, move them to a station that is shorthanded. Don't leave an instant for idling."
They nodded but looked restive. They were irritated by this sort of lecture, and unhappy at being a.s.signed to work stations.
"Ah, I almost forgot," Tokichiro said in a louder voice. "Along with the division of ten men for every four yards, I'm a.s.signing a reserve corps of eight coolies and two workmen to each group. When I look at the way the work has been done so far, workers and plasterers are apt to leave the scaffolding and spend the day doing work that is not their own, like carrying lumber. But a worker at the workplace is the same as a soldier on the fied. He should never leave his post. And he shouldn't abandon his tools, whether he be a carpenter, a plasterer, or a mason. That would be the same as a soldier throwing away his sword or spear on the battlefield."
He allocated the posts and divided the men, and then shouted with authority enough to start a battle, "Let's begin!"
Tokichiro also found work for his new subordinates. He ordered one of them to beat a drum. When he commanded the workers to begin, the man beat the drum as though they were marching into battle, one beat to every six paces.
Two beats of the drum sounded a break.
"Rest!" Tokichiro gave the order standing on top of a boulder. If someone didn't rest, he scolded him.
The construction site had been swept clean of the indolence that had prevailed until then; it was replaced by an intensity of activity more common on the battlefield, and by the sweat of excitement. But Tokichiro looked on silently, satisfaction never showing in his face. Not yet. Not like this, he thought.
Taught by their many years of labor, the workmen knew how to use their bodies in crafty ways. They gave the impression of working hard, but in fact they were not wringing out real sweat. Their resistance was such that they took a little comfort by showing obedience on the surface, but not truly working hard. Tokichiro's past life had been drowned in sweat, and he knew the true value and beauty of that sweat.
It is untrue to state that labor is a thing of the body. If labor is not filled with the spirit, there's no difference between the sweat of men and that of cows and horses. Keeping his mouth shut, he thought about the true nature of sweat and work. These men were working in order to eat. Or they were working in order to feed parents, wives, and children. They worked for food or pleasure, and they did not rise above that. Their work was small. And it was mean. Their desires were so limited that pity welled up inside Tokichin and he thought, I was like that too, before. Is it reasonable to expect great works from people with little hope? If he couldn't imbue them with a greater spirit, there was no reason for them to work with greater efficiency.
For Tokichiro, standing silently on the construction site, half a day pa.s.sed quicky.
Half a day was one-sixth of his allotted time. Looking at the site, however, he could see no signs that they had made any progress since morning. Both above and below the scaffolding, the men seemed to be full of eagerness, but it was nothing more than a sham. On the contrary, they antic.i.p.ated Tokichiro's complete and overwhelming defeat in three days.
"It's noon. Beat the drum," Tokichiro ordered. The noise and uproar of the construction site came to a halt all at once. When Tokichiro saw that the workers had taken out their lunches, he sheathed his sword and went off.
The afternoon ended with the same atmosphere at the construction site, except that discipline had broken down and indolence was more evident than it had been during the morning. It was no different from the day before, when Yamabuchi Ukon had been in charge. Even worse, the workers and coolies had been ordered to work without rest or sleep from this evening on, and knew that they were not going to be let out of the castie grounds for three days. Thus they begrudged their labor even more and did nothing but think of more ways to cheat as they worked.
"Stop your work! Stop your work! Wash your hands and meet in the square!" It was still light, but the official suddenly made the rounds beating the drum.
"What's going on?" the workers asked each other suspiciously. When they asked the foremen, they were answered with shrugs. They all went to the square where the lumber was kept, to see what this was about. There in the open, sake and food had been put into piles as high as mountains. They were told to be seated, and sat on straw mats, stones, and lumber. Tokichiro sat down in the very center of the workmen and raised his cup.
"Well, this isn't much, but we have three days before us. One day has already pa.s.sed quickly, but I would like you to work and try the impossible. So, just tonight, please drink and rest to your hearts' content."
His manner was completely different from what it had been that morning, and he himself set an example by drinking a cup. "Come on," he shouted, "drink up. For those of you who don't like sake, there's food and sweets."
The workers were amazed. Suddenly they began to worry about finis.h.i.+ng the project by the third day.
But Tokichiro was the first to get tipsy.
"Hey! There's plenty of sake. And it's the castle's, so no matter how much we drink, there'll be more in the storehouse. If we drink, we can dance, sing, or just sleep until the beat of the drum."
The workers soon stopped complaining. Not only were they being released from work, but they were also unexpectedly receiving food and sake. More than that, the overseer himself was relaxing and mixing with them.
"This gentleman has a sense of humor, doesn't he?"
When the sake began to take effect, they started to tell jokes. But the foremen still looked at Tokichiro coolly.
"Huh! He's being clever, but it's transparent." And this made them even more hostile. With looks on their faces that questioned the propriety of drinking sake in the workplace, they didn't touch their cups.
"Foremen! What's the matter?" Tokichiro got up, cup in hand, and sat down amid their cold looks. "You aren't drinking anything at all. Maybe you're thinking that foremen have responsibilities much like generals and therefore shouldn't drink, but don't be so anxious. What can be done, can be done. What can't be done, can't be done. If I was wrong, and we can't do this in three days, the matter will be closed with my suicide. Forcing the foreman who had the bitterest look to take a cup, Tokichiro poured from the flask himself. "Well, if we're talking about anxiety, it's not so much this particular construction project or even my own life that concerns me. I worry about the fate of the province in which you all live. But taking over twenty days to do just this little bit of construction-with that kind of spirit, this province is going to perish."
His words were charged with emotion. Suddenly the workers fell quiet. Tokichiro looked up at the evening stars as though in lamentation. "I imagine that all of you seen the rise and fall of provinces, too. And you know the misery of the people who lived in fallen provinces. Well, it's something that cannot be helped. Naturally enough, His Lords.h.i.+p, his generals, and those of us who are the lowest samurai do not forget about the defense of the smallest part of the province, even when we sleep.
"But the rise and fall of a province is not in its castle. It's right here, in you. The people of the province are its stone walls and moats. Working on the construction of this castle, you may feel as though you're plastering the walls of somebody else's house, but you're wrong. You're building your own defenses. What would happen if this ca.s.ste was burnt to the ground one day? Surely it would not be the fate of the castle alone. The castle town, too, would be engulfed in flames, and the entire province would be destroyed. It would be like a scene from h.e.l.l: children ripped away from their parents, old folks looking for their children, young girls screaming in panic, the sick burnt alive. Ah, if the province were to fall, it would really be the end. You all have parents, children, wives, and sick relatives. You must always, always remember."
Even die foremen stopped sneering and looked serious. They too had property and families, and Tokichiro's words struck home.
"So why is it that we are at peace today? Fundamentally, of course, it's thanks to His Lords.h.i.+p. But you, the people of this province, most certainly protect us with this castle as your very center. No matter how much we samurai fight, if the heart-the people-were to waver..." Tokichiro spoke with tears in his eyes, but he was not pretending. He grieved from the heart and meant every word he spoke.
Those who were struck by the truth of his words were immediately sobered and hushed. Someone wept and blew his nose. It was the carpenters' foreman-the most influential and oldest hand-who had been more openly opposed than anyone to Tokichiro.
Ah, me!...Ah, me!" He dried the tears on his pockmarked cheeks. The others looked on, amazed. When he realized they were all looking at him, he suddenly pushed through his colleagues and threw himself down in front of Tokichiro.
"I have no excuses. I understand my own foolishness and superficiality now. You should tie me up as a lesson, and hurry on with this construction for the sake of the province." Head bowed, the old man trembled as he spoke.
At first, Tokichiro looked at him with blank amazement, but then he nodded slightly and said, "Hm. You were told to do this by Yamabuchi Ukon, right?"
"You knew it all along, Master Kinos.h.i.+ta."
"How could I not know? And Ukon told you and the others not to come to my house when I invited you."
"That's right."
"And he told you to be as slow as possible at the construction site, to delay the work purposely, and to disobey my orders."
"Y-yes."