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Going for what Tenzo had asked for, Hiyos.h.i.+ crawled quietly from the entrance of the male servants' quarters into the main house. Once there, he saw that a lamp was lit in Sutejiro's room.
"Master?" Hiyos.h.i.+ called out as he seated himself respectfully on the veranda. There was no answer, but he sensed that both Sutejiro and his wife were awake.
"Madam?"
"Who is it?" asked Sutejiro's wife, her voice trembling. Either she or her husband had awakened and shaken the other awake because just a moment ago there had been a vague rustling and the sound of voices. Thinking it might be an attack by bandits, both had shut their eyes in fear. Hiyos.h.i.+ opened the sliding door and moved forward on his knees. Both Sutejiro and his wife opened their eyes wide.
"There are bandits outside. A lot of them," Hiyos.h.i.+ said.
Husband and wife swallowed hard, but said nothing. They looked incapable of speech.
"It'd be terrible if they came rus.h.i.+ng in. They'd tie you two up and leave five or six dead or injured. I've thought of a plan, and I've got their leader waiting for your answer.'
Hiyos.h.i.+ told them of his conversation with Tenzo, and ended by saying, "Master please let the robbers have what they want. I'll take it to Tenzo, and he'll go away."
There was a slight pause before the merchant asked, "Hiyos.h.i.+, what in the world doe; he want?"
"He said he came for the akae water pitcher."
"What?"
"He said that if I handed it over, he'd go away. Since it's not worth anything, won't you let him have it? It was all my idea," Hiyos.h.i.+ explained proudly. "I'll pretend I'm stealing it for him." But the despair and fear hovering around the faces of Sutejiro and his wife were almost palpable. "The akae pitcher was taken out of storage for the tea ceremony earlier today, wasn't it? The man must be a fool to tell me to bring that worthless thing to him!" Hiyos.h.i.+ said, looking as if he found the whole matter hilarious.
Sutejiro's wife was extremely quiet, as though she had been turned to stone. With a deep sigh, Sutejiro said, "This is awful." Lost in thought, he too became quiet.
"Master, why look at it that way? One piece of pottery can finish all this without bloodshed."
"It's not just any piece of pottery. Even in the country of the Ming there are few pieces like it. I brought it back from China after considerable hards.h.i.+p. What's more, it is a keepsake from Master Shonzui."
"In the pottery shops of Sakai," said his wife, "it would fetch over a thousand gold pieces."
But the robbers were more to be feared. If they resisted them, there would be a ma.s.sacre, and there had been cases of mansions being burned to the ground. Neither event was unusual in these unsettled times.
In such a situation, a man did not have much time to make up his mind. For a moment, Sutejiro seemed to be unable to break free from his past attachment to the pitcher. But finally he said, "It can't be helped." He felt a little better after that. He took the key to the storehouse from a small drawer of a lacquer cabinet.
"Take it to him." He threw the key down in front of Hiyos.h.i.+. Vexed at the loss of the precious water pitcher, Sutejiro could not bring himself to praise Hiyos.h.i.+ at all, even though he thought the scheme was well devised for a boy of his age.
Hiyos.h.i.+ went alone to the storehouse. He came out holding a wooden box and returned the key to the hand of his master, saying, "It would be best if you put out the light and quietly went back to bed. You needn't worry."
When he brought the box to Tenzo, the bandit, only half believing what was happening, opened it and examined the contents carefully. "Hm, this is it," he said. The lines of his face softened.
"You and your men should get out of here fast. When I was searching for this in the storehouse just now, I lit a candle. Kato and his samurai are probably waking up at this very moment, and will soon start to make their rounds."
Tenzo made hastily for the gate. "You come and call on me in Mikuriya anytime. I'll take you on." With these words he disappeared into the darkness.
The fearful night was over.
It was about noon of the following day. Because it was the first week of the New Year, an endless procession of guests, coming in twos and threes, made their way to the main house. Yet the atmosphere in the pottery shop was strangely uneasy. Sutejiro was moody and sullen, and his usually cheerful wife was nowhere to be seen.
Of.u.ku quietly went to his mother's room and sat down. She had not fully recovered from the nightmare of the previous night and lay in bed, her face a sickly white.
"Mother, I've just now come from talking with Father. It's going to be all right."
"Really? What did he say?"
"At first he was skeptical, but when I told him about Hiyos.h.i.+'s behavior and the time when he grabbed me behind the house and threatened me, saying he'd call in the bandits of Mikuriya, he was surprised and seemed to think again."
"Did he say he'd dismiss him soon?"
"No. He said he still considered him to be a promising little monkey, so I asked him if he was of a mind to raise a thief's tool."
"From the very first, I disliked the look in that boy's eyes."
"I mentioned that too, and finally he said that if no one got on with him, there was no other recourse but to dismiss him. He said that because he'd taken charge of him from Kato of Yabuyama, it would be difficult for him to do it. He thought it would be better if we dealt with the matter and found some inoffensive pretext to dismiss him."
"Good. It's gotten to the point where I can't bear to have that monkey-faced boy working here for even half a day more. What's he doing now?"
"He's packing goods in the warehouse. Can I tell him you want to see him?"
"No, please don't. I can't stand the sight of him. Now that your father's agreed, wouldn't it be just as well if you told him that he's being dismissed as of today and sent him home?"
"All right," said Of.u.ku, but he was a little frightened. "What shall I do about his pay?"
"From the beginning, we haven't been held by any promise to put aside wages for him. And although he's not much of a worker, we've fed and clothed him. Even that is nore than he deserves. Oh well, let him keep the clothes he's wearing, and give him two measures of salt."
Of.u.ku was too afraid to say this to Hiyos.h.i.+ all by himself, so he took another man with him to the warehouse. He peered inside and saw that Hiyos.h.i.+, working alone, was covered with pieces of straw from head to toe.
"Yes? what do you want?" Hiyos.h.i.+ answered in an unusually energetic voice, bounding up to Of.u.ku. Thinking that talking about the events of the previous night wasn't a good idea, he had not told anyone about it, but he was very proud of himself-so much so that he secretly expected his master's praise.
Of.u.ku, accompanied by the brawniest of the shop's clerks, the one who most intimidated Hiyos.h.i.+, said, "Monkey, you can go today."
"Go where?" Hiyos.h.i.+ asked in surprise.
"Home. You still have one, don't you?"
"I do, but-"
"You're dismissed as of today. You can keep your clothes."
"We're giving you this because of the mistress's kindness," said the clerk, holding out the salt and the bundle of Hiyos.h.i.+'s clothes. "Since you don't have to pay your respects, you can leave right away."
Stunned, Hiyos.h.i.+ felt the blood rush to his face. The anger in his eyes seemed to leap out at Of.u.ku. Stepping back, Of.u.ku took the bundle of clothes and the bag of salt from the clerk, put them on the ground, and hurriedly walked away. From the look in Hiyos.h.i.+'s eyes, it seemed that he might chase after the retreating Of.u.ku, but actually couldn't see a thing; he was blinded by his tears. He remembered his mother's tear-stained face when she had warned him that if he was dismissed once more, she wouldn't be able to face anyone, and that it would be a disgrace for her brother-in-law. The memory of her face and body, so haggard from poverty and childbearing, made him sniff back his tears. His nose stopped running, but he stood there motionless for a moment, not knowing what to do next. His blood seethed with anger.
"Monkey," called one of the workers, "what's the matter? You messed up again, hhh? He told you to leave, didn't he? You're fifteen, and wherever you go they'll give you your meals at least. Be a man and stop blubbering."
Without stopping their work, the other workers made fun of him. Their laughter and jeers filled his ears, and he resolved not to cry in front of them. Instead, he swung around to face them, baring his white teeth.
"Who's blubbering? I'm sick and tired of this boring old shop. This time I'm going to serve a samurai!" Fixing the bundle of clothes on his back, he tied the bag of salt to a piece of bamboo and shouldered it jauntily.
"Going to serve a samurai!" jeered one of the workers. "What a way to say good-bye!" They all laughed.
n.o.body hated Hiyos.h.i.+, but no one felt sorry for him either. For his part, once he had taken his first step beyond the earthen wall, his heart filled with the clear blue of the sky. He felt he had been set free.
Kato Danjo had fought at the battle of Azukizaka in the autumn of the preceding year. Impatient to distinguish himself, he had dashed into the midst of the Imagawa forces and had been so badly injured that he had been forced to come home for good. Nowadays he slept all the time in the house at Yabuyama. As the days became colder toward the end of the year, the spear wound in his stomach gave him constant trouble. He was always groaning with pain.
Oetsu took good care of her husband, and that day she was was.h.i.+ng his pus-stained undergarments in a stream that ran through their compound. She heard a carefree voice ainging, and wondered who it might be. Annoyed, she stood up and looked around. Although the house was only halfway up Komyoji Hill, from inside the earthen wall it was possible to see the road at the foot of the hill, and beyond it the farmland of Nakamura, he Shonai River, and the wide Owari Plain.
It was bitterly cold. The New Year's sun was sinking hazily toward the horizon, bringing an end to another day. The singer's voice was loud, as if he had experienced neither the harshness of the world nor any human suffering. The song was a popular tune from the end of the last century, but here in Owari, farmers' daughters had corrupted it into a spinning song.
Well, can that be Hiyos.h.i.+? she asked herself as the figure reached the foot of the hill. He carried a dirty cloth bundle on his back, and a bag hung from the end of a bamboo rod over his shoulder. She was surprised at how big he had gotten in such a short time, and that, although he had grown so much, he was still as happy-go-lucky as ever.
"Auntie! What are you doing standing out here?" Hiyos.h.i.+ bobbed his head in salutation. His song gave a certain cadence to his step, and his voice, so totally unaffected, gave his greeting a certain humorous tone. His aunt's expression was clouded; she looked like someone who had forgotten how to laugh.
"What are you doing here? Have you come with a message for the priests at the Komyoji?"
Hard put to answer, Hiyos.h.i.+ scratched his head.
"The pottery shop let me go. I came here thinking I'd better let my uncle know."
"What? Again?" Oetsu said, frowning. "You came here after being sent away again?"
Hiyos.h.i.+ thought about telling her the reason, but somehow it did not seem to be worth the trouble. In a sweeter tone he said, "Is my uncle at home? If he is, would you let me talk with him, please?"
"Absolutely not! My husband was badly wounded in battle. We don't know whether today or tomorrow will be his last day. You're not to go near him." She spoke bluntly, her tone severe. "I really feel sorry for my sister, having a child like you."
When he heard his aunt's news, he was dispirited. "Well, I wanted to ask my uncle a favor, but I guess it's useless, isn't it?"
"What kind of favor?"
"Since he's a samurai, I thought he could find me a place in a samurai household."
"What in the world! How old are you now?"
"Fifteen."
"At fifteen, you should know a bit about the world."
"That's why I don't want to work in any old boring place. Auntie, do you suppose there's an opening somewhere?"
"How should I know?" Oetsu glared at him, her eyes full of reproach. "A samurai household doesn't accept a man if he doesn't fit in with the family traditions. What are they going to do with a wild, carefree boy like you?"
Just then, a maidservant approached and said, "Madam, please come quickly. Your husband's pain is worse again."
Without another word, Oetsu ran to the house. Abandoned, Hiyos.h.i.+ gazed at the darkening clouds over Owari and Mino. After a while he went through the gate in the earthen wall and hung around outside the kitchen. What he wanted most was to go home to Nakamura and see his mother, but he was held back by the thought of his stepfather who made him feel that the fence around his own house was made of thorns. He decide that his first priority was to find an employer. He had come to Yabuyama out of prudence, thinking it proper to inform his benefactor, but with Danjo in so serious a condtion, he was at a loss as to what to do next-and he was hungry.
While he was wondering where he would sleep from that night on, something so wrapped itself around his cold leg. He looked down to see a little kitten. Hiyos.h.i.+ picked up and sat next to the kitchen door. The waning sun cast a cold light over them.
"Is your stomach empty too?" he asked. The cat s.h.i.+vered as he held it to his chest, Feeling the warmth of Hiyos.h.i.+'s body, it began to lick his face.
"There, there," he said, turning his head away. He did not particularly like cats, but on that day the kitten was the only living creature to show him any affection.
Suddenly Hiyos.h.i.+ p.r.i.c.ked up his ears. The cat's eyes, too, widened with surprise. From a room next to the veranda had come the shrill cry of a man in pain. Presently, Oetsu came into the kitchen. Her eyes were swollen with tears, which she dried on her sleeve while stirring a medicinal concoction on the stove.
"Auntie," Hiyos.h.i.+ began cautiously while petting the cat, "this kitten's stomach is empty and it's s.h.i.+vering. If you don't give it some food, it'll die." He avoided mentioning his own stomach. Oetsu ignored the remark.
"Are you still here?" she asked. "It'll soon be night, but I'm not letting you stay in this house."
She hid her tears with her sleeve. The beauty of the samurai's young wife, who h been so happy just two or three years before, had faded like a flower beaten by the rain. Hiyos.h.i.+, still holding the kitten, thought about his hunger and the bed that was beyond his reach. As he looked at his aunt, he suddenly noticed there was something different her appearance.
"Auntie! Your belly is big. Are you pregnant?"
Oetsu raised her head with a start as though her cheek had been slapped. The sudden question was completely out of place.
"Just like a little boy!" she said. "You shouldn't ask such forward questions. You're disgusting!" Exasperated, she added, "Go home quickly while there's still some light. Go to Nakamura or anywhere! Right now I don't care what you do." Swallowing her own choked voice, she disappeared into the house.
"I'll go," Hiyos.h.i.+ muttered, and stood up to go, but the cat was not willing to surrenderr the warmth of his chest. At that moment a maidservant brought out a little bowl cold rice in bean paste soup, showed it to the cat, and called it outside. It promptly abandoned Hiyos.h.i.+ to follow after the food. Hiyos.h.i.+ watched the cat and its food with mouth watering, but it seemed no one was going to offer him anything to eat. He made up his mind to go home. But when he got to the entrance of the garden, he was challenged by someone with a keen sense of hearing.
"Who's out there?" asked a voice from the sickroom.
Rooted to the spot, Hiyos.h.i.+ knew it was Danjo and promptly answered. Then, thinking the time had come, he told Danjo that he had been dismissed from the pottery shop.
"Oetsu, open the door!"
Oetsu tried to change his mind, arguing that the evening wind would make him cold and that his wounds would ache. She made no move to open the sliding door, until Danjo lost his temper.
"Fool!" he shouted. "What difference does it make if I live another ten or twenty days? Open it!"
Weeping, Oetsu did as she was told and said to Hiyos.h.i.+, "You'll only make him worse. Pay your respects and then leave."
Hiyos.h.i.+ stood facing the sickroom and bowed. Danjo was leaning against some piled-up bedding.
"Hiyos.h.i.+, you've been dismissed from the pottery shop?"
"Yes, sir."
"Hm. That's all right."
"What?" Hiyos.h.i.+ said, puzzled.
"There isn't the least bit of shame in being dismissed, as long as you haven't been disloyal or unjust."
"I see."
"Your house, too, was formerly a samurai house. Samurai, Hiyos.h.i.+."
"Yes, sir."