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"Hm," Koroku grunted, a concerned look on his face. Although his nephew was a villain who did nothing but evil, he had a sharp mind. If this turned ugly, would he sense it and try to escape? They're rather late, he thought again.
His wife untied the mosquito netting. Their son, Kameichi, who was playing at the edge of the net, was not quite two years old.
"Hey! Come here." Koroku embraced the child and held him at arm's length. As plump as the children in Chinese paintings, the boy felt heavy, even in his father's arms.
"What's the matter? Your eyelids are red and swollen." Koroku licked at Kameichi's eyes. The boy, turning restive, pulled and scratched at his father's face.
"He must have been eaten up by the mosquitoes," his mother replied.
"If it's just mosquitoes, it's nothing to worry about."
"He frets so, even when he's asleep. He keeps slipping out from under the net."
"Don't let him get cold when he's asleep."
"Of course I won't."
"And be careful of smallpox."
"Don't even talk about it."
"He's our first child. You might say he's the prize of our first campaign."
Koroku was young and st.u.r.dy. He shook off the pleasure of the moment and strode out of the room, like a man who had some great purpose to achieve. He was not one to sit indoors and peacefully sip his morning tea. When he had changed his clothes and washed his face, he went into the garden, walking with great strides toward the sound of hammering.
Along one side of the narrow path were two small smithies that had been built in a area where huge trees had been fairly recently cut down. This was the middle of a forest where no ax, until now, had touched a tree since the days of Koroku's forefathers.
The gunsmith, Kuniyos.h.i.+, whom Koroku had secretly summoned from the city of Sakai, was at work with his apprentices.
"How's it going?" he asked. Kuniyos.h.i.+ and his men prostrated themselves on the dirt floor. "No luck yet, eh? Are you still unable to copy the firearm you're using as a model?"
"We've tried this and we've tried that. We've gone without sleep and food, but..."
Koroku nodded. Just then a low-ranking retainer came up to him and said, "My lord the two men you sent to Mikuriya have just come back."
"Have they, now?"
"Yes, my lord."
"Did they bring Tenzo back with them?"
"Yes, my lord."
"Good!" Koroku nodded approvingly. "Have him wait."
"Inside?"
"Yes. I'll be there soon."
Koroku was an able strategist-the clan depended on him for it-but there was another side to his character: a tendency to be softhearted. He could be stern, but he could be moved by tears, especially where his own flesh and blood were concerned. He had made up his mind, though: he must do away with his nephew this morning. But he seemed to hesitate, and stayed for quite some time watching Kuniyos.h.i.+ work.
"It's only natural," he said. "After all, firearms just arrived here seven or eight years go. Since then, samurai clans in all the provinces have vied with each other to produce guns or buy them from the s.h.i.+ps of the European barbarians. Here in Owari we have a tactical advantage. There must be many country samurai in the north and east who have never even seen firearms. You haven't made one before, either, so take your time and work carefully by trial and error. If you can make one, you can make a hundred, and we'll have them on hand for later."
"My lord!" The retainer came back and knelt on the dew-covered ground. "They're waiting for you."
Koroku turned to him. "I'll be there soon. They can wait a bit longer."
While Koroku was determined to make the costly sacrifice of punis.h.i.+ng his nephew or justice' sake, he was torn by a conflict between his sense of what was right and his own feelings. As he was about to leave, he spoke to Kuniyos.h.i.+ again, "Within the year you'll be able to make ten or twenty serviceable firearms, won't you?"
"Yes," said the smith, who, conscious of his responsibility, had a serious expression on his sooty face. "If I can make one that I feel is right, I can make forty or even a hundred."
"It's the first one that's difficult, eh?"
"You spend so much money on me."
"Don't worry about it."
"Thank you, my lord."
"I don't suppose the fighting will let up next year, the year after that, or in the years following.... When the gra.s.ses on this earth all wither, and the buds begin to sprout again-well, do the best you can to finish it quickly."
"I'll put everything I have into it."
"Remember, it's to be done in secret."
"Yes, my lord."
"The sound of the hammer is a little too loud. Can you work so it won't be heard outside the moat?"
"I'll be careful about that, too."
On his way out of the smithy, Koroku saw a gun propped next to the bellows. "And that?" he asked, pointing to it. "Is it the model, or one that you've made?"
"It's brand-new."
"Well, let me see it."
"I'm afraid it's not quite ready for your inspection yet."
"Never mind. I have a good target for it. Will it fire?"
"The ball flies out, but no matter what I do, I can't make the mechanism engage as it does in the original. I'll try harder to make something that will work."
"Testing is also an important job. Let me have it."
Taking it from Kuniyos.h.i.+'s hands, Koroku rested the barrel of the gun on his crooked elbow and made as if aiming it at a target. Just then, Inada Oinosuke appeared at the door of the smithy.
"Oh, you haven't finished yet."
Koroku turned toward Oinosuke with the b.u.t.t of the gun pressed against his ribs.
"Well?"
"I think you should come quickly. We were able to talk Tenzo into coming along with us, but he seems to think it strange and acts nervous. If things go wrong, he may tun into the tiger breaking out of his cage, as the proverb goes."
"Very well, I'm coming."
Handing the gun to Oinosuke, Koroku walked with long strides down the path through the forest.
Watanabe Tenzo sat just outside the study wondering what was going on. What kind of emergency had caused him to be summoned here? Aoyama s.h.i.+ns.h.i.+chi, Nagai Hannojo, Matsubara Tak.u.mi, and Inada Oinosuke-the trusted retainers of the Hachisuka clan-all sat next to him, carefully observing his every movement. Tenzo had begun to feel uneasy as soon as he had arrived. He was thinking of making up some excuse and leaving when he caught sight of Koroku in the garden.
"Ah, Uncle." Tenzo's greeting was accompanied by a forced smile.
Koroku looked impa.s.sively at his nephew. Oinosuke rested the b.u.t.t of the gun on the ground.
"Tenzo, come out into the garden, won't you?" he said. His appearance was no different from normal. Tenzo was a little rea.s.sured.
"They told me to come quickly, said there was some urgent business to take care of.
"That's right."
"What sort of business?"
"Well, come over here."
Tenzo put on a pair of straw sandals and went out into the garden. Hannojo and Tak.u.mi went with him.
"Stand there," Koroku commanded, sitting down on a large rock and raising the gun Tenzo realized in an instant that his uncle was going to take aim at him, but there was nothing he could do. The other men stood around him, as inert as stones on a go board. The leader of the bandits of Mikuriya had been placed in check. His face went livid. Invisible flames of anger radiated from Koroku. The look on his face told Tenzo tha words would be useless.
"Tenzo!"
"Yes?"
"Surely you haven't forgotten the things I've told you over and over again?"
"I keep them firmly in my mind."
"You were born a human being in a world in chaos. The most shameful things are vanity in clothing, vanity in eating, and oppressing ordinary, peaceable people. The so-called great provincial clans do these things, and so do the ronin. The family of Hachisuka Koroku is not like them, and I believe I've already cautioned you about this."
"Yes, you have."
"Our family alone has pledged to harbor great hopes and fulfill them. We have vowed not to oppress the farmers, not to act like thieves, and if we become the rulers of a province, to see to it that prosperity is shared by all."
"Yes, we have."
"Who has broken this pledge?" Koroku asked. Tenzo was mute. "Tenzo! You have abused the military strength I have entrusted to you. You have put it to evil use, doing the work of a thief in the night. It was you who broke into the pottery shop in s.h.i.+nkawa and stole the akae pitcher, wasn't it?"
Tenzo looked as if he was about to make a break for it.
Koroku stood up and thundered, "You swine! Sit down! Do you want to run away?"
"I... I won't run." His voice quavered. He slumped down on the gra.s.s and sat as though fastened to the ground.
"Tie him up!" Koroku barked to his retainers. Matsubara Tak.u.mi and Aoyama s.h.i.+ns.h.i.+chi were instantiy on Tenzo. They twisted his hands behind his back and tied them with his sword knot. When Tenzo clearly understood that his crime had been exposed and that he was in danger, his pale face became a little more resolute and defiant.
"U-u-uncle, what are you going to do with me? I know you're my uncle, but this is beyond reason."
"Shut up!"
"I swear, I don't remember doing what you're talking about."
"Shut up!"
"Who told you such a thing?"
"Are you going to be quiet or not?"
"Uncle... you are my uncle, aren't you? If there was such a rumor going around, couldn't you have asked me about it?"
"Never mind the cowardly excuses."
"But for the head of a large clan to act on rumors without investigating them..."
Needless to say, this whining was repugnant to Koroku. He raised the gun and rested it in the crook of his elbow.
"You sc.u.m. You're just the living target I need to try out this new weapon that Kuniyos.h.i.+'s just made for me. You two, take him over to the fence and tie him to a tree."
s.h.i.+ns.h.i.+chi and Tak.u.mi gave Tenzo a shove and grabbed him by the scruff of the neck. They marched him all the way to the far end of the garden, which was far enough away that a poor archer would not be able to shoot an arrow the entire distance.
"Uncle! I have something to say. Hear me out, just once!" Tenzo yelled. His voice, and the despair in it, were plain for all to hear. Koroku ignored him. Oinosuke had brought a fuse. Koroku took it and, after loading a ball into the musket, took aim at his frantically screaming nephew.
"I did wrong! I confess! Please hear me out!"
As unimpressed as their lord, the men stood silently, braced themselves, and watched. After several minutes, Tenzo fell silent. His head hung down. Perhaps he was contemplating death. Or maybe he was a broken man.
"It's no good!" Koroku murmured. He took his eyes from the target. "Even when I pull the trigger, the ball does not come out. Oinosuke, run over to the smithy and get Kuniyos.h.i.+."
When the smith came, Koroku held out the gun to him, saying, "I tried to fire just now, but it doesn't work. Fix it."
Kuniyos.h.i.+ examined the musket. "It cannot be repaired easily, my lord," he said.
"How long will it take?"
"Maybe I can do it by this evening."
"Can't you do it sooner than that? The living target I'm going to try it out on is waiting."
Only then did the blacksmith realize that Tenzo was meant to be the target. "Your... your nephew?" he stammered.