Read The Crane Pavilion Online
Authors: I. J. Parker
Tags: #Literature & Fiction, #Genre Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery; Thriller & Suspense, #Mystery, #Historical Fiction, #Japanese, #Ancient Japan, #Historical Detective
28
Twilight before the Dark
They carried him home on a litter. By then the sun had risen and the mist dissipated enough for Tora, who walked beside the litter, to see clearly the white, still face and the traces of blood on his master’s lips. He had seen enough battle casualties to know that things were very bad and was tempted from time to time to make the bearers stop so he could check to see if his master was still alive. But he controlled himself. Getting him home was the most important thing now.
The bearers were constables from the Sixth Ward. He had also sent someone to the Sugawara family’s physician. Tora hoped he would meet them at the house.
Genba answered their pounding, gasped, and threw wide the gates. They brought in the litter, hesitated for directions, then followed Tora into the main house.
In Akitada’s room, Tora unrolled the bedding. “Where’s the doctor?” he snapped at Genba.
Genba, his eyes wide with shock and his face pale, came to help. “Doctor? How bad is it?”
“Bad. Go see about getting the doctor here. Send the boy. Tell him to hurry.”
Tora pushed a bearer aside and put his hands under Akitada’s torso to lift him. “Careful!” he hissed as they laid his master down on his back. Akitada did not open his eyes, but a slight twitch passed across his face.
“Sorry, sir,” Tora muttered, kneeling beside him.
The bearers stood around the litter, until Tora looked up. “You can go,” he said, adding belatedly, “Thanks.”
Then he looked at his hands and saw they were covered with blood.
The next space of time was among the worst Tora had ever passed. As the morning light made its way into the room, he saw that blood had soaked into the dark silk of his master’s robe. There was too much of it, mostly toward the back, and perhaps the bleeding had not stopped. Tora was afraid to move his master again to see. Where was the cursed doctor?
The doctor who came was a new man. Their previous physician had died. This one was irritated and only half dressed, having been pulled from his bed by the boy. He bustled in, glanced at the patient and told Tora, “Open those shutters. I need light.”
After a brief check of Akitada’s pulse and appearance, he asked, “Where’s the wound? I see some blood but no wound.”
An irrational thought passed through Tora’s mind. Perhaps there was no wound. Perhaps this was someone else’s blood, someone his master had fought with. Common sense rejected it. “Probably in his back,” he said dully.
“Why didn’t you say so? Help me take his clothes off and turn him over.”
Genba had tiptoed into the room with the doctor. Together, they undressed Akitada. They were as gentle as they could, removing layers of clothing with shaking hands, and then turning him on his stomach. His back was covered with blood.
“Water!” barked the doctor.
Genba ran.
Meanwhile the doctor probed for wounds. “Knife thrusts,” he muttered. “Two. Maybe more.”
Genba returned with Hanae, who carried a basin of warm water. It was she who cleaned away the blood.
The doctor shook his head and tsked. “Only two, but deep. Not much bleeding now, but that may mean it’s all but over.”
Hanae cried out in protest, and Genba sucked in his breath.
Tora seized the doctor by the neck of his robe and snarled, “You bastard! You’ve done nothing for him yet. Don’t you dare say it’s over. He’s still breathing. Get busy, and if you don’t do a good job, I’ll personally help you to hell.” He released him with a push.
The doctor muttered something, but he scurried to his bamboo case. There he unearthed ointments, plasters, bandages, and various herbal medicines. He busied himself with applying a yellow paste to the wounds, then covering them with large plasters. While Tora and Genba held Akitada, he bandaged his torso then indicated that they could lay him down again.
After cleaning away more blood, Hanae covered their master with a quilt. Then they all looked at the patient.
“He’s breathing,” said Tora.
“Barely,” said the doctor spitefully.
“I wish he’d open his eyes. Is he in pain, do you think?” Hanae asked.
The doctor growled, “No. He’s already where you cannot feel pain anymore.” Tora clenched his fists and hissed. The doctor scooted away a few steps. “I’ve served noble families for many years,” he said angrily. “It grieves me to find Lord Sugawara like this, but threatening me isn’t going to save his life.”
Tora looked away. “Just do the best you can,” he muttered.
“I’m done for the time being. Those packets contain some herbs. If he lives long enough to get the fever, boil them in some water and try to make him swallow the liquid. You can send for me, if there’s a change.”
And with that, he turned to leave.
“Your fee, doctor,” cried Hanae.
“You can send it later.” And he was gone.
They knelt beside their master without speaking. Genba brushed silent tears from his face. After a while, Hanae said, “The children! I should bring them.”
They all knew what she meant. Their father was dying, and they had a right to be by his side.
Tora nodded. “The children first, then the others.”
*
The journey into the darkness was very painful. Akitada thought for a while that he had arrived in one of the many hells, the one inhabited by the devils with the long knives. He knew he must run to escape them, but his feet were heavy … so heavy … and he needed sleep. He had not slept for so long and now his eyes would no longer stay open. And so one of the devils caught him and he felt the pain of his knife plunging deep into his back and fell.
Much later he thought about being in hell. There would be no Tamako there. Nor his small son Yori. He hoped they knew he had tried to reach them, had tried very hard and had failed.
He had failed them in so many ways.
Tora’s face appeared before him. He looked angry, as well he might. He had let them all down. Even at the very end. There had been something. Something urgent and important he had had to do. But it was gone. Failed again. He had given them grief instead of joy, poverty instead of comfort, abandonment instead of protection. No wonder they were angry. No wonder they wept. The weeping troubled him a good deal.
What of his other children? They too would be abandoned, now that he was taking this dark road to a place from which none returned. He had abandoned them just as his own father had abandoned him. No, that wasn’t right. It was he who had abandoned his father. He had chosen Seimei instead. And now he was choosing to be with Seimei in death. We die to repeat our mistakes and sins.
On grasping this truth, the darkness seized him again.
*
The children and the others had left again, and only Tora and Genba remained. They sat beside their master, one on each side, much as if he were a corpse already. Neither man had prayed, though the women had.
Genba thought of his master’s children, sighed, and shook his head. They had not cried, but their eyes had been filled with pain and fear. It was all happening to them again, first their mother and little brother, and now their father.
Tora watched him and asked, “What?”
Genba started. Seeing Tora’s eyes on him, he said, “The children. I cannot bear it. What must they be feeling?” And his tears came again until he covered his face in shame.
Tora said fiercely, “They are strong like their father. He’ll live. I know he will.”
Genba sniffed and nodded. “I’m sorry. Shokichi’s pregnant. It makes a man protective,” he said apologetically.
Tora sighed. “You’d better go and tell Saburo. He has a right to know.”
Genba nodded and got to his feet.
But at the jail, they turned him away. Orders from the Superintendent, they said.
Genba went to Kobe’s office, arriving there the moment Kobe himself got in. He saw Genba, frowned, then paused to give him a second look.
“Anything wrong?” he asked brusquely.
Genba was past caring about proper greetings and bows. His voice choking, he said, “The master’s dying. I need to tell Saburo, but the guards turned me away.”
Kobe stared. “What?”
Genba sighed and started over, “There’s not much time, I think. Tora sent me. The doctor said—” He stopped for another gulp of air and said, “Tora found the master before daylight this morning. Someone had stabbed him in the back. Twice. He must’ve been lying in that alley all night. The doctor says there’s no hope. He may die any moment.”
Kobe had turned white. He said to one of his officers, “Go to the jail and bring Saburo. Be quick about it.”
Genba’s knees started shaking. “Thank you, sir,” he muttered.
“Sit down and tell me what you know.”
So Genba did, and then Saburo came, hovering between disbelief and shock. And Genba told the story again as they walked back, Kobe in the middle and Genba and Saburo on either side. Three of Kobe’s police officers followed behind. By the time they reached the Sugawara compound, Kobe knew all about Kanemoto, Phoenix, the secret house near the Rokujo Palace, and their somewhat tenuous connection to the trial of the blind shampoo girl. He made his officers wait on the veranda of the main house and went in to see Akitada.
Tora rose when they entered. The room was dim again. A sharp smell of herbs and a faint whiff of blood hung in the air. Kobe nodded to Tora and bent to look at Akitada.
Tora said, “He’s not moved, sir, but he’s still breathing.”
Kobe nodded. “The doctor has given up hope?”
Tora looked away. “What do doctors know?”
Saburo went to kneel beside the bedding and touched his master’s hand. “He feels cold,” he said. “It might be from losing so much blood.”
Nobody said it, but they all thought, “Or because he’s dying.”
Tora bethought himself and brought a cushion for Kobe. The superintendent shook his head. “No,” he said. “I have delayed too long. This wouldn’t have happened if I had trusted him and taken action. Now there is nothing I can do for him except finish his work. Send for me if there is … any change.”
And with this he nodded and left.
Saburo wiped his face and looked up at Tora. “Does that mean I’m free to stay?”
“I don’t know. I think so.” Tora sat back down.
Saburo bowed his head. “I have done this,” he said. “I have brought nothing but evil fortune to all of you. And now I’ve killed him, too.”
Tora said fiercely, “Shut up! He won’t die.”
Genba sighed. “I suppose I’d better see what needs to be done. What do you think Kobe is up to?”
Tora eyed him bitterly. “He’ll find Kanemoto and Phoenix and arrest them. Then he’ll stop the trial. After that he’ll get the bastard who knifed the master. It will all get done, but I’d give anything if it had gotten done without this.”
Genba left, and Tora and Saburo sat together, watching anxiously for Akitada’s every breath.
29
Kobe Risks All
Superintendent Kobe left the Sugawara house with a heavy heart but a quick step. His men could barely keep up with him. As he walked, he issued orders and as soon as they reached police headquarters, they gathered constables who dashed off in different directions. Kobe himself went to the jail to talk to Sachi.
He found her sitting dejectedly on her pallet, but she raised her head when she heard the lock. In the manner of the blind, she did not look at him directly but cocked her head to hear better.
“Sachi?” he said. “I’m Superintendent Kobe. I have some more questions to ask you.”
She got on her knees and bowed. “Thank you, sir,” she said, “but I’m to go to my trial this morning. Surely it’s too late for questions. Forgive me, but I’d hoped to spend the little time I have left with my thoughts and prayers.”
He felt a pang of pity, and somehow this confirmed him in his decision. “I’m here because I hope to help you. You have friends, you know, and your friends have been working very hard to prove that someone else killed Nakamura. Even at this late hour, we may be able to set you free.”
She sat up a little at his words. “Oh, I remember. Two men came to see me here. Are they the ones? They said they were going to help, but they didn’t come back, and I thought they’d given up.”
He explained how Saburo and Tora, and finally even Akitada had become involved in her case, and she grew thoughtful.
“It was very good of them,” she said. “But why would they care about me? I don’t understand any of this.”
Kobe could see that what Akitada and his men had done passed understanding for most people who acted either out of self-interest or obligation. He started again, and this time Sachi began to look hopeful.
“Oh,” she said. “They did all that for me? They must be saints.”
Kobe did not tell her that Akitada would most likely pay with his life for her freedom. Instead he asked his questions.
“I was told you left the room at the Daikoku-yu because Nakamura made sexual advances. What did he do that upset you?” He had been troubled by this because, like most people, he assumed that shampoo girls who worked in bathhouses were accustomed to earning extra money by performing sexual services.
Sachi blushed and covered her face. “He asked me to use my mouth … to do a dirty thing. I said that I didn’t do such things. Then he touched me.” She gestured to her breasts and groin. “I … I didn’t want to make a scene and I made an excuse to get some lotion. I told Jinzaemon, but he made me go back and finish my job.”
“Did you make an exception with Nakamura or would you have refused sexual services to anyone?”
“To anyone, sir. I made it clear to Jinzaemon that I would not do such things. He didn’t like it. I think I was about to lose my job.”
“I see. Now to a more important question. Do you know who might have killed Nakamura while you went to get the lotion?”
“No, sir.”
“Did you hear or notice anyone near the room when you left it or when you returned?”
This time she did not answer right away. She sat very still, then said, “It’s a long time ago now, but I think there were two people there. One was outside the room when I came out. I heard a footstep walking away. It sounded heavy, and so perhaps it was a man. The other I passed in the corridor when I came back. I smelled her.”