Read The Golden Naginata Online
Authors: Jessica Amanda Salmonson
“My master told me to come and bury the corpse of a troublesome fellow named Heinosuke of Omi. For once, Priest Kuro seems to have guessed wrong. Have you noticed such a body?”
“One of the men you buried this morning,” she replied softly, “requested, on his dying breath, that I slay the man of Omi. But Heinosuke was shockingly quick and evaded me. Your master's ploy went awry, for I no longer think Heinosuke killed those nine men. If I find out who really slew them so obscenely, I will yet consider myself bound to avenge them. Could it be that you were sent to commit the inhuman act? Certainly you weren't shocked by their conditions.”
“I am shocked by nothing,” said Ittosai deeply, walking about the room, his manner apparently intended as a threat, though the bikuni was uncowed. “If my master had asked me to slay in that grim manner, I would have tried, as I am his one faithful retainer.”
“A devoted vassal might prefer to take his own life as a form of criticism,” said the bikuni, speaking of
kanshi
or remonstration suicide, practiced by retainers bound to tyrannical masters and otherwise unable to disobey. Ittosai grunted at the very implication, and replied,
“I will rise in the world instead. In any case, he has not asked me to commit cruel acts, only to perform degrading chores. It might be that cruelty in his behalf would be more appealing to me, rather than continuing at the lowly tasks assigned me.”
The bikuni was bold enough to say, “I think better of you than that.” Ittosai responded with bitter, momentary laughter, his deep voice failing to convey true mirth, but only anguish. He ceased striding about the chamber and stopped in sword's reach of the bikuni, glaring at her from under the shadow of his wide hat. His eyes were as white as the snowflakes clinging to his hat. He warned,
“Don't imagine sensitivity where there is none. The years have driven me mad, I promise you.” The high-cheeked, hardened prettiness of his face became, for a moment, sallow and almost like a skull. His lips formed a line of anger not so much aimed at the bikuni but at the whole of Naipon, the universe, or himself. She backed away from him and bowed slightly, an act of obeisance that made Ittosai turn from her with a nervous look, his anger, or his madness, abating like a tide, and as surely liable to return.
The bikuni spoke again, softly, as to a wild animal that was known occasionally to allow itself to be stroked. “I have recently found out that three men I killed in a cemetery along a pass leading to White Beast Shrine were men your master Kuro did not wish alive. The nine men sent to fight me this morning were also, I believe, meant to die by my hand, though some supernatural agent intervened to do the work instead, for reasons that elude me. I begin to fret that some fate of mine is bound to Kanno province and that I was drawn here for other reasons than to inform Heinosuke of his sister's death. Am I somehow your master's pawn but cannot see it? Is there some connection between myself and his malevolence? If he seeks to use me in some way, it will be his undoing, I am sure. I would like to meet your master and find out his intent!”
Ittosai said, “You cannot ask his vassal's aid.”
“Do you refuse to comprehend your master's villainy?”
“That is not for me to judge.”
“Even if it can be proven that he is a monster escaped from Emma's Hell, born of this strange temple?”
“I wouldn't know about such things,” he said flatly.
It was years since she had personally counted on the regulations of vassalage for the definition of her own conduct, and the bikuni was irritated that Ittosai was not similarly able to think for himself. She was free and a wanderer; he had wandered too. His stubbornness made her tell him hotly, “It annoys me that you feel the way you do!”
“I'll tell you what I know,” said Ittosai, his voice gone throaty and strange, his white eyes turning on her again. His expression was at once calm and maniacal. He did not seem the same fellow she had met that morning, or who had entered the chamber moments before. In this unexpected persona, Ittosai spoke with greater self-assurance. He said, “What I know is this.” When the nun was attentive, he continued, “You, woman of Heida, are the nearest living relative of Kuro the Darkness.”
The bikuni was plainly shocked. Her throat was instantly dry. Ittosai continued to speak.
“Through you, Kuro will have vengeance, for reasons that are not my business to ask about. You say you are annoyed with me, but consider my position; I have greater reason for annoyance. You unwittingly perform services I would do with open eyes. You do against your will that which I would count proof of my worth as a vassal. I admired you before, but look how far you've fallen! And still I am a shadow in your wake. I wish Kuro would order me to kill you! But he values my strong arm for the way it holds a shovel. When at last your eyes are opened, you will know that you, more than Kuro the Darkness, were the monster of the play.”
“What you say is senseless!” the bikuni challenged, backing to the wall as though attacked. “You're vicious to invent such a story! How could I be Priest Kuro's servant and not know it? How could he be my relative, when my clan lives far in the east of Naipon? I am a slayer of monsters! I am no beast!”
She staggered backward through the door, feeling again that nearly loving stroke at her nape, slapping at it with her hand, finding nothing. Ittosai's words could not be revelations, but only mistruths meant to confound her! He stood against the window of the chamber in which she might have slain Heinosuke. Snow fell behind the outline of Ittosai. He began to walk forward, following her down the corridor. He had become a dark shape inside a golden outline, glowing, a frightful vision though making no physical threat.
It was true she had felt something of madness in the haunted, derelict temple, and had nurtured some affection for the echoes of cruelty that made its presence known for miles around. Now the temple's malignance rang in her ears. Her hand covered her mouth and nose, for some spell descended upon her, along with sickness. She strode backward, keeping the glowing shape of Ittosai in her sight. She came out of the monastery onto the path, which had frozen, the snow beginning to stick. She continued as far as the wooden guardians, on whose heads sat small coronets of snow. The sound of the river and the falls could not drown the throbbing, knelling sound, which originated with Ittosai or the temple or from within her very skull.
She stopped between the tall wooden gods, took a stand, hand to hilt of sword, menacing Ittosai while shouting hoarsely,
“What have you brought me!”
“Truth.”
“Or Kuro's magic! I have done you no harm. How can you make me think I am a monster? The trouble in Kanno province never began with me!”
“It will end with you. It will end badly.”
“Because of truth or beguilement?” she demanded hotly. “You cannot charm me!” She began to calm her spirit, straighten her posture, but kept her hand to hilt as she said with a forced quiet, “I won't let it happen.”
Ittosai was himself in the grip of some spell, standing as an automaton without emotion, betraying none of his anger, none of his pride, none of the goodness she had felt could not be long suppressed. He raised his hand, in which he held a small wooden plaque, which she had not seen him holding before. He recited the sutra inscribed thereon, his white eyes glaring at her from under the edge of his hat.
“
Namu myoho-renge-kyo. Namu myoho-renge-kyo.
”
“Stop it!” she demanded, sounding stern, but he did not stop. Her sword came from its sheath and she ran along the snow-sprinkled path toward Ittosai. Steel slashed across the top of his hand. In a moment, the top of the plaque fell off, landing between Ittosai's feet. The bikuni growled, “I cannot be made to do a dark priest's bidding!” She was panting and felt that she was not talking to Ittosai any longer, but through him to Priest Kuro himself.
“Ho ho,” was Ittosai's response. The amusement and sarcasm of his tone and look was definitely not in keeping with the nature of the man. “If what you say is true,” he said, “then you should experiment with it and find out. Last night, a runaway maid from the castle was found trying to flee the fief, a crime punishable by death. She was aided by a farmer's son. At this moment they are being tied head-down to the cross. They will die in a fenced enclosure outside the village. Criminals are commonly exposed there, to die slowly, as examples to others. It's a hard way to die. Sometimes people last for days. On the other hand, with the sudden snow, they could freeze to death in one night. How unfortunate! And weren't they pretty lovers?” Ittosai, or whatever made him speak, laughed again, this time without bitterness, without anger, without sorrow. There was only joy. He said, “If you are strong enough, if you are independent of Kuro's whims, why not save the pitiable couple? They are among Kuro's foes, after all. If you can get them out of their trouble, then you will have proven Kuro has no hold on you, no plan for you. Can you do it? Why not try?”
When the bikuni was gone, Ittosai Kumasaku strode bearlike over the thin blanket of snow. He went to the pláce where he had tethered the old mare. He stroked her muzzle, took hold of the reins, but did not mount. Instead, he looked about in confusion. Somehow he had forgotten why he had come to the temple.
His brain ached. He took off his wide straw hat and wiped his forehead. His hair was soaked, his face hot. Snowflakes steamed into nonexistence as they brushed his cheek.
He leaned hard against the flank of his mare; and with wild, forlorn expression, he began to bellow as with pain. The horse, old but battle-trained, was frightened, but did not move as Ittosai continued yelling, and yelling, and yelling.
She hurried to the edge of the mountain village, then strolled with a forced casual air through its center street. It was early in the evening. The sun, though nearly invisible, had not as yet gone below the mountains. The weather, as well as fearful sentiments, had sent most of the villagers indoors. Most of the shopkeepers had taken in their signs, somewhat prematurely. A tea and noodle shop remained open. A young woman stood in the doorway, gazing toward the farther edge of town, her expression tense, rice-floured hands worrying the apron hanging from her obi. As the nun passed by, the young woman averted her eyes and withdrew into the interior of the noodle shop.
Two middle-aged men in peasant blues came down the middle of the street. They were squat fellows conversing with one another rapidly, making vague comments about pitiful this and pitiful that. Their conversing halted when they saw the nun in her incognito-hat and two swords at her side. She appeared to them out of the swirling snow, causing them to draw aside and stand motionless, mouths open, eyes round. When she had gone by them without taking much notice, they renewed their jabber. She overheard a reference to the Battle of Awazu. Then she caught another snatch of their discussion, predicting warm blood on fresh snow. They knew much, these peasants! Priest Bundori's tongue had wagged through the town, and the nun's present nonchalance fooled no one.
She saw eyes peeping from windows that were opened the barest slit. The whole village expected carnage. What else was in their minds? Did they think her the gravest part of their misfortune, or their salvation?
Fires burned in the homes, but the snow cleansed the air of smoke or scent of cooking. There was a deadening of all the senses, due in part to the muffling snow; and there was a quietude about the village that smacked of held breaths. Somewhere nearby, the silence was momentarily interrupted by a door slamming adamantlyâagainst the cold, and against expectation.
As she neared the further edge of the village, the bikuni took a narrow alley off the center street, circling about in such a way that she could investigate the punishment-enclosure without the guards noticing her presence. The enclosure was made with thick, sharp strips of bamboo, loosely laced from one vertical pole to another. There was a gate that could be removed altogether or left completely sealed, as now, made of the same laced strips. It would be easy to fit one's arm through any portion of the fence, but it would be difficult to pull it down or push on it without cutting oneself on the hard strips of razor-edged bamboo.
Her view was veiled by the swirling whiteness. The track she made in passing was already filling up with windblown and new-fallen flakes. The guards' chances of noticing her, a mere shadow between two buildings across the way, were slight.
There were more guards than one would expect. Someone certainly did not wish the couple saved from their slow execution. Inside the criss-cross fence, a small fire had been built, around which squatted samurai with long spears leaning against their shoulders, hands cast forth in search of warmth. At the enclosure's entry, four men, also with spears and swords, stood conversing. Additional sentries strode about the inside and outside of the enclosure, only nominally on guard, seeming quite certain the weather had driven off the usual village spectators or anyone with a mind toward intervention.
The men did not themselves seem especially concerned about the redundancy of their post. They had learned in the past months that duties and assignments were occasionally pointless or askew, directed less by Lord Sato than by his minister Kuro the Darkness, whose reasoning evaded understanding. Most of Lord Sato's men no longer cared one way or another how things were run.
It was curious and darkly whimsical that the villagers, thanks to Priest Bundori's gossip, suspected things might be coming to an alarming point, but Lord Sato's vassals remained unready for a raid of the very sort suggested by Ittosai, Kuro's one true vassal. These samurai were almost pitiful, going aimlessly about their appointed task, knowing nothing of potential doom lurking beyond their fortress of bamboo, a doom clad in the costume of a mendicant nun.
Shinji and Otane were at the enclosure's very center and, for the moment, totally undefined, due to increasing snowfall. Then a sudden, higher wind brushed aside the veil long enough for the nun to see the couple, a sight that brought a grimace to her covered face. They were clad in peasant cottonsâ
mopei
knee-britches and
hapari
field jacketsâclothing that the youth Shinji would have provided so that Otane might not be detected as a samurai's daughter; a failed plan.