The Thousand Autumns of Jacob De Zoet: A Novel (93 page)

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Authors: David Mitchell

Tags: #07 Historical Fiction

BOOK: The Thousand Autumns of Jacob De Zoet: A Novel
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The Lord Abbot studies Shiroyama's face for evidence that he misheard.

The well-trained acolyte rises, crouching, reading the silent hall for threat.

'Dark emotions,' Enomoto speaks with indulgence, 'may cloud one's heart at such a time, but for the sake of your posthumous name, Magistrate, you must--'

'Quiet before the Magistrate's verdict!' The crushed-nose chamberlain speaks with the full authority of his office.

Enomoto blinks at the older man. 'Addressing
me
in that--'

'Lord Abbot Enomoto-
no-kami
,' Shiroyama knows how little time remains, '
Daimyo
of Kyoga Domain, High Priest of the Shrine of Mount Shiranui, by the power vested in me by the August Shogun, you are hereby found guilty of the murder of the sixty-three women buried behind the Harubayashi Inn on the Sea of Ariake Road, of orchestrating the captivity of the Sisters of the Shrine of Mount Shiranui, and of the persistent and unnatural infanticide of the issue fathered upon those women by you and your monks. You shall atone for these crimes with your life.'

The muffled clatter of horses penetrates the closed-off hall.

'It grieves me,' Enomoto is impassive, 'to see a once-noble mind--'

'Do you deny these charges? Or suppose yourself immune to them?'

'Your questions are ignoble. Your charges are contemptible. Your assumption that you, a disgraced appointee, could punish me -
me!
- is a breath-taking vanity. Come, Acolyte, we must leave this pitiable scene and--'

'Why are your hands and feet so cold on such a warm day?'

Enomoto opens his scornful mouth, and frowns at the red gourd.

'It never left my sight, Master,' states the acolyte. 'Nothing was added.'

'First,' says Shiroyama, 'I offer up my reasons. When, two or three years ago, rumours reached us about bodies being hidden in a bamboo grove behind the Harubayashi Inn, I paid little heed. Rumours are not proof, your friends in Edo are more powerful than mine, and a
daimyo
's back garden is no one else's concern - ordinarily. But when you spirited away the very midwife who saved the lives of my concubine and son, my interest in the Mount Shiranui Shrine grew. The Lord of Hizen produced a spy who told some grotesque tales about your retired nuns. That he was soon killed only confirmed his tales, so when a certain testament in a dogwood scroll-tube--'

'Apostate Jiritsu was a viper who turned against the Order.'

'And Ogawa Uzaemon was, of course, killed by mountain bandits?'

'Ogawa was a spy and a dog who died like a spy and a dog.' Enomoto sways as he stands, staggers, falls and snarls, 'What have you - what have you--'

'The poison attacks the body's musculature, beginning at the extremities and ending with the heart and diaphragm. It is extracted from the glands of a tree-snake found only in a Siamese delta. This creature is known as the Four Minute Snake. A learned chemist can guess why. It is unsurpassingly lethal, and unsurpassingly difficult to procure, but Tomine is an unsurpassingly well-connected chamberlain. We tested it on a dog, which lasted . . . how long, Chamberlain?'

'Less than two minutes, Your Honour.'

'Whether the dog died of bloodlessness or suffocation, we shall soon discover. I am losing my elbows and knees as we speak.'

Enomoto is helped by his acolyte into a sitting position.

The acolyte tumbles, and lies struggling, like a cut-string puppet.

'In air,' the Magistrate continues, 'the poison hardens into a thin, clear flake. But a liquid - especially a spirit, like
sake
- dissolves it instantaneously. Hence the coarse Sakurajima cups - to hide the painted-on poison. That you saw through my offensive on the
Go
board, but overlooked this simple stratagem, amply justifies my death.'

Enomoto, his face distorted by fear and fury, reaches for his sword, but his arm is stiff and wooden and he cannot draw his weapon from its scabbard. He stares at his hand in disbelief and, with a guttural snarl, swings his fist at his
sake
cup.

It skips across the empty floor, like a pebble skimming dark water.

'If you
knew
, Shiroyama, you
horse-fly
, what you've done . . .'

'What I know is that the souls of those unmourned women buried behind the Harubayashi Inn -'

'Those disfigured whores were fated from birth to die in gutters!'

'- those souls may rest now. Justice is served.'

'The Order of Shiranui lengthens their lives, not shortens them!'

'So that "Gifts" can be bred to feed your derangement?'

'We sow and harvest our crop! Our crop is ours to use as we please!'

'Your Order sows cruelty in the service of madness and--'

'The Creeds
work
, you human
termite
! Oil of Souls
works
! How could an Order founded on insanity survive for so many centuries? How could an abbot earn the favour of the Empire's most cunning men with quackery?'

The purest believers
, Shiroyama thinks,
are the truest monsters
. 'Your Order dies with you, Lord Abbot. Jiritsu's testimony is gone to Edo and -' his breaths grow sparser as the poison numbs his diaphragm '- and without you to defend it, Mount Shiranui Shrine will be disestablished.'

The flung-away cup rolls in a wide arc, trundling and whispering.

Shiroyama, sitting cross-legged, tests his arms. They predecease him.

'Our Order,' Enomoto gasps, 'the Goddess, the Ritual harvested
souls
. . .'

A guppering noise escapes Chamberlain Tomine. His jaw vibrates.

Enomoto's eyes fry and shine, 'I cannot die.'

Tomine falls forward on to the
Go
board. Both bowls of stones scatter.

'Senescence undone,' Enomoto's face locks, 'skin unmottled, vigour unstolen.'

'Master, I'm cold,' the acolyte's voice melts, 'I'm cold, Master.'

'Across the River Sansho,' Shiroyama spends his last words, 'your victims are waiting.' His tongue and lips no longer co-operate.
Some say
, Shiroyama's body turns to stone,
that there is no afterlife. Some say that human beings are no more eternal than mice or mayflies. But your eyes, Enomoto, prove that Hell is no invention, for Hell is reflected in them
. The floor tilts and becomes the wall.

Above him, Enomoto's curse is malformed and strangled.

Leave him behind
, the Magistrate thinks.
Leave everything, now . . .

Shiroyama's heart stops beating. The Earth's pulse beats against his ear.

An inch away is a
Go
clam-shell stone, perfect and smoothed . . .

. . . a black butterfly lands on the White stone, and unfolds its wings.

PART IV

The Rainy Season

1811

XL

Mount Inasa Temple, overlooking Nagasaki Bay

Morning of Friday the 3rd July, 1811

The cortege proceeds across the cemetery led by two Buddhist priests, whose black, white and blue-black robes remind Jacob of magpies, a bird he has not seen for thirteen years. One priest bangs a dull drum, and another strikes a pair of sticks. Following behind are four
eta
carrying Marinus's coffin. Jacob walks alongside his ten-year-old son, Yuan. Interpreters of the First Rank Iwase and Goto walk a few steps behind, with the hoar-frosted, evergreen Dr Maeno and Otsuki Monjuro from the Shirando Academy ahead of the four guards in the rear. Marinus's headstone and coffin were paid for by the Academicians, and Chief Resident de Zoet is grateful: for three seasons Dejima has been dependent upon loans from the Nagasaki Exchequer.

Droplets of mist cling to Jacob's red beard. Some escape down his throat, beneath his least-frayed collar, and are lost in the warm sweat drenching his torso.

The foreigners' enclosure is at the far end of the cemetery, by the edge of the steep forest. Jacob is reminded of the burial place reserved for suicides adjacent to his uncle's church in Domburg.
My late uncle's church
, he corrects himself. The last letter from home reached Dejima three years ago, though Geertje had written it two years before. After their uncle's death, his sister had married the schoolmaster of Vrouwenpolder, a small village east of Domburg, where she teaches the younger children. The French Occupation of Walcheren makes life difficult, Geertje admitted - the Great Church at Veere is a barracks and stables for Napoleon's troops - but her husband, she wrote, is a good man and they are luckier than most.

The calls of cuckoos haunt the mist-dripping morning.

Within the foreigners' enclosure waits a large group of mourners, half hidden under umbrellas. The slow pace of the cortege allows him to peruse some of the twelve or thirteen dozen headstones: his are the first Dutch feet ever to enter this place, so far as he can determine from his predecessors' Day Registers. The names of the very earliest dead are lost to frost and lichen, but from the Genroku Era onwards - the 1690s, Jacob calculates - inscriptions can be discerned with increasing certainty. Jonas Terpstra, a likely Frieslander, died in the First Year of Hoei, at the beginning of the last century; Klaas Oldewarris was summoned to God in the Third Year of Horyaku, during the 1750s; Abraham van Doeselaar, a fellow Zeelander, died in the Ninth Year of An'ei, two decades before the
Shenandoah
sailed to Nagasaki. Here is the grave of the young mestizo who fell from the English frigate, whom Jacob christened in death 'Jack Farthing'; and Wybo Gerritszoon, dead of a 'Ruptured Abdomen' in the Fourth Year of Kyowa, nine years ago: Marinus suspected a burst appendix, but kept his promise not to cut open Gerritszoon's body to check his diagnosis. Jacob recalls Gerritszoon's aggression very well but the man's face has faded from memory.

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