CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR
JUMPING OFF KIYOMIZU TEMPLE
As Hanshiro sat on the tea house balcony jutting out over a narrow chasm, he had to admire the sagacity of the mad bandit priest. The view from this crag was spectacular. Hanshiro could see all the way to the sparkling waters of the bay of Suruga, but that wasn’t its main advantage. From here he could also see travelers, on their way to the Hakone barrier, toiling along the switchbacks both up and down the mountain. When they passed directly below, they were out of sight of those above and below them on the road. It was an ideal place for an ambush.
The bandit had been wise in his choice of roosts, but not in his selection of victims. Fifteen years earlier, the crag where this tea house now stood had been the highwayman’s lair.
He had lived in a cave in the face of the cliff, and he had waited here until likely prey appeared. With his staff and its iron rings and spear’s head strapped on his back, he would swing across the chasm on a retractable rope bridge. In the guise of a mountain priest soliciting donations he would rob travelers of their clothing, their goods, and their money. Then he threw them, still alive, into the abyss.
Thus he disposed of both evidence and witnesses. And he might have been operating here yet if late one winter afternoon he had not made the mistake of selecting a lone man heading eastward, down the snowy mountain. The traveler had been a seedy-looking individual with rustic written all over his shabby sandals, snow cape, hat, and leggings, all of straw. The bulky cape had hidden Hanshiro’s pair of swords, which were about all he had to his name when he’d left Tosa to find employment in the Eastern Capital.
When the mad priest, red-rimmed eyes wild and staring and topknot all a-bristle, had loomed up in the road, Hanshiro hadn’t sullied his blade on him. His walking staff had sufficed. The priest had joined his victims. The bottom of the crevice was a long way down, giving him time to reflect on his misdeeds before he landed.
“Is there anything else Your Honor desires?” The girl bowed low.
“Everything is splendid.” Hanshiro smiled at the child.
She was the very image of Snow, her mother, whom he could hear giving frantic orders in the kitchen. Hanshiro had asked Snow not to go to any trouble, but he knew the request was futile. He knew Snow had whispered instructions to her fifteen-year-old son as soon as Hanshiro appeared. Even now the boy was speeding down the mountain to buy fresh bonito in Odawara.
When he returned Snow would toast the fish over a fire of pine needles. She would beat the fillets lightly with straws so the flavor of the smoke would permeate them while they turned a golden brown. If Hanshiro was still there when they were done, she would serve them with soy sauce and garlic. Bonito cooked that way was a specialty of Tosa; and if bonito was available, Snow always prepared it for Hanshiro.
She would refuse payment, of course. Hanshiro never paid for anything here. He was responsible for Snow and her husband owning this tea house, although the mad priest was also their unwitting benefactor.
After he killed the priest Hanshiro hadn’t looked for the treasure he must have hidden away. He had been much younger then, and naive. Money of all kinds was distasteful to him. Money tainted with death was anathema. But events turned out as they should on the Great Wheel.
Another ri down the mountain Hanshiro had found Snow and her husband destitute and in rags. They had been begging in the snow by the side of the road. Their newborn son had been bundled up and asleep on Snow’s back. Hanshiro had assumed that they were the ones who were fated to receive good from the priest’s evil.
Because the sun’s light had been fading fast, Hanshiro had given them his lantern. He had told them to search in the cave on the jagged precipice that blocked most of the sky above the road. In a way it was Hanshiro’s test of their courage and determination. Because of the priest’s depredations and the mysterious disappearances of travelers, stories abounded about that promontory. The mountain people whispered that demons lurked there, swooping down off the crag to crush the bones of hapless victims and suck the marrow.
The couple braved the terrors of the accursed place. They found the neatly tied packets of heavy oval gold coins and the sacks of silver and copper in a basket hidden under matting at the rear of the cave. An army of priests marched up the mountain to exorcise the site and the money and to accept a generous donation for their services. Another army of tax collectors arrived to claim the government’s share. A phalanx of officials arranged for them to have the use of the land and received their “thank-money” in turn. With what was left the couple built this tea house.
They named their aerie Gentle Haven. They added a red-lacquered arc of a bridge over the chasm. They lined the path to their front gate with stone lanterns that glowed cheerfully, welcoming travelers caught by nightfall. They built small shrines to Jizo and Benten. They prospered.
Over the years they had learned not to inquire into the reasons for Hanshiro’s visits. So now, except for a steady flow of tobacco and tea, hot towels, select tidbits, and the sweet sake for which Hakone was famous, no one bothered him. He had sat, straight and still, looking down the Tokaido, since shortly after dawn. There was no evidence on his face of the emotions scuffling behind his navel.
He watched the long procession of a daimyo’s entourage wind past. He inspected each person trudging up the slope, each bald-pated nun and peasant, each merchant, clerk, pilgrim, and itinerant pot polisher. He even scrutinized the couriers with their wooden letter boxes bouncing on their backs. Lady Asano would be deranged to try to pass herself off as a messenger, but he didn’t put it past her. She already had proven herself audacious and inventive. And deadly.
The Te9781429935999_img_333.gifkaide9781429935999_img_333.gif was so steep and treacherous here, most postboys were reluctant to rent their horses for this leg of the journey. The horses wore out the straw sandals quickly on the rocks, and their feet became tender. The way was littered with discarded horse sandals. As a result there were more of the light, open, mountain kago here than along the coast. A few of them had mats thrown over them to obscure the occupants. Hanshiro knew his quarry might be hidden in one of those, but he doubted it. Kira’s men were checking all kago.
Hanshiro watched the approach of the peasant family, the ragged child, and the woman in the dirty white pilgrim’s robe. He saw their companion’s wide-brimmed pilgrim’s hat, gloved hands, and tabi-clad feet in tattered straw sandals and dirty white gaiters. They were the only parts visible under the stack of goods. Something was odd about the three as a group, though, and Hanshiro studied them as they made their slow progress up the mountain.
Pilgrims didn’t usually carry such heavy burdens, but they often did behave strangely. A journey to a far country had a way of changing people. Virtuous farmers and obedient housewives turned frolicsome and licentious. Harlots and scurfy knaves became religious fanatics, determined to crawl the length of the country or wash the feet of every leper they could find.
Hanshiro suspected that the peasant under the load was performing a self-indulgent penance for petty sins. Maybe he had made a fool of his neighbor’s wife in the communal storehouse. Or diverted a few momme of silver from the tax collection. Or mixed in extra handfuls of chaff with his own tax portion of rice.
Once the three had passed, Hanshiro transferred his attention to the approaching group of merchants with their bearers and servants. And not far behind them the west country artist, and Hanshiro’s drinking partner, Nameless. Hanshiro watched him until he was out of sight.
Then he settled back to wait. The day was new. He was sure that by the end of it he would have Lady Asano.
 
 
“What is our lord’s name?”
“Tsuchiya, lord of Kururi.”
“Who is the magistrate?” As they walked, Kasane helped Cat memorize the names of the functionaries of their home province. The officials at the barrier might ask them such questions.
“Yamashita,” Cat panted.
“How many koku of rice does our lord command?”
“Seventy thousand.”
The child interrupted the drill. She tugged at Cat’s sleeve and pointed upward.
Cat turned her head sideways, peering out from under the load and up the steep slope. The trail through the huge boulders and the dense tangle of bushes, ferns, and trees was almost invisible. “Do you live up there?” she asked.
The girl pointed again and pulled at the frame. Kasane helped Cat draw her arms out of the straps. The child tested the straw cords holding the stack of goods together before she let them transfer the straw pad and the frame to her back.
“You can’t carry such a load up a path that steep.” Cat mouthed the words and gestured, but to no avail. The girl was already on her way.
With her toes she sought purchases in the rocks and grabbed the bases of bushes to haul herself up the incline. It looked as though the load itself had acquired arms and legs and were crawling up the mountainside. Cat and Kasane watched her until she was out of sight in the luxuriant vegetation and drifting mist.
May Amida protect you, Cat thought. Then she and Kasane resumed their own journey.
Without the child’s load on her back Cat felt light-footed, able to run up the mountain. But soon she was gasping for breath again in the thin, biting air. A new weight seemed to press down on her. More weight dragged at each foot as she moved it out in front of her.
Snow lay in patches on rocks and outcroppings, but Cat was sweating. She passed men struggling up the slope under loads as tall as they were, or resting by the wayside, eyes bulging, muscles quivering with the strain.
About the middle of the day Cat and Kasane stopped to sip cups of hot water from the kettle on a boy’s portable brazier. They bought skewers of rice dumplings from a shy young woman who stood by the side of the road. They trudged silently past tiny hamlets clinging to the mountainsides.
As they climbed higher their afternoon shadows lengthened behind them. Without being aware of it, they drew closer together as they neared Lake Hakone. At the lower end of the long, narrow stretch of water was a saddle in the basalt rock. Straddling it was the fenced compound of the government’s control post.
Bordering Lake Hakone was a thriving town of inns and tea houses. Shops and baths and a small, insouciant pleasure district lined the main thoroughfare. The women in the souvenir shops offered bowls and boxes decorated with elaborate cherry- and camphorwood inlay.
The inns’ maids importuned travelers. Touts shouted the advantages of the sulphur waters of their hot springs spas. Dozens of ferries and pleasure boats bobbed at anchor along Lake Hakone’s shoreline. It was a cheerful place, but at the other side stood a government guard. Each traveler who passed him had to be bareheaded. Those on horseback or in kago had to dismount. As Cat passed by him she felt his gaze assessing her.
The short stretch of the Tokaido beyond the town was particularly lovely. The roadbed was more level as it followed the ridgeline and passed between an avenue of silent, towering cryptomeria. The huge trees muted the noise of the couriers and the kago bearers and the pilgrims’ bells. Their grandeur didn’t ease Cat’s dread. And she was reproaching herself for leading Kasane into such peril.
Cat saw the crowd of travelers waiting to pass the barrier about the same time she saw the four severed heads. Each head, with black hair unbound and hanging loose where the men’s shoulders once had been, rested on a narrow shelf fastened atop two posts. The four shelves were lined up parallel with the road and at eye level. Each head sat in a ring of blood-soaked cloth that held it upright.
Stuck into the ground beside each was a narrow plank with a square plaque nailed to it. The plaques were inscribed with the crimes of the heads’ owners. As they walked slowly past them Cat read the plaques to Kasane.
“This one killed a bird.” Cat considered the irony of Tokugawa Tsunayoshi’s law making the killing of any living thing punishable by death or exile. “This one tried to sneak around the barrier.”
“Why does the third one have a doll’s head with it?”
“He was a wandering puppeteer. He was suspected of being a spy.”
Cat read the fourth plaque, then she read it slowly again. The fourth man had been beheaded for the murder of two samurai in Hiratsuka and a merchant in Odawara. Was that a coincidence, or had he paid the price for Cat’s crime?
Kasane whimpered as she moved closer to Cat. She once had seen a man decapitated in her village. He had been caught trying to bribe the assessor to overlook his newest field. She had passed the exposed head each day, and she had studied it as though it were an artifact. Now she realized she might suffer the same fate.
Cat sat down under three huge cedars growing from a grassy hillock near the flight of stone steps leading to a temple. She set the bottom of the bundle on the slope behind her and leaned against it. She spread her legs in a most unladylike way and rested her forearms on her knees.
“What will happen to us, mistress?” Kasane spoke in a low voice as she massaged Cat’s calves. They were knotted and quivering with the strain of the climb.
Cat reached out and tilted up Kasane’s chin so she could look into her eyes. “Turn back now, elder sister.” Her voice was low and intense. “I’ll say you took ill and returned to our village.”
“They’ll find me on the road. They’ll execute me anyway.”
“Don’t be silly. They don’t know the whereabouts of every peasant.” But Cat knew she would never convince Kasane of that.
Kasane was sure the government’s spies kept it apprised of the comings and goings of each of its thirty million subjects. She assumed the she9781429935999_img_333.gifgun knew to a grain how much millet the people of her village harvested from their tiny fields and how many fish they caught. It knew the decisions made in each meeting of each of the hundreds of thousands of groups of five heads of households in each of the thousands of villages scattered throughout the land.
If it hadn’t taken her into custody yet, that was only because it hadn’t cared to. That made her determination to try to fool the barrier guards even more astonishing.
“I will stay with you, mistress.”
“Then we have jumped off Kiyomizu temple.” Cat could tell that Kasane had no idea what she was talking about. “Kiyomizu temple sits on a mountainside near the Western Capital,” Cat said. “It has a sheer cliff in front of it. To jump off the terrace of Kiyomizu temple means one has done a rash deed and cannot turn back.”
Cat used her round fan with “Souvenir of Totsuka” written on it, to brush the dust off her trousers. “The official at the barrier will demand our permits. I’ll give them both to him. Say nothing unless he asks you a question. A woman may take you aside and search you, but they don’t usually pay much attention to peasants.”
Cat took a deep breath and closed her eyes briefly. Sitting down had been a mistake. Her body rebelled at the thought of getting up and walking again. She used her staff to haul herself to her feet.
“Dewa mairo?” She smiled at Kasane. “Shall we go?”