Read The Tokaido Road (1991)(528p) Online
Authors: Lucia St. Clair Robson
Tags: #Historical - Romance
“He’s only a farmer.” Kasane defended him diffidently.
“It is said that a curse will fall on anyone who refuses to gratify the love of another. “Cat gave the letter back to Kasane. “It is said that if a person suffers obsession of the heart and is not relieved, his or her spirit will return after death to take vengeance.”
Kasane was unable to find in her limited experience anything to say about such a complication. She was terrified of ghosts in general. The idea that one might have animosity for her personally almost paralyzed her with fear.
“I think this is just an infatuation of the road.” Cat took pity on her and stopped teasing. “Maybe he wants a marriage not entered into the book at the temple. Do you want to discourage him?”
“I don’t think so,” Kasane said almost inaudibly.
“Then we’ll send him an answer tonight.” Cat was amused by this flirtation, but she was wary of it, too. It could put her and Kasane in jeopardy.
Cat also felt protective, brotherly, in fact. Kasane was so naive. So inexperienced. A man could easily make a fool of her.
Cat was composing a poem to send to Kasane’s suitor when she saw a man and woman struggling by the side of the road. The attacker had a hand over his victim’s mouth so she could make only muffled cries.
The few other travelers in the vicinity hurried past; but Cat brandished her walking staff and advanced, stiff-legged, toward them. The thief saw her coming and shoved the woman into her. Then he ran into the thick undergrowth and disappeared.
Kneeling in the road and sobbing incoherently, the woman clung to Cat’s waist. She looked middle-aged and quite respectable, although she was hysterical and disheveled by the attack.
“Calm yourself, auntie,” Cat said. “He’s gone now.” She was pleased to see that Kasane still clutched her own staff in a fighting position.
She wouldn’t be the first peasant to become a
samurai, Cat thought.
Cat helped the woman to her feet. “Do you live nearby?”
Still sobbing, the woman pointed up the mountain. She bowed repeatedly as she backed toward a narrow path. Cat and Kasane continued down the trail with her thanks following them.
“You’re a brave one, Kasane.”
“I was frightened, but I knew you could beat him.”
Cat turned off
onto a side trail, screened by bushes.
“Plant your feet like so.” She demonstrated a fighting stance. “Hold your staff up.”
Kasane stood as she was told, and Cat did a reverse grip spin. She cracked her staff against Kasane’s, not with full force, but hard enough to send a shock up her arms.
“That’s the basic strike. Now you try it. Use the force of the spinning shaft to knock me over.”
Kasane hit at Cat’s staff timidly.
“Hard.”
Kasane hit a little harder.
“As hard as you can.”
Cat felt the beginning of the tingle that meant Kasane was applying force, but she knew she had a great deal of strength she wasn’t using.
“We’ll practice later,” Cat said. “While we walk we can play the priest game.”
“How is it played?”
“You carry both our packs until you see a priest. Then I have to carry both of them until I see one, and so on.”
“It distresses me to see you carrying one pack. It wouldn’t be right for you to carry two.”
“I’m a strong lad. I can carry a horse’s load.”
“May I use the knife?”
When Cat handed it to her, Kasane cut a pole from the stand of bamboo growing along the road. She slung her pack on one end and the
furoshiki
on the other. She lifted it and balanced it easily on her shoulder.
She bounced the pole once to settle the burden. “Let’s go.”
A setting sun as red as madder root burnished the mountainsides the color of old copper as they hurried along. A cold wind pushed them from behind. The steep descent caused cramps to knot the muscles of their calves and drove their feet forward into their sandals. They had to change into new ones that rubbed their feet raw, but they hardly noticed.
Their pilgrims’ bells jingled merrily. They laughed and talked and switched off loads whenever one of them spotted a priest’s bald head.
Kago
bearers shouted out propositions to both of them as they passed.
Night fell before they left the mountains, but they reached Mishima by the light of the moon and the big lanterns hung from the outlying shops and tea houses.
“The guidebook recommends the Trout House,” Cat said. “It says it’s inexpensive and clean.”
They found the Trout House on a quiet side street and sat wearily on the raised floor of the entry way. They had been walking since before dawn that morning.
“Welcome.” The maid bowed low. She lined up their dusty sandals neatly with the toes pointed outward so they could climb into them easily in the morning. A second maid hurried in with towels draped over her shoulder and a basin of hot water to wash their feet.
“Wait!” Cat patted the front of her jacket.
“What is it, younger brother?”
“Our money,” Cat whispered. “Our money is gone.”
THE DIVINE FAVOR OF THE THOUSAND-HANDED KANNON
The tiny house sat by itself next to the forest at the outskirts of Mishima. The latticework showing under its cracked mud plaster and its crooked window bars of peeled branches reminded Cat of a cricket cage. She and Kasane stood on the hard-packed earth of the narrow entryway.
“Fifteen coppers each.” The proprietress wore a hempen robe, made mostly of patches, that reached the middle of her bare shins. It was held shut by a straw cord wrapped around her waist. Her graying hair was tied in a rag knotted above her forehead. “Bath and food and fuel for cooking are extra, of course.” She spoke loudly to be heard above the wailing of the baby inside and the shrill quarreling of his parents.
Cat peered around the woman and into the single, smoky room. The knee-high wooden platform that formed the bare floor was crowded with people and their belongings. The only light came from a rush wick burning in a pottery bowl on a shelf and the flames in the firewell in the center of the room. The unpleasant smell of whale oil permeated everything.
Cat leaned back to see the wooden plaque nailed to the outside of the door sill. “Pilgrims’ Inn,” it read. “Inexpensive rates.”
“Enter or leave,” the innkeeper snapped. “You’re letting in the weather.”
Cat was so cold that she could hardly move, and she heard Kasane’s teeth chattering. She turned and slid the plank door closed behind her. She regretted the decision immediately. A foul stench overpowered the smell of the whale oil. It came from an aged nun whose bald head was covered with festering sores.
“We were robbed.” Cat was too weary to go elsewhere. She was disheartened by her search through Mishima for lodging she could afford. And she couldn’t bear to force Kasane to walk any farther. “We have only twenty
mon.
” She jingled the coins she and Kasane had gleaned from their sleeves, small change the cutpurse had missed.
“Anything to barter?”
“We carry only necessities.”
The woman studied them through narrowed eyes. She obviously considered twenty coppers preferable to the nothing she would get if she turned them away. “All right.” She gestured toward a heap of filthy quilts in the corner. The pile seemed to quiver with the six-legged life infesting it. “The bedding is extra.”
“We’ll do without.” Cat set down the
furoshiki,
then sat on the edge of the platform herself. She untied her sandals and took off her muddy
tabi.
Her wet feet were blue and numb with cold.
The woman brought a basin of cold, murky water. Kasane scooped out the cockroach floating in it. Then she and Cat dipped their towels and washed their feet. They stood up and picked their way among the pilgrims and their goods. The baby had not stopped shrieking. His parents were still bickering.
Cat’s plan was to get as far from the nun as possible. She made her way past the couple with the unhappy baby and an old man and a young woman, probably his daughter, whose back was curved like a fern shoot. She must have been struck by the mysterious illness that deformed the spines of its victims. The two were probably on their way to Ise to ask the Sun Goddess to cure her.
The master of the house sat near the fire. He seemed oblivious to the noise and the smell. He had anchored two loops of rice straw cords over the long, callused toes of his right foot, and he was plaiting a sandal around them. Without even asking his pardon, Cat stepped rudely over his sprawled leg.
She wasn’t just annoyed that she hadn’t found a better place to stay. She was furious with herself for allowing her sack of coins to be stolen. Only nightfall had stopped her from turning back to hunt down the thief. The woman who had pretended to be attacked must have pinched it when she’d clung to Cat.
Baka!
Fool! It was a vulgar word that Cat never would have used, but Kasane’s brother would have. As she had stalked through the silent, muddy streets of Mishima, past the shuttered houses, she had muttered it over and over, savoring the small explosion it made as it left her lips.
“Baka!”
she muttered to herself now.
The only clear space was in a rear corner, near an old woman who was sleeping curled on her side on a scrap of matting. The corner had the added advantage of being next to the back door. Cat and Kasane set their loads against the wall. The fleas launched an immediate attack on their ankles, and Cat regretted the loss of Shichisaburo’s flea powder at the Kawasaki ferry.
“The roaches are big enough to pull an ox cart.” Cat swatted one with a spare sandal.
The insects swarmed on the strings of dried fish hanging from the log rafters. They crawled across the floor. Their droppings littered the basket of millet on a shelf nearby.
Kasane stamped her feet to scatter them and unrolled the mats. “Maybe we should bargain with Locked Fist for her bedding,” Kasane said in a low voice as she rubbed Cat’s feet with her towel to warm them.
Cat stared at her as though she had gone mad.
“Then we would be blessed with the divine favor of the Thousand-Handed Kannon.” Kasane’s expression was solemn with only a hint of a twinkle in her dark eyes.
Cat had to chuckle. She looked warily toward the bedding. “We would need a thousand hands to scratch the holy Kannon’s blessings.”
When the baby stopped wailing to draw breath, Cat heard a tearing noise outside. It sounded as though someone were ripping the low-hanging thatch from the roof.
“Chikusho!
Beast!” The innkeeper opened the front door and shrieked out into the night. “Take your filthy animal away and feed it!” She picked up rocks from the pile she had stacked by the door and flung them at the hungry horse and the postboy who was allowing it to eat the inn’s roof.
“ ‘Fleas, lice,’ ” Cat recited in a murmur for Kasane’s benefit. “ ‘Horse pishing by the pillow.’ “
“Did you write that poem, younger brother?”
“No. Master Basho wrote it.” Actually, Cat was cheered by the poem from Basho’s famous travel journal. The master himself had stayed in an inn as bad as this one.
“I have to go somewhere,” Cat told Kasane. “Watch our things.”
Cat wouldn’t feel at ease until she had checked out the back exit. She lit her night lantern, and the landlady eyed it greedily. Cat knew she would demand it in the morning as partial payment for the lodging.
Cat stood on the rotting back porch and snuffed the lantern. She waited for her eyes to grow accustomed to the darkness and studied the tiny, cluttered backyard. It was a morass of mud from the recent rains. It sloped toward a ravine, a ribbon of black at the edge of the mud. Cat found a short, stout stick and set it next to the heavy wooden storm shutters. Then she put on the worn-down privy
geta.
Even with her eyes closed, the privy would have been easy to find.
When Cat returned she found that the rice gruel bubbling over the firewell belonged to the couple with the child. It had finished cooking, and the mother was feeding it to the boy. He had fallen blessedly quiet while he ate.
Kasane had hung her small pot on the iron hook over the flames. The handful of rice she had begged that morning was cooking inside it. Thick slabs of mushroom were grilling on bamboo skewers. They had appeared in the mountains as if by magic, a result of the rains and the warmer weather they brought. Kasane had gathered them, washed them in a clear stream, and wrapped them in a bamboo sheath. Now she dabbed them with soy sauce she had bought in Odawara. The aroma canceled out the other smells and made Cat’s stomach grumble.
Even so, Cat stared morosely at the turmoil around her, trying to ignore the hunger in the faces of the other pilgrims. She soon realized why this corner had been vacant. An icy wind blew steadily through the wide cracks between the warped boards in the door. It carried the privy’s scent with it. Also, people would be passing constantly on their way outside. Every time they opened the door the steady breeze would turn into a blast of cold air.
The woven bamboo ceiling that was the floor of the loft overhead creaked as some unseen member of the household walked on it. Grit sifted down onto Cat from the straw mats up there. She wrapped her travel cloak around her and shivered.
“How did you get old Locked Fist to part with the charcoal to cook the food?” Cat muttered when Kasane knelt and set two small bowls of rice topped with the dark slices of mushroom on the mat in front of her.
“I gave her the book.” Kasane sat back on her haunches, waiting for Cat to finish before she started eating.
Cat held the bowl a long moment, savoring the warmth and the solid curve of it in her hand and the aromatic steam issuing from it.
“You gave away your spring pictures?” she said between mouthfuls. The mushrooms and hot rice were delicious.
“It won’t be needed.” Kasane spoke to the floor. “No one will ever have this miserable person as a wife.”
“Don’t be so sure.” With her chopsticks, Cat motioned for Kasane to eat. She knew she must be ravenous. “I’ve thought of a poem to send to the pilgrim.”
“You’re too kind.” Kasane blushed and bowed low over her bowl.
“I’ll write it down when I finish eating.”
The old woman lying next to them suddenly rose up on one scaly elbow. Shadows pooled in the hollows of her cheeks and eyes and her toothless mouth. Kasane jumped as though she had seen a corpse rising from the grave, which was understandable. The old woman did resemble someone long dead.
“You know how to write.” It wasn’t really a question. “Write me a letter.” She rose to a sitting position and reached for her pipe and tobacco. “This is what you must say.”
Without waiting for Cat to answer, she launched into her dictation. “ ‘Beloved Nephew. Send me money immediately or I will curse you and your offspring for eternity. Praise Buddha.’ Sign it ‘the saintly pilgrim, Springtime.’ ”
A knock at the door interrupted anything else she might have had to say. Even as the innkeeper made her way across the room to open it, Cat knew that the knock was about her. It had the ring of a sword hilt to it.
Cat prepared for flight. No purpose would be served by fighting here, in this confined space with so many people about. With so many witnesses. With luck she and Kasane could flee out the back and escape in the darkness.
“We might have to run.” Cat gulped the last of the rice and stuck the bowl and chopsticks into the
furoshiki.
She quietly put her staff within easy reach.
“Take
your pack outside and wait for me,” she whispered. “Be careful! There’s a steep drop-off just beyond the porch, and the ground is slippery.”
Kasane disappeared out the back door just as the innkeeper slid open the front. Two men stood framed in the opening. They closed the door behind them and wrinkled their noses at the smell in the room. Distaste replaced boredom on their faces.
They didn’t expect to find Lady Asano here, but their leader insisted on a house-to-house search through Mishima. Besides, the latest couriers, direct from Lord Kira’s mansion in Edo, bore letters promising a large reward for the ones who found her.
“We’re looking for a thief,” said the tallest of the two. “He stole money from his master and ran away from the place of his employ. Anyone found harboring him will be punished.”
“Anyone who turns him in will be rewarded.” The shorter man glowered around the dim, smoky room that, except for the crackling of the small fire, was absolutely quiet for the first time that evening.
“Stop!” the taller man shouted at Cat’s retreating back. The young mother screamed, and people scattered as the two
samurai
drew their swords and leaped from the stone step up onto the floor. They arrived at the back door in time to hear the rumble of the heavy wooden storm shutter closing outside.
“Get her!” the tall one shouted through the matting over the outside of the barred window.