Mura looked up at Blackthorne and remembered how he had tried to question him aboard the ship and then, when this Captain had become unconscious, he had decided to bring him to his own house because he was the leader and should have special consideration. They had laid him on the quilt and undressed him, more than just a little curious.
“His Peerless Parts are certainly impressive,
“Large,” he had answered and they had all laughed, his mother and wife and friends and servants, and the doctor.
“I expect their women must be—must be as well endowed,” his wife, Niji, said.
“Nonsense, girl,” said his mother. “Any number of our courtesans could happily make the necessary accommodation.” She shook her head in wonder. “I’ve never seen anything like him in my whole life. Very odd indeed,
They had washed him and he had not come out of his coma. The doctor had thought it unwise to immerse him in a proper bath until he was awake. “Perhaps we should remember, Mura-san, we don’t know how the barbarian really is,” he had said with careful wisdom. “So sorry, but we might kill him by mistake. Obviously he’s at the limit of his strength. We should exercise patience.”
“But what about the lice in his hair?” Mura had asked.
“They will have to stay for the time being. I understand all barbarians have them. So sorry, I’d advise patience.”
“Don’t you think we could at least shampoo his head?” his wife had said. “We’d be very careful. I’m sure the Mistress would supervise our poor efforts. That should help the barbarian and keep our house clean.”
“I agree. You can shampoo him,” his mother had said with finality. “But I’d certainly like to know how large he is when erect.”
Now Mura glanced down at Blackthorne involuntarily. Then he remembered what the priest had told them about these Satanists and pirates. God the Father protect us from this evil, he thought. If I’d known that he was so terrible I would never have brought him into my house. No, he told himself. You are obliged to treat him as a special guest until Omi-san says otherwise. But you were wise to send word to the priest and send word to Omi-san instantly. Very wise. You’re headman, you’ve protected the village and you, alone, are responsible.
Yes. And Omi-san will hold you responsible for the death this morning and the dead man’s impertinence, and quite rightly.
“Don’t be stupid, Tamazaki! You risk the good name of the village,
“Nothing, I agree, Mura-san, please excuse me.” Tamazaki had always replied as formally. “But Buddhists should have more tolerance,
“Yes, Buddhism teaches tolerance. But how many times must you be reminded they’re samurai, and this is Izu and not Kyushu, and even if it were Kyushu, you’re still the one that’s wrong. Always.
“Yes. Please excuse me, I know I’m wrong. But sometimes I feel I cannot live with my inner shame when Omi-san is so insulting about the True Faith.”
And now, Tamazaki, you are dead of your own choosing because you insulted Omi-san by not bowing simply because he said, “.?.?.?this smelly priest of the foreign religion.” Even though the priest does smell and the True Faith is foreign. My poor friend. That truth will not feed your family now or remove the stain from my village.
Oh, Madonna, bless my old friend and give him the joy of thy Heaven.
Expect a lot of trouble from Omi-san, Mura told himself. And if that isn’t bad enough, now our
A pervading anxiety always filled him whenever he thought of his feudal lord, Kasigi Yabu,
Northwards, Toranaga, the greatest general alive, Lord of the Kwanto, the Eight Provinces, the most important
Who will win the war?
Neither.
Because their war will envelop the empire again, alliances will fall apart, provinces will fight provinces until it is village against village as it ever was. Except for the last ten years. For the last ten years, incredibly, there had been a warlessness called peace throughout the empire, for the first time in history.
I was beginning to like peace, Mura thought.
But the man who made the peace is dead. The peasant soldier who became a samurai and then a general and then the greatest general and finally the Taiko, the absolute Lord Protector of Japan, is dead a year and his seven-year-old son is far too young to inherit supreme power. So the boy, like us, is in pawn. Between the giants. And war inevitable. Now not even the Taiko himself can protect his beloved son, his dynasty, his inheritance, or his empire.
Perhaps this is as it should be. The Taiko subdued the land, made the peace, forced all the
We’re all trapped and that is a fact; war will come soon and that is a fact; Yabu alone will decide which side we are on and that is a fact; the village will always be a village because the paddy fields are rich and the sea abundant and that is a last fact.
Mura brought his mind back firmly to the barbarian pirate in front of him. You’re a devil sent to plague us, he thought, and you’ve caused us nothing but trouble since you arrived. Why couldn’t you have picked another village?
“Captain-san want
“
“No!” Blackthorne wanted only to sleep. But because he knew that he needed this man on his side he forced a smile, indicated the crucifix. “You’re a Christian?”
Mura nodded. “Christian.”
“I’m Christian.”
“Father say not. Not Christian.”
“I’m a Christian. Not a Catholic. But I’m still Christian.”
But Mura could not understand. Neither was there any way Blackthorne could explain, however much he tried.
“Want
“The—the dimyo—when come?”
“Dimyo? No understand.”
“Dimyo—ah, I mean