Shogun - Clavell James - Страница 95
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The column was moving through the city heading for the sea. He saw Yabu keeping the pace up and momentarily Pieterzoon's screams came soaring into his head. "One thing at a time," he muttered, half to himself.
"Yes," Mariko was saying. "It must be very difficult for you. Our world is so very different from yours. Very different but very wise." She could see the dim figure of Toranaga within the litter ahead and she thanked God again for his escape. How to explain to the barbarian about us, to compliment him for his bravery? Toranaga had ordered her to explain, but how? "Let me tell you a story, Anjin-san. When I was young my father was a general for a daimyo called Goroda. At that time Lord Goroda was not the great Dictator but a daimyo still struggling for power. My father invited this Goroda and his chief vassals to a feast. It never occurred to him that there was no money to buy all the food and sake and lacquerware and tatamis that such a visit, by custom, demanded. Lest you think my mother was a bad manager, she wasn't. Every groat of my father's revenue went to his own vassal samurai and although, officially, he had only enough for four thousand warriors, by scrimping and saving and manipulating my mother saw that he led five thousand three hundred into battle to the glory of his liege lord. We, the family - my mother, my father's consorts, my brothers and sisters - we had barely enough to eat. But what did that matter? My father and his men had the finest weapons and the finest horses, and they gave of their best to their lord.
"Yes, there was not enough money for this feast, so my mother went to the wigmakers in Kyoto and sold them her hair. I remember it was like molten darkness and hung to the pit of her back. But she sold it. The wigmakers cut it off the same day and gave her a cheap wig and she bought everything that was necessary and saved the honor of my father. It was her duty to pay the bills and she paid. She did her duty. For us duty is all important."
"What did he say, your father, when he found out?"
"What should he say, other than to thank her? It was her duty to find the money. To save his honor."
"She must have loved him very much."
"Love is a Christian word, Anjin-san. Love is a Christian thought, a Christian ideal. We have no word for 'love' as I understand you to mean it. Duty, loyalty, honor, respect, desire, those words and thoughts are what we have, all that we need. " She looked at him and in spite of herself, she relived the instant when he had saved Toranaga, and through Toranaga, her husband. Never forget they were both trapped there, they would both be dead now, but for this man.
She made sure that no one was near. "Why did you do what you did?"
"I don't know. Perhaps because..." He stopped. There were so many things he could say: 'Perhaps because Toranaga was helpless and I didn't want to get chopped . . . . Because if he was discovered we'd all be caught in the mess . . . . Because I knew that no one knew except me and it was up to me to gamble . . . . Because I didn't want to die - there's too much to do to waste my life, and Toranaga's the only one who can give me back my ship and my freedom.' Instead he replied in Latin, "Because He hath said, render to Caesar the things that are Caesar's."
"Aye," she said, and added in the same language, "aye, that is what I was attempting to say. To Caesar those things, and to God those things. It is thusly with us. God is God and our Emperor is from God. And Caesar is Caesar, to be honored as Caesar. " Then, touched by his understanding and the tenderness in his voice, she said, "Thou art wise. Sometimes I think thou understandst more than thou sayest. "
Aren't you doing what you swore you would never do? Blackthorne asked himself. Aren't you playing the hypocrite? Yes and no. I owe them nothing. I'm a prisoner. They've stolen my ship and my goods and murdered one of my men. They're heathen - well, some of them are heathen and the rest are Catholics. I owe nothing to heathens and Catholics. But you'd like to bed her and you were complimenting her, weren't you?
God curse all consciences!
The sea was nearer now, half a mile away. He could see many ships, and the Portuguese frigate with her riding lights. She'd make quite a prize. With twenty bully boys I could take her. He turned back to Mariko. Strange woman, from a strange family. Why did she offend Buntaro - that baboon? How could she bed with that, or marry that? What is the "sadness"?
"Senhora," he said, keeping his voice gentle, "your mother must have been a rare woman. To do that."
"Yes. But because of what she did, she will live forever. Now she is legend. She was as samurai as - as my father was samurai."
"I thought only men were samurai."
"Oh, no, Anjin-san. Men and women are equally samurai, warriors with. responsibilities to their lords. My mother was true samurai, her dutifulness to her husband exceeded everything."
"She's at your home now?"
"No. Neither she nor my father nor any of my brothers or sisters or family. I am the last of my line."
"There was a catastrophe?"
Mariko suddenly felt tired. I'm tired of speaking Latin and foul-sounding Portuguese and tired of being a teacher, she told herself.
I'm not a teacher. I'm only a woman who knows her duty and wants to do it in peace. I want none of that warmth again and none of this man who unsettles me so much. I want none of him.
"In a way, Anjin-san, it was a catastrophe. One day I will tell you about it." She quickened her pace slightly and walked away, nearer to the other litter. The two maids smiled nervously.
"Have we far to go, Mariko-san?" Sono asked.
"I hope not too far," she said reassuringly.
The captain of Grays loomed abruptly out of the darkness on the other side of the litter. She wondered how much that she had said to the Anjin-san had been overheard.
"You'd like a kaga, Mariko-san? Are you getting tired?" the captain asked.
"No, no thank you." She slowed deliberately, drawing him away from Toranaga's litter. "I'm not tired at all."
"The barbarian's behaving himself? He's not troubling you?"
"Oh, no. He seems to be quite calm now."
"What were you talking about?"
"All sorts of things. I was trying to explain some of our laws and customs to him." She motioned back to the castle donjon that was etched against the sky above. "Lord Toranaga asked me to try to get some sense into him."
"Ah yes, Lord Toranaga." The captain looked briefly at the castle, then back to Blackthorne. "Why's Lord Toranaga so interested in him, Lady?"
"I don't know. I suppose because he's an oddity."
They turned a corner, into another street, with houses behind garden walls. There were few people about. Beyond were wharves and the sea. Masts sprouted over the buildings and the air was thick with the smell of seaweed. "What else did you talk about?"
"They've some very strange ideas. They think of money all the time."
"Rumor says his whole nation's made up of filthy merchant pirates. Not a samurai among them. What's Lord Toranaga want with him?"
"So sorry, I don't know."
"Rumor says he's Christian, he claims to be Christian. Is he?"
"Not our sort of Christian, Captain. You're Christian, Captain?"
"My Master's Christian so I am Christian. My Master is Lord Kiyama. " "I have the honor to know him well. He honored my husband by betrothing one of his granddaughters to my son."
"Yes, I know, Lady Toda."
"Is Lord Kiyama better now? I understand the doctors won't allow anyone to see him."
"I haven't seen him for a week. None of us has. Perhaps it's the Chinese pox. God protect him from that, and God curse all Chinese!" He glared toward Blackthorne. "Doctors say these barbarians brought the pest to China, to Macao, and thence to our shores."
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