Authors: I. J. Parker
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Mystery & Detective, #General, #Political
A government barrier had been erected between the steep mountainside and Hakone lake, a desolate sheet of water mirroring sky and mountaintops. Here, for the first time since they had left the civilized world of the capital, they encountered evidence of harsh frontier justice. Displayed at eye level on shelves near the barrier were the heads of criminals, each accompanied by a plaque describing his misdeeds, a lesson and a deterrent to would-be offenders.
Akitada, though nauseated by the sight, forced himself closer to read the plaques, nearly twenty of them. Murder, rape, robbery, fraud, and one case of treason. The authorities in this eastern province took their responsibility for checking travelers seriously.
He rejoined the others, profoundly uneasy about Tora’s fate, should the barrier guard decide to question his identity. There was no guarantee that his own status was sufficient to save his new servant’s head, if Tora was arrested for his supposed crimes.
He looked around. About twenty people ahead of them awaited their turn. The line moved slowly. No one escaped scrutiny at the Hakone barrier.
A guard approached and asked for their papers. After glancing at them, he motioned them past the waiting line and into the inspection office.
Ducking under a curtain, they found themselves in a large room with a packed dirt floor, facing a low bench in front of a raised wooden platform. Tora and Seimei went to kneel on the bench. Akitada remained standing.
On the platform sat a uniformed and fiercely mustached captain of the guard with three soberly dressed officials behind him and a scribe at a low writing desk off to the side.
The guard handed Akitada’s papers up to his commander with a whispered comment. The captain ran his sharp black eyes over Akitada, then scrutinized Seimei and Tora. Then he read all the documents, some of them twice.
Akitada felt beads of perspiration on his upper lip and his palms. This was a far cry from the deferential reception he had come to expect at checkpoints. He jumped a little when he heard a curt bark. “Approach, sir!”
Akitada’s official standing meant that he should give the orders, not the other way around, but he could not risk drawing attention to Tora and so he obeyed without protest.
“I see from your documents that you are on special assignment from the capital to Kazusa province?”
Akitada nodded.
“The men with you are your servants and you vouch for them?” The captain’s beady eyes left Akitada’s face and rested on Tora again—more thoughtfully than before.
“Yes.” Akitada tried to make his tone casual, though his heart was pounding. “The older man is called Seimei, the younger Tora.”
“I see. Why did you get papers for the man Tora in Futakawa?”
Akitada felt himself flush. “Ah,” he stammered, “the trip proved harder than expected and ... er ... Seimei is unused to traveling. We had some difficulties, and, well, it seemed a good idea to hire another servant.”
The captain gave him a long look. “Difficulties?” he said with what amounted to a sneer. “No doubt you’re not used to travel. You have actually come quite far without an escort. A lot of the young gentlemen from the capital turn tail long before they reach Hakone.”
Akitada flushed again, this time angrily, but he bit his lip and said nothing.
“What is your business in Kazusa?”
“I travel under imperial orders, as you can see, Captain ... ?”
“Saito is the name. You are not, by chance, looking into the missing tax shipments from Kazusa, are you?”
Akitada’s instructions were to use the utmost discretion, but this man might have valuable information. “I am,” he admitted. “What do you know of the matter?”
“I know that no goods from Kazusa province have passed here in years. Plenty of things going the other way—Buddhist scrolls and statuary, parcels for the governor—but no tax convoys from Kazusa for the emperor.” The captain turned to one of the clerks. “Bring the ledgers for the past two years and copies of the correspondence about the Kazusa tax shipments!” Reaching for an open ledger, he turned some pages, then pushed the ledger toward Akitada. “See for yourself! When they did not show up at the usual time again this year, I reported the matter to the capital. Again.”
Again? Akitada bent to read.
The clerk returned with a large document box that he set down. The captain took out two more ledgers and turned to the end of the entries. “Last year. Nothing. There you are.” He pointed to a line of brushstrokes. “And here the same,” he said, shoving a third ledger at Akitada. “And here are copies of the reports I sent to the capital.”
Akitada looked, then looked again in disbelief. “There has not been a single tax convoy from Kazusa for three years or more?” he asked. It seemed incredible. Worse, the documents proved that no one had bothered to investigate the matter until now.
“Three years precisely,” corrected the captain. “Before then everything was always in order and punctual as geese flying south in the winter.”
“How do you account for it?”
“I cannot,” the captain said. He appraised Akitada and compressed his lips. “I simply do my duty. My men got instructions to question everyone coming from the east about incidents on the road. There was never even the vaguest rumor of either gangs or piracy. It would take a small army to fall on a tax convoy under military escort. In my opinion—and, mind you, it is just an opinion—the goods never left Kazusa. Hrrmph.” He cleared his throat and gave Akitada another of his disconcerting stares. “Confirmed by the fact that the imperial authorities have taken their sweet time to investigate.” A corner of his mouth twitched. “Until now,” he added with deliberate sarcasm.
Akitada felt himself flush hotly. He knew what the man thought. Nobody wanted the shipments found. By sending an inexperienced junior clerk to investigate a matter of this magnitude, the government had signaled the fact that they wished the whole thing forgotten. And for what reason but to protect the provincial governor who was a Fujiwara and a distant relative of the chancellor? Unfortunately, he also happened to be the cousin of Akitada’s best friend Kosehira. They had attended the university together and become close because both had been friendless, Akitada because he was poor and Kosehira because he was short and fat.
Resenting the captain’s manner, Akitada snapped, “Thank you. I must be on my way. If you are quite finished with us ... ?”
The captain grinned. “Of course! Of course! I won’t keep you. Good luck, sir.” He bowed with mocking deference.
“Seimei, the bell tokens!”
A soldier received the tokens to be exchanged for two horses and rushed away.
They were headed out the door when the captain called after them, “The weather is turning. You would be well advised to spend the night in our quarters.”
Akitada turned and said stiffly, “Thank you, but I think we will press on.”
♦
They made the descent in daylight, but the rain began soon after they had left the lakeside barrier and fell coldly and steadily all the way down the mountain. Its gray sheets obscured what would have been magnificent views; its icy wetness insinuated itself through layers of clothing to their skin. Soaked, chilled, and exhausted, they broke their journey in Odawara at the foot of the mountain and spent the night in an inn that was overrun by rats, sleeping on mats of moldy, stinking straw, covered by their own wet clothes.
The next day they awoke to more gray clouds and sheeting rain, but set out again covered by their wet straw cloaks and limp straw hats. The road wound through foothills until it approached the coast again. They could smell and taste the salt of the sea on the cold wind miles before they set eyes on it.
When they emerged from the last protective belt of forest and saw the wide expanse of open ocean before them, they were sucked into a frigid, whirling gray mist. Above them the wind swept ragged smoky clouds along; before them the charcoal-dark ocean boiled and subsided with a continuous roar, vomiting up dirty yellow foam and swallowing it again; and all about them swirled and blew the spray and the everlasting rain, tearing at their cloaks and slapping the wet, salt-laden wisps of their hats against their stinging cheeks. Seimei developed a nagging cough.
After Oiso the road veered away from the coast and they entered a huge plain, most of the year a rich and verdant source of rice for the nation. Now, in this late season, the rice paddies, lying fallow, were black sheets of water between dams, dotted here and there as far as the eye could see by farms or hamlets huddling dejectedly under gloomy trees. The Tokaido crossed this submerged plain on a raised dam, planted on both sides with pines drooping mournfully under the weight of their wet needles.
Finally, toward evening of that dismal day, the rain eased to a drizzle. Battered and weary, they reached Sagami Bay and the harbor town of Fujisawa. From there Akitada had planned to journey by water, taking a boat across the bay to Kazusa province. They would save five or six days that way, arriving in the provincial capital in two days.
Fujisawa was a sizable and bustling town with its own post station and small police force. It was a major port for boats sailing across Sagami Bay, and on the nearby island of Enoshima was a famous shrine.
As soon as they entered the town, Tora left to find a room in an inn, while Akitada and Seimei continued to the post station to return the horses. Progress through Fujisawa’s narrow streets was difficult on horseback. Because of the drizzle, shoppers carried oilpaper umbrellas, and the horses shied, while the Fujisawans cursed or screamed.
The post station was near the harbor. At its gate stood the usual roofed notice board. This one carried one very large and official-looking proclamation that, unlike the rest of the messages, was yellowed and torn. The writing had faded almost into illegibility, but there were faint traces of a red government seal, and Akitada went to read it. As far as he could make out, it requested information about robberies of government shipments and offered a substantial reward. The seal was that of the governor of Kazusa. Clearly no one had applied for the reward for many months, and the offer had not been renewed.
Akitada returned to Seimei. “An old posting about the lost taxes. This is looking worse by the minute for the governor. He is not even making a token effort to investigate the loss. How can we accept the man’s hospitality when he is our prime suspect?”
Seimei sneezed. “I don’t know, sir,” he croaked dismally, his teeth chattering.
Akitada searched the old man’s face. He looked unnaturally flushed and huddled in his saddle. “Are you feeling all right, old fellow?” he asked with sudden concern.
Seimei shivered and coughed. “Just a little cold. I’ll be better once I’m off this horse and can stretch my legs a bit.”
They turned the horses over to the post station’s grooms and left their saddlebags in the office after removing their valuables.
The rain had stopped, but it was quickly turning dark because of the overcast sky. Everywhere lanterns were being lit, and fires and candles glowed from the many places of business catering to visitors. Mouthwatering smells of hot foods filled the streets. Akitada and Seimei made their way slowly through the crowds, stopping from time to time at inns to ask for Tora.
But it was as if the rain had swallowed him up.
In an unsavory and nearly deserted part of town, Akitada became aware of Seimei’s lagging steps. He stopped. “Seimei,” he said, “we have spent an hour searching. It is time we went back to an inn, got a room, and rested. You need a hot bath, some warm wine, and dry bedding.”
To his astonishment, Seimei objected. “Please, sir,” he quavered through chattering teeth, “couldn’t we just try a bit longer? I have a very uneasy feeling about this. It isn’t like Tora.”
“Nonsense. He is young and strong. Perhaps he simply got tired of our company and took off.”
“Oh,” Seimei cried, wringing his hands, “I hope not. Oh, dear. It is all my fault.”
“Why your fault?”