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"I've already written my death poem, Lady: When I die, don't burn me, don't bury me, just throw my body on a field to fatten some empty-bellied dog."
"That could be arranged. Easily."
"Yes. But I've long ears and a safe tongue, which could be more important. " Mariko poured more cha. For herself. "So sorry, have you?"
"Oh yes, oh very yes. Please excuse me but it's no boast that I was trained well, Lady, in that and many other things. I'm not afraid to die. I've written my will, and detailed instructions to my kin in case of a sudden death. I've made my peace with the gods long since and forty days after I'm dead I know I'll be reborn. And if I'm not"the woman shrugged- "then I'm a kami." Her fan was stationary. "So I can afford to reach for the moon, neh? Please excuse me for mentioning it but I'm like you: I fear nothing. But unlike you in this life - I've nothing to lose."
"So much talk of evil things, Gyoko-san, on such a pleasant rooming. It is pleasant, neh?" Mariko readied to bury her fangs. "I'd much prefer to see you alive, living into honored old age, one of the pillars of your new guild. Ah, that was a very tender idea. A good one, Gyoko-san."
"Thank you, Lady. Equally I'd like you safe and happy and prospering in the way that you'd wish. With all the toys and honors you'd require."
"Toys?" Mariko repeated, dangerous now.
Gyoko was like a trained dog on the scent near the kill. "I'm only a peasant, Lady, so I wouldn't know what honors you wish, what toys would please you. Or your son."
Unnoticed by either of them the slim wooden haft of Mariko's fan snapped between her fingers. The breeze had died. Now the hot wet air hung in the garden that looked out on a waveless sea. Flies swarmed and settled and swarmed again.
"What - what honors or toys would you wish? For yourself?" Mariko stared with malevolent fascination at the older woman, clearly aware now that she must destroy this woman or her son would perish.
"Nothing for myself. Lord Toranaga's given me honors and riches beyond my dreams. But for my son? Ah yes, he could be given a helping hand."
"What help?"
"Two swords."
"Impossible."
"I know, Lady. So sorry. So easy to grant, yet so impossible. War's coming. Many will be needed to fight."
"There'll be no war now. Lord Toranaga's going to Osaka."
"Two swords. That's not much to ask."
"That's impossible. So sorry, that's not mine to give."
"So sorry, but I haven't asked you for anything. But that's the only thing that would please me. Yes. Nothing else." A dribble of sweat fell from Gyoko's face onto her lap. "I'd like to offer Lord Toranaga five hundred koku from the contract price, as a token of my esteem in these hard times. The other five hundred will go to my son. A samurai needs a heritage, neh?"
"You sentence your son to death. All Toranaga samurai will die or become ronin very soon."
"Karma. My son already has sons, Lady. They will tell their sons that once we were samurai. That's all that matters, neh?"
"It's not mine to give."
"True. So sorry. But that's all that would satisfy me."
Irritably, Toranaga shook his head. "Her information's interesting - perhaps - but not worth making her son samurai."
Mariko replied, "She seems to be a loyal vassal, Sire. She said she'd be honored if you'd deduct a further five hundred koku from the contract fee for some needy samurai."
"That's not generosity. No, not at all. That's merely guilt over the original usurious asking price."
"Perhaps it's worth considering, Sire. Her idea about the guild, about gei-sha and the new classes of courtesans, will have far-reaching effects, neh? It would do no harm, perhaps."
"I don't agree. No. Why should she be rewarded? There's no reason for granting her that honor. Ridiculous! She surely didn't ask you for it, did she?"
"It would have been more than a little impertinent for her to do that, Sire. I have made the suggestion because I believe she could be very valuable to you."
"She'd better be more valuable. Her secrets are probably lies too. These days I get nothing but lies." Toranaga rang a small bell and an equerry appeared instantly at the far door.
"Sire?"
"Where's the courtesan Kiku?"
"In your quarters, Sire."
"Is the Gyoko woman with her?"
"Yes, Sire."
"Send them both out of the castle. At once! Send them back to . . . . No, lodge them at an inn - a third-class inn - and tell them to wait there until I send for them." Toranaga said testily, as the man vanished, "Disgusting! Pimps wanting to be samurai? Filthy peasants don't know their place anymore!"
Mariko watched him sitting on his cushion, his fan waving desultorily. She was jarred by the change in him. Gloom, irritation, and petulance, where before there had always been only buoyant confidence. He had listened to the secrets with interest, but not with the excitement she had expected. Poor man, she thought with pity, he's given up. What's the good of any information to him? Perhaps he's wise to cast things of the world aside and prepare for the unknown. Better you should do that yourself too, she thought, dying inside a bit more. Yes, but you can't, not yet, somehow you've got to protect your son.
They were on the sixth floor of the tall fortified donjon and the windows overlooked the whole city on three quarters of the compass. Sunset was dark tonight, the thread of moon low on the horizon, the dank air stifling, though here, almost a hundred feet above the floor of the castle battlements, the room gathered every breath of wind. The room was low and fortified and took up half the whole floor, other rooms beyond.
Toranaga picked up the dispatch that Hiro-matsu had sent with Mariko and read it again. She noticed his hand tremble.
"What's he want to come to Yedo for?" Impatiently Toranaga tossed the scroll aside.
"I don't know, Sire, so sorry. He just asked me to give you this dispatch."
"Did you talk to the Christian renegade?"
"No, Sire. Yoshinaka-san said you'd given orders against anyone doing that."
"How was Yoshinaka on the journey?"
"Very capable, Sire," she said, patiently answering the question for a second time. "Very efficient. He guarded us very well and delivered us on time exactly."
"Why didn't the priest Tsukku-san come back with you all the way?"
"On the road from Mishima, Sire, he and the Anjin-san quarreled," Mariko told him, not knowing what Father Alvito might have already told Toranaga, if in fact Toranaga had sent for him yet. "The Father decided to travel on alone."
"What was the quarrel about?"
"Partially over me, my soul, Sire. Mostly because of their religious enmity and because of the war between their rulers."