fear of dying, and then he fell into oblivion.
C H A P T E R F O U R T E E N
TO R A
Almost a month after the arrival of Yoshimine Taketsuna on
Sado Island, another ship from Echigo brought a young man in
military garb. Under the watchful eyes of several people, the
new arrival made his way from the ship to a small wine shop
overlooking Mano Harbor. He was a handsome fellow with
white teeth under a trim mustache, and he wore his shiny new
half armor and sword with a slight swagger. A scruffy individual
in loincloth and tattered shirt limped behind him with his
bundle of belongings.
The rank insignia on the visitor’s breastplate marked him as
a lieutenant of the provincial guard. Both the iron helmet with
its small knobs and the leather-covered breastplate shone with
careful waxing. Full white cotton trousers tucked into black
boots and a loose black jacket covered his broad shoulders.
He took a seat on one of the benches outside the shop and
removed his helmet, mopping it and his sweaty brow with a
bright green cloth square he carried in his sleeve. Then he
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pounded his fist on the rough table. His bearer limped over and
squatted down on the ground beside him.
“Hey,” growled the officer, “you can’t sit here. Go over there
where I don’t have to smell you.”
Obediently the man got up and moved.
“Miserable wretches don’t know what respect is,” grumbled
the new arrival, and eyed the bearer’s bony frame with a frown.
Surely the man was over forty, he thought, too old for hard phys-
ical labor. Besides, he was crippled. One of his legs was shorter
than the other. Worse, the fellow looked starved, with every rib
and bone trying to work its way through the leathery skin.
He turned impatiently and pounded the table again. A
fat, dirty man in a short gown and stained apron appeared in
the doorway and glared into the sun. Seeing the helmet and
sword, he rushed forward to bow and offer greetings to the
honorable officer.
“Never mind all that,” said his guest. “Bring me some wine
and give that bearer over there something to eat and some water
to drink. If I don’t feed him, he’ll collapse with my bundle.”
The officer was Tora, normally in charge of the constables at
the provincial headquarters of Echigo, but now on a mission to
find his master.
Glancing about him, he rubbed absentmindedly at the red
line the heavy helmet had left on his forehead. Made of thick
iron and lined with leather, even half armor was heavy and
uncomfortable, but his was new and he was still inordinately
proud of it.
The owner of the wine shop returned with the order. He set
a flask and cup down on the table and turned to take a chipped
bowl filled with some reeking substance to the bearer, when
Tora clamped an iron fist around his arm.
“What is that stinking slop?” he demanded.
“Er, fish soup, sir.”
I s l a n d o f E x i l e s
241
Tora sniffed. “It stinks,” he announced, and jerked the
man’s arm, spilling the soup in a wide arc into the street. Imme-
diately seagulls swooped down with raucous cries to fight over
the scattered morsels. He growled, “Get fresh food or I’ll put my
fist into that loose mouth of yours.”
“Yes, sir, right away, sir,” gasped the man, rubbing his wrist
and backing away. From a safe distance, he pleaded, “But he’s only
a beggar. Lucky to get anything. I wouldn’t have charged much.”
“What?” roared Tora, rising to his feet. The man fled, and
quickly reappeared with a fresh bowl, which he presented to
Tora, who first smelled and then tasted it. Satisfied, he nodded.
The squatting servant received the food with many bows
and toothless grins toward his benefactor before raising it to his
mouth and emptying it in one long swallow.
“Give him another,” instructed Tora. “He likes it.”
Having seen to the feeding of his bearer, Tora poured
himself some wine and leaned back to look around.
He had spent the crossing planning his approach carefully.
Tora was not much given to planning, but life with his master
had taught him to respect danger. In the present situation, he
knew he must restrain his anxiety and move cautiously to
gather information without precipitating unfortunate develop-
ments. His master had used a disguise. Perhaps it had failed.
Tora felt that nothing was to be gained by doing the same.
Something had clearly gone wrong, or he would have returned
or sent a message by now. As it was, they had waited well beyond
the time of his master’s expected return.
Though it was a beautiful late summer afternoon, with the
sun glistening on the bay, seagulls wheeling against a blue sky,
and colorful flags flying over the gate of a nearby palisade, Tora
frowned. There was nothing cheerful about the people here.
Half-naked bearers were unloading bales and boxes from
the ship. They were younger, stronger, and better fed than the
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pathetic creature guarding Tora’s bundle, but their expressions
were uniformly sullen or dejected. There was no talk. Neither
jokes nor curses passed their lips as they crept, bent double
under their loads, along the beach toward piles of goods stock-
piling under the eyes of bored guards.
Tora considered the cripple. Their host had referred to him
as a beggar, but the ragged creature had offered his services as
a bearer. On second thought, the man could not have handled
anything much heavier than Tora’s bundle, which contained
little more than a change of clothes.
The man bowed and grinned. At least four of his front teeth
were gone, he had a flattened nose, and one ear was misshapen.
Either he was incredibly foolhardy about getting into fights, or
he had been beaten repeatedly. Tora thought the latter and
beckoned the man over.
He rushed up with that lopsided limp of his and carefully
positioned himself downwind. “Yes, your honor?”
“What’s your name?”
“Taimai.”
“Taimai? Turtle?”
The man nodded. “It’s lucky.”
“Hmm.” Tora glanced at the skinny, twisted figure and
disagreed. “Well, Turtle, would you know of a good cheap
inn?”
“Yes, yes,” Turtle crowed, jumping up and down in his ea-
gerness. “Just around the corner. Very cheap and excellent
accommodations.”
Tora rose, dropping some coppers on the table. The host
rushed out and scooped them up eagerly. He bowed several
times. “Come again, your honor. Come again.”
Paid the rascal too much, Tora thought as he put on his
helmet and followed the limping Turtle into town.
“Just a moment!” said a high, sharp voice behind him.
I s l a n d o f E x i l e s
243
Tora turned and recognized the red-coated police officer,
also a lieutenant. He had come on board ship to check every-
body’s papers before they disembarked. Under normal circum-
stances, Tora would have struck up a conversation and proposed
a friendly cup of wine, but there was something about the man
that he did not like. He had passed his papers over silently, and
the lieutenant had studied them silently, giving Tora a long
measuring look from small mean eyes before returning them
without comment.
Tora now narrowed his eyes and looked the other man
over, from his meager mustache to his leather boots, and
said, “Yes?”
“Where are you going with that piece of shit? I thought you
had a dispatch for the governor.”