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"I wonder what those little houses are where they pay their visits,"
Reggie said.
"Oh, those are the _hikite chaya_" said Yae glibly, "the Yos.h.i.+wara tea-houses."
"Do they live there?" asked Asako.
"Oh, no; rich men who come to the Yos.h.i.+wara do not go to the big houses where the _oiran_ live. They go to the tea-houses; and they order food and _geisha_ to sing, and the _oiran_ to be brought from the big house. It is more private. So the tea-houses are called _hikite chaya_, 'tea-houses which lead by the hand.'"
"Yae," said Reggie, "you know a lot about it."
"Yes," said Miss Smith, "my brothers have told me. They tell me lots of things."
After a stay of about half an hour, the _oiran_ left their tea-houses.
The processions reformed; and they slowly tottered back to the places whence they had come. Across their path the cherry petals were already falling like snowflakes; for the cherry-blossom is the j.a.panese symbol of the impermanence of earthly beauty, and of all sweet things and pleasant.
"By Jove!" said Geoffrey Harrington to the world in general, "that was an extraordinary sight. East is East and West is West, eh? I never felt that so strongly before. How often does this performance take place?"
"This performance," said Reggie, "has taken place for three days every Spring for the last three hundred years. But it is more than doubtful whether it will ever happen again. It is called _Oiran Dochu_, the procession of the courtesans. Geoffrey, what you have seen to-day is nothing more or less than the Pa.s.sing of Old j.a.pan!"
"But whom do these women belong to?" asked Geoffrey. "And who is making money out of all this filth?"
"Various people and companies, I suppose, who own the different houses," answered Reggie. "A fellow once offered to sell me his whole establishment, bedding and six girls for 50 down. But he must have been having a run of bad luck. In most countries it is a most profitable form of investment. Do you remember 'Mrs. Warren's Profession'? Thirty-five per cent I think was the exact figure. I don't suppose j.a.pan is any exception."
"By Jove!" said Geoffrey, "The women, poor wretches, they can't help themselves; and the men who buy what they sell, one can't blame them either. But the creatures who make fortunes out of all this beastiness and cruelty, I say, they ought to be flogged round the place with a cat-o'-nine-tails till the life is beaten out of them. Let's get away from here!"
As they left the beer-house a small round j.a.panese man bobbed up from the crowd, raised his hat, bowed and smiled. It was Tanaka. Geoffrey had left him behind on purpose, that his servants, at least, might not know where he was going.
"I think--I meet Ladys.h.i.+p here," said the little man, "but for long time I do not spy her. I am very sorry."
"Is anything wrong? Why did you come?" asked Geoffrey.
"Good _samurai_ never leave Lords.h.i.+p's side. Of course, I come," was the reply.
"Well, hurry up and get back," said his master, "or we shall be home before you."
With renewed bowings he disappeared.
Asako was laughing.
"We can never get rid of Tanaka," she said, "can we? He follows us like a detective."
"Sometimes I think he is deliberately spying on us," said her husband.
"Cheer up," said Reggie, "they all do that."
The party dispersed at the Imperial Hotel. Asako was laughing and happy. She had enjoyed herself immensely as usual; and her innocence had realized little or nothing of the grim significance of what she had seen.
But Geoffrey was gloomy and distrait. He had taken it much to heart.
That night he had a horrible dream. The procession of the _oiran_ was pa.s.sing once more before his eyes; but he could not see the face of the gorgeous doll whom all these crowds had come out to admire. He felt strangely apprehensive, however. Then at a corner of the street the figure turned and faced him. It was Asako, his wife. He struggled to reach her and save her. But the crowds of j.a.panese closed in upon him; he struggled in vain.
CHAPTER XI
A GEISHA DINNER
_Inis.h.i.+ tos.h.i.+ Ne-kojite uyes.h.i.+ Waga yodo no Wakaki no ume wa Hana saki ni keri_.
The young plum tree Of my house Which in bygone years I dug up by the roots and transplanted Has at last bloomed with flowers.
Next morning Geoffrey rose earlier than was his wont; and arrayed in one of his many kimonos, entered his sitting-room. There he found Tanaka, wrapped in contemplation of a letter. He was scrutinizing it with an attention which seemed to pierce the envelope.
"Who is it from, Tanaka?" asked Geoffrey; he had become mildly ironical in his dealings with the inquisitive guide.
"I think perhaps invitation to pleasure party from Ladys.h.i.+p's n.o.ble relatives," Tanaka replied, unabashed.
Geoffrey took the note to his wife, and she read aloud:
"DEAR MR. AND MRS. BARRINGTON--It is now the bright Spring weather. I hope you to enjoy good health. I have been rude thus to absent myself during your polite visit. Much pressing business has hampered me, also stomach trouble, but indeed there is no excuse. Please not to be angry. This time I hope you to attend a poor feast, Maple Club Hotel, next Tuesday, six p.m. Hoping to esteemed favor and even friend,
"Yours obedient,
"G. FUJINAMI."
"What exactly does he mean?"
"As Tanaka says, it is an invitation to a pleasure party at the beginning of next week."
"Answer it, sweetheart," said Geoffrey; "tell them that we are not angry, and that we shall be delighted to accept."
Tanaka explained that the Maple Club Restaurant or Koyokwan, which more strictly should be translated Hall of the Red Leaf, is the largest and most famous of Tokyo "tea-houses"--to use a comprehensive term which applies equally to a shack by the roadside, and to a dainty pleasure resort where entertainments run easily into four or five pounds per head. There are restaurants more secretive and more _elite_, where the aesthetic _gourmet_ may feel more at ease and where the bohemian spirit can loose its wit. But for public functions of all kinds, for anything on a really big scale, the Maple Club stands alone. It is the "Princes" of Tokyo with a flavour of the Guildhall steaming richly through its corridors. Here the great munic.i.p.al dinners take place, the great political entertainments. Here famous foreigners are officially introduced to the mysteries of j.a.panese _cuisine_ and the charms of j.a.panese _geisha_. Here hangs a picture of Lord Kitchener himself, scrambled over by laughing _mousmes_, who seem to be peeping out of his pockets and b.u.t.tonholes, a Gulliver in Lilliput.
Both Geoffrey and Asako had treated the invitation as a joke; but at the last moment, while they were threading the mysterious streets of the still unfamiliar city, they both confessed to a certain nervousness. They were on the brink of a plunge into depths unknown.
They knew nothing whatever about the customs, tastes and prejudices of the people with whom they were to mix--not even their names and their language.
"Well, we're in for it," said Geoffrey, "we must see it through now."
They drove up a steep gravel drive and stopped before a broad j.a.panese entrance, three wide steps like altar stairs leading up to a dark cavernous hall full of bowing women and men in black clothes, similar, silent and ghostlike. The first impression was lugubrious, like a feast of mutes.
Boots off! Geoffrey knew at least this rule number one in j.a.panese etiquette. But who were these fluttering women, so attentive in removing their cloaks and hats? Were they relatives or waitresses?
And the silent groups beyond? Were they Fujinami or waiters? The two guests had friendly smiles for all; but they gazed helplessly for a familiar face.
An apparition in evening dress with a long frock coat and a purple tie emerged from that grim chorus of spectators. It was Ito, the lawyer.
The free and easy American manner was checked by the responsibility of those flapping coat-tails. He looked and behaved just like a shop-walker. After a stiff bow and handshake he said:
"Very pleased to see you, Sir, and Mrs. Barrington, also. The Fujinami family is proud to make your entertainment."