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He spent the winter in his thin cotton clothes, selling needles under a cold sky, wandering wherever his feet took him. The next year, the twenty-second year of Temmon, when the peach blossoms were everywhere, he was still calling out, "Won't you buy needles? Needles from the capital! Sewing needles from the capital!"
He approached the outskirts of Hamamatsu, walking along as carefree as ever.
Another Master Matsus.h.i.+ta Kahei was a native of Enshu province. The son of a country samurai, he had become a retainer of the Imagawa clan, with a domain in Suruga and a stipend of three thousand kan. He was governor of the fortress at Zudayama and chief administrator of the relay station at Magome Bridge. In those days the Tenryu River was divided into Big and the Little Tenryu. The Matsus.h.i.+ta residence was on the banks of the Big Tenryu, a few hundred yards east of Zudayama.
That day Kahei was returning from the neighboring Hik.u.ma Castle, where he had been conferring with a fellow Imagawa retainer. The officials of the province met regularly to tighten their control over the people and to guard against invasion from neighboring clans: Tokugawa, Oda, and Takeda.
Kahei turned in his saddle and called one of his three attendants: "Nohachiro!"
The man who answered was bearded and carried a long spear. Taga Nohachiro ran up to his master's horse. They were traveling along the road between Hik.u.manawata and the Magome ferry. Trees lined the road, and there was a pleasant view of fields and rice paddies.
"He's not a farmer, and he doesn't look like a pilgrim," Kahei mumbled.
Nohachiro followed Kahei's line of sight. He took in the flaming yellow of the mustard flowers, the green of the barley, and the shallow water in the paddies, but did not anyone.
"Anything suspicious?"
"Over there, on the path next to that rice paddy, there's a man. Looks a little little like a heron. What do you suppose he's up to?"
Nohachiro took another look and saw that, sure enough, there was a man stooping over on the path by the paddy.
"Find out what he's doing."
Nohachiro ran off along a narrow path. It was the rule in all the provinces that anything that looked the least bit suspicious was to be investigated immediately. Provincial officials were particularly sensitive about their borders and the appearance of strangers.
Nohachiro came back and made his report: "He says he's a needle seller from Owari. He's wearing a stained white cotton smock. That's why from here he reminds you of a heron. He's a little fellow with a face like a monkey's."
"Ha, ha! Not a heron or a crow, but a monkey, eh?"
"And a talkative one, too. Likes to spit out big words. While I was questioning him, he tried to turn things around. He asked me who my master was, and when I told him who you were, he stood up and looked over this way very boldly."
"What was he doing, stooping over like that?"
"He told me he was putting up for the night at a lodging house in Magome, and he was collecting pond snails to eat this evening."
Kahei saw that Hiyos.h.i.+ had gone up onto the road and was walking on ahead of diem.
He asked Nohachiro, "There was nothing suspicious about him, was there?"
"Nothing I could see."
Kahei took a fresh grip on the reins. "One shouldn't blame low-bred people for their bad manners." Then, motioning his men on with a nod of the head, he said, "Let's go." It did not take them long to catch up with Hiyos.h.i.+. Just as they pa.s.sed him, Kahei looked around casually. Hiyos.h.i.+, of course, had moved off the road and was kneeling respectfully under a row of trees. Their eyes met.
"Just a minute." Kahei reined in his horse and, turning to his attendants, said, "Bring the needle seller over here." And, to no one in particular, he added with a note of wonder in his voice, "He's an unusual fellow... yes, there's something different about him."
Nohachiro decided that this was another of his master's whims and promptly ran off.
"Hey! Needle seller! My master would like a word with you. Follow me."
Kahei looked down at Hiyos.h.i.+. What was it about this short, unkempt youth in soiled clothes that he found so fascinating? It was not his resemblance to a monkey, which he had hardly taken in. He took a long, hard second look at Hiyos.h.i.+, but he could not put into words what he felt. Something that was at once complex and formless pulled at him-it was the boy's eyes! The eyes had been called the mirrors of the soul. He could see little else of value in this shriveled little creature, but the look in his eyes was so full of laughter that it was somehow fresh and seemed to contain... what? An indomitable will, or maybe a vision that knew no bounds?
He has magnetism, thought Kahei, and he decided he liked this strange-looking boy. If his a.s.sessment had been more thorough, he would have discovered, hidden beneath the traveler's black grime, ears as red as a rooster's comb. Nor did he see that, though Hiyos.h.i.+ was still young, the great ability he would display in later years was already visible in the lines on his forehead, which made him look like an old man at first glance. Kahei's discernment simply did not go that far. He felt an unusual attachment toward Hiyos.h.i.+, mixed with some kind of expectation.
Unable to rid himself of the feeling but without saying a word to Hiyos.h.i.+, he turned to Nohachiro and said, "Bring him along." He tightened his reins and galloped off.
The front gate facing the river was open, and several retainers were waiting for him. A tethered horse was grazing near the gate. Apparently a visitor had arrived during his absence.
"Who is it?" he asked as he dismounted.
"A messenger from Sumpu."
Kahei acknowledged the information and went in. Sumpu was the capital of the Imagawa clan. Messengers were not especially rare, but Kahei was preoccupied with his meeting in Hik.u.ma Castle, so he forgot all about Hiyos.h.i.+.
"Hey, you, where do you think you're going?" challenged the gatekeeper as Hiyos.h.i.+ was about to follow the attendants through the gate. His hands and the straw-wrapped package he carried were spattered with mud. The splotches of mud drying on his face felt itchy. Had the gatekeeper thought that Hiyos.h.i.+ was poking fun at him by twitching his nose on purpose? The gatekeeper reached out to grab Hiyos.h.i.+ by the scruff of the neck.
Stepping back, Hiyos.h.i.+ answered, "I'm a needle seller."
"Peddlers don't come through this gate without authorization. Off with you!"
"You better check with your master first."
"And why should I do that?"
"I followed him here because he told me to. I came with the samurai who came in just now."
"I can't imagine the master bringing the likes of you back. You look pretty shady to me."
Just then, Nohachiro remembered Hiyos.h.i.+ and came back to get him. "It's all right, he told the gatekeeper.
"Well, if you say so."
"Come along, Monkey."
The gatekeeper and the other servants burst out laughing. "What is he, anyway? With his white smock and muddy straw bundle, he looks just like the Buddha's monkey messenger!"
The boisterous voices rang in Hiyos.h.i.+'s ears, but during the seventeen years of his life he had had ample opportunity to hear the taunts of others. Didn't they bother him? Had he got used to them? It seems that neither was the case. When he heard this kind of remark he blushed, just like anyone else. His ears, especially, turned bright red. This was proof that the taunts did not go unheard. But his behavior did not reflect his feeling. He was as calm as if the insults had been spoken into the ears of a horse. In fact, he could be disarmingly charming at such times. His heart was like a flower held up by a bamboo support, quietly waiting for the storm to pa.s.s. He was not going to be upset by adversity, nor would he be servile.
"Monkey, there's an empty stable over there. You can wait there, where the sight of you won't offend anyone," said Nohachiro, who then went about his business.
When evening came, the smell of cooking drifted from the kitchen window. The moon rose over the peach trees. The formal interview with the messenger from Sumpu being finished, more lamps were lit, and a banquet was prepared to send him on his way the following day. The sound of the hand drum and a flute drifted over from the mansion, where a Noh play was being performed.
The Imagawa of Suruga were a proud and ill.u.s.trious family. Their tastes ran not only to poetry, dance, and music but to any luxury from the capital: inlaid swords for their samurai and stylish under-kimonos for their women. Kahei himself was a man of simple tastes. Nevertheless, his opulent residence presented a quite different appearance from the mansions of the samurai of Kiyosu.
That's pretty bad Noh, Hiyos.h.i.+ thought, as he lay stretched out on the straw he had spread on the floor of the empty stall. He liked music. Not that he understood it, but he liked the cheery world of dreams it created. It allowed him to forget everything. But he was distracted by his empty stomach. Oh, if I could only borrow a pot and a fire, he groaned inwardly.
Taking his dirty straw bundle with him, he stuck his head through the door of the kitchen. "Excuse me, but I wonder if you couldn't lend me a pot and a small cooking stove. I was thinking of eating my meal."
The kitchen helpers stared blankly back at him. "Where in the world did you come from?"
"His lords.h.i.+p brought me back with him today. I'd like to boil the pond snails I picked from the rice paddies."
"Pond snails, eh?"
"I've been told they're good for the stomach, so I eat some every day. That's because I get stomach upset easily."
"You eat them with bean paste. Do you have any?"
"Yes."
"Rice?"
"I have rice, thank you."
"Well, there's a pot and a fire in the stove in the servants' quarters. Do it over there."
Just as he did every night in cheap lodging houses, Hiyos.h.i.+ cooked up a small portion of rice, boiled his pond snails, and ate his evening meal. Then he went to sleep. The servants' quarters being an improvement over the stable, he stayed there until midnight, when the servants finished their ch.o.r.es and came back.
"You swine! Who told you you could sleep here?"
They kicked him, picked him up, and threw him out. He went back to the stable, only to find the messenger's horse fast asleep and seeming to say, "You don't belong here, either."
The hand drum had fallen silent, and the pale moon was waning. Hiyos.h.i.+, no longer sleepy, could not stand being idle. Work or fun, it didn't matter much to him, but if he wasn't involved in one or the other, he very quickly became bored.
Maybe the sun will come while I'm sweeping up, he thought as he started to sweep the stable, collecting the horse manure, fallen leaves, and straw into a pile, out of the master's sight.
"Who's out there?" Resting his broom, Hiyos.h.i.+ looked around. "Ah, it's the needle seller."
Hiyos.h.i.+ finally saw that the voice was coming from the lavatory at the corner of the main house's veranda. He could make out Kahei's face inside. "Oh, it's you, my lord."
Drinking sake with the messenger, who was a strong drinker, Kahei had drunk too much. Now, almost sober again, he asked in a tired voice, "Is it close to dawn?" He disappeared from the window, opened the rain shutters of the veranda, and looked up at the waning moon.
"The c.o.c.k hasn't crowed yet, so it'll be a little while until dawn."
"Needle seller-no, we'll call you Monkey-why are you sweeping the garden in the middle of the night?"
"I had nothing to do."
"It would probably be a good idea to get some sleep."
"I already slept. When I've slept for a certain amount of time, for some reason I can't lie still anymore."
"Are there any sandals?"
Hiyos.h.i.+ quickly found a pair of new straw sandals and arranged them so that Kahei could step into them easily.
"Here you are, my lord."
"You just got here today, and you say you've already slept enough. How is it you know the lay of the land already?"
"Please excuse me, my lord."
"What for?"
"I'm not a suspicious person at all. But in this kind of mansion, even when I'm asleep, by hearing various sounds, I can guess where things are located, the size of the grounds, the drainage system, and where the fires are."
"Hm. I see."
"I noticed where the straw sandals were earlier. It occurred to me that someone might come out and ask for sandals."
"I'm sorry. I forgot all about you."
Hiyos.h.i.+ laughed but made no reply. Although he was no more than a boy, he did not seem to respect Kahei very much. Kahei then asked him about his background and whether he had hopes of serving someone. Hiyos.h.i.+ a.s.sured him that he had. He had high hopes for the future and had been walking throughout the provinces from the time was fifteen.
"You walked around the provinces for two years, wanting to serve a samurai?"
"Yes."
"Why, then, are you still a needle seller?" Kahei asked pointedly. "Looking for two years without finding a master-I wonder if there isn't something wrong with you?"
"I have good and bad points, just like any other man. At first I thought any master or any samurai household would do, but once I went out into the world, I started to feel differently."
"Differently? How?"
"Walking around and looking at the warrior cla.s.s as a whole-the good generals, the bad generals, the lords of large and small provinces-led me to think that there is nothing so important as choosing a master. Therefore, I decided to go on with my needle selling and before I knew it, two years had gone by."
Kahei thought he was clever, but there was also something of the fool about him. And though there was some truth in what he said, he sounded very pretentious and a little hard to believe. There was one thing that was beyond doubt, though: here was no ordinary young man. He decided on the spot to employ Hiyos.h.i.+ as a servant.
"Will you serve me?"
"Thank you, my lord. I'll try," Hiyos.h.i.+ answered with little enthusiasm in his voice.
Kahei was dissatisfied with Hiyos.h.i.+'s joyless reply, but it did not occur to him, as the new master of this wandering youth clothed in nothing more than a thin cotton coat, that he himself might be deficient in some respect.
Like the samurai of the other clans, the Matsus.h.i.+ta samurai received intensive training in the horsemans.h.i.+p needed for battle. At daybreak they left their dormitories with practice spears and swords, and went to the broad field in front of the rice storehouse.
"Hiyaaa!" Spear clashed against spear, sword against sword. In the morning, everyone, down to the lower-ranking samurai in the kitchen and the men who pulled guard duty, gave their all and came away from the field with faces bright red from exertion. That Hiyos.h.i.+ had been taken on as a servant was soon common knowledge throughout the mansion. The stable attendants treated him as a rank beginner and ordered him about.
"Hey, Monkey! Every morning from now on, after we take the horses out to graze, clean out the stables. Bury the horse manure in that bamboo thicket." After he had finished cleaning up the horse manure, one of the older samurai told him, "Fill the big water jars." And so it went on: "Split the firewood." While he was splitting the firewood, he'd be told to do something else. In short, he was the servants' servant.
He was popular at first. People said, "Nothing makes him mad, does it? His good point is that no matter what you tell him to do, he doesn't get angry." The young samurai liked him, but in the way that children like a new toy, and sometimes they gave him presents. But it was not long before people started to complain about him.
"He's always arguing."
"He flatters the master."
"He takes people for fools."
Since the younger samurai made a lot of noise over small faults, there were times when the complaints about Hiyos.h.i.+ reached Kahei's ears.