Authors: James Clavell
By God, I am going to bring
Erasmus
home, Blackthorne thought. And with as many of the men as He leaves alive.
They were crossing the square now and he took his eyes off the slaver and saw the three samurai guarding the trapdoor. They were eating deftly from bowls with the wooden sticks that Blackthorne had seen them use many times but could not manage himself.
“Omi-san!” With signs he explained that he wanted to go to the trapdoor, just to shout down to his friends. Only for a moment. But Omi shook his head and said something he did not understand and continued across the square, down the foreshore, past the cauldron, and on to the jetty. Blackthorne followed obediently. One thing at a time, he told himself. Be patient.
Once on the jetty, Omi turned and called back to the guards on the trapdoor. Blackthorne saw them open the trapdoor and peer down. One of them beckoned to villagers who fetched the ladder and a full fresh-water barrel and carried it below. The empty one they brought back aloft. And the latrine barrel.
There! If you’re patient and play their game with their rules, you can help your crew, he thought with satisfaction.
Groups of samurai were collected near the galley. A tall old man was standing apart. From the deference that the
daimyo
Yabu showed him, and the way the others jumped at his slightest remark, Blackthorne immediately realized his importance. Is he their king? he wondered.
Omi knelt with humility. The old man half bowed, turned his eyes on him.
Mustering as much grace as he could, Blackthorne knelt and put
his hands flat on the sand floor of the jetty, as Omi had done, and bowed as low as Omi.
“Konnichi wa
, Sama,” he said politely.
He saw the old man half bow again.
Now there was a discussion between Yabu and the old man and Omi. Yabu spoke to Mura.
Mura pointed at the galley. “Anjin-san. Please there.”
“Why?”
“Go! Now. Go!”
Blackthorne felt his panic rising. “Why?”
“Isogi!”
Omi commanded, waving him toward the galley.
“No, I’m not going to—”
There was an immediate order from Omi and four samurai fell on Blackthorne and pinioned his arms. Mura produced the rope and began to bind his hands behind him.
“You sons of bitches!” Blackthorne shouted. “I’m not going to go aboard that God-cursed slave ship!”
“Madonna! Leave him alone! Hey, you piss-eating monkeys, let that bastard alone!
Kinjiru, neh?
Is he the pilot? The Anjin,
ka?”
Blackthorne could scarcely believe his ears. The boisterous abuse in Portuguese had come from the deck of the galley. Then he saw the man start down the gangway. As tall as he and about his age, but black-haired and dark-eyed and carelessly dressed in seaman’s clothes, rapier by his side, pistols in his belt. A jeweled crucifix hung from his neck. He wore a jaunty cap and a smile split his face.
“Are you the pilot? The pilot of the Dutchman?”
“Yes,” Blackthorne heard himself reply.
“Good. Good. I’m Vasco Rodrigues, pilot of this galley!” He turned to the old man and spoke a mixture of Japanese and Portuguese, and called him Monkey-sama and sometimes Toda-sama but the way it sounded it came out “Toady-sama.” Twice he pulled out his pistol and pointed it emphatically at Blackthorne and stuck it back in his belt, his Japanese heavily laced with sweet vulgarities in gutter Portuguese that only seafarers would understand.
Hiro-matsu spoke briefly and the samurai released Blackthorne and Mura untied him.
“That’s better. Listen, Pilot, this man’s like a king. I told him I’d be responsible for you, that I’d blow your head off as soon as drink
with you!” Rodrigues bowed to Hiro-matsu, then beamed at Blackthorne. “Bow to the Bastard-sama.”
Dreamlike. Blackthorne did as he was told.
“You do that like a Japper,” Rodrigues said with a grin. “You’re really the pilot?”
“Yes.”
“What’s the latitude of The Lizard?”
“Forty-nine degrees fifty-six minutes North—and watch out for the reefs that bear sou’ by sou’west.”
“You’re the pilot, by God!” Rodrigues shook Blackthorne’s hand warmly. “Come aboard. There’s food and brandy and wine and grog and all pilots should love all pilots, who’re the sperm of the earth. Amen! Right?”
“Yes,” Blackthorne said weakly.
“When I heard we were carrying a pilot back with us, good says I. It’s years since I had the pleasure of talking to a real pilot. Come aboard. How did you sneak past Malacca? How did you avoid our Indian Ocean patrols, eh? Whose rutter did you steal?”
“Where are you taking me?”
“Osaka. The Great Lord High Executioner himself wants to see you.”
Blackthorne felt his panic returning. “Who?”
“Toranaga! Lord of the Eight Provinces, wherever the hell they are! The chief
daimyo
of Japan—a
daimyo’s
like a king or feudal lord but better. They’re all despots.”
“What’s he want with me?”
“I don’t know but that’s why we’re here, and if Toranaga wants to see you, Pilot, he’ll see you. They say he’s got a million of these slant-eyed fanatics who’ll die for the honor of wiping his arse if that’s his pleasure! ‘Toranaga wants you to bring back the pilot, Vasco,’ his interpreter said. ‘Bring back the pilot and the ship’s cargo. Take old Toda Hiro-matsu there to examine the ship and—’ Oh yes, Pilot, it’s all confiscated, so I hear, your ship, and everything in it!”
“Confiscated?”
“It may be a rumor. Jappers sometimes confiscate things with one hand, give ’em back with the other—or pretend they’ve never given the order. It’s hard to understand the poxy little bastards!”
Blackthorne felt the cold eyes of the Japanese boring into him and he tried to hide his fear. Rodrigues followed his glance. “Yes, they’re
getting restless. Time enough to talk. Come aboard.” He turned but Blackthorne stopped him.
“What about my friends, my crew?”
“Eh?”
Blackthorne told him briefly about the pit. Rodrigues questioned Omi in pidgin Japanese. “He says they’ll be all right. Listen, there’s nothing you or me can do now. You’ll have to wait—you can never tell with a Jappo. They’re six-faced and three-hearted.” Rodrigues bowed like a European courtier to Hiro-matsu. “This is the way we do it in Japan. Like we’re at the court of Fornicating Philip II, God take that Spaniard to an early grave.” He led the way on deck. To Blackthorne’s astonishment there were no chains and no slaves.
“What’s the matter? You sick?” Rodrigues asked.
“No. I thought this was a slaver.”
“They don’t have ’em in Japan. Not even in their mines. Lunatic, but there you are. You’ve never seen such lunatics and I’ve traveled the world three times. We’ve samurai rowers. They’re soldiers, the old bugger’s personal soldiers—and you’ve never seen slaves row better, or men fight better.” Rodrigues laughed. “They put their arses into the oars and I push ’em just to watch the buggers bleed. They never quit. We came all the way from Osaka—three-hundred-odd sea miles in forty hours. Come below. We’ll cast off shortly. You sure you’re all right?”
“Yes. Yes, I think so.” Blackthorne was looking at
Erasmus
. She was moored a hundred yards away. “Pilot, there’s no chance of going aboard, is there? They haven’t let me back aboard, I’ve no clothes and they sealed her up the moment we arrived. Please?”
Rodrigues scrutinized the ship.
“When did you lose the foremast?”
“Just before we made landfall here.”
“There a spare still aboard?”
“Yes.”
“Where’s her home port?”
“Rotterdam.”
“She was built there?”
“Yes.”
“I’ve been there. Bad shoals but a piss-cutter of a harbor. She’s got good lines, your ship. New—haven’t seen one of her class before. Madonna, she’d be fast, very fast. Very rough to deal with.” Rodrigues
looked at him. “Can you get your gear quickly?” He turned over the half-hour glass sand timer that was beside the hourglass, both attached to the binnacle.
“Yes.” Blackthorne tried to keep his growing hope off his face.
“There’d be a condition, Pilot. No weapons, up your sleeve or anywhere. Your word as a pilot. I’ve told the monkeys I’d be responsible for you.”
“I agree.” Blackthorne watched the sand falling silently through the neck of the timer.
“I’ll blow your head off, pilot or no, if there’s the merest whiff of trickery, or cut your throat. If I agree.”
“I give you my word, pilot to pilot, by God. And the pox on the Spanish!”
Rodrigues smiled and banged him warmly on the back. “I’m beginning to like you, Ingeles.”
“How’d you know I’m English?” Blackthorne asked, knowing his Portuguese was perfect and that nothing he had said could have differentiated him from a Dutchman.
“I’m a soothsayer. Aren’t all pilots?” Rodrigues laughed.
“You talked to the priest? Father Sebastio told you?”
“I don’t talk to priests if I can help it. Once a week’s more than enough for any man.” Rodrigues spat deftly into the scuppers and went to the port gangway that overlooked the jetty. “Toady-sama!
Ikimasho ka?”
“Ikimasho
, Rodrigu-san.
Ima!”
“Ima
it is.” Rodrigues looked at Blackthorne thoughtfully. “
‘Ima’
means ‘now,’ ‘at once.’ We’re to leave at once, Ingeles.”
The sand had already made a small, neat mound in the bottom of the glass.
“Will you ask him, please? If I can go aboard my ship?”
“No, Ingeles. I won’t ask him a poxy thing.”
Blackthorne suddenly felt empty. And very old. He watched Rodrigues go to the railing of the quarterdeck and bellow to a small, distinguished seaman who stood on the raised fore-poop deck at the bow. “Hey, Captain-san.
Ikimasho?
Get samurai aboard-u,
ima! Ima, wakarimasu ka?”
“Hai
, Anjin-san.”
Immediately Rodrigues rang the ship’s bell loudly six times and the Captain-san began shouting orders to the seamen and samurai ashore and aboard. Seamen hurried up on deck from below to prepare
for departure and, in the disciplined, controlled confusion, Rodrigues quietly took Blackthorne’s arm and shoved him toward the starboard gangway, away from the shore.
“There’s a dinghy below, Ingeles. Don’t move fast, don’t look around, and don’t pay attention to anyone but me. If I tell you to come back, do it quickly.”
Blackthorne walked across the deck, down the gangway, toward the small Japanese skiff. He heard angry voices behind him and he felt the hairs on his neck rising for there were many samurai all over the ship, some armed with bows and arrows, a few with muskets.
“You don’t have to worry about him, Captain-san, I’m responsible. Me, Rodrigu-san,
ichi ban
Anjin-san, by the Virgin!
Wakarimasu ka?”
was dominating the other voices, but they were getting angrier every moment.
Blackthorne was almost in the dinghy now and he saw that there were no rowlocks. I can’t scull like they do, he told himself. I can’t use the boat! It’s too far to swim. Or is it?
He hesitated, checking the distance. If he had had his full strength he would not have waited a moment. But now?
Feet clattered down the gangway behind him and he fought the impulse to turn.
“Sit in the stern,” he heard Rodrigues say urgently. “Hurry up!”
He did as he was told and Rodrigues jumped in nimbly, grabbed the oars and, still standing, shoved off with great skill.
A samurai was at the head of the gangway, very perturbed, and two other samurai were beside him, bows ready. The captain samurai called out, unmistakably beckoning them to come back.
A few yards from the vessel Rodrigues turned. “Just go there,” he shouted up at him, pointing at
Erasmus
. “Get samurai aboard!” He set his back firmly to his ship and continued sculling, pushing against the oars in Japanese fashion, standing amidships. “Tell me if they put arrows in their bows, Ingeles! Watch ’em carefully! What’re they doing now?”
“The captain’s very angry. You won’t get into trouble, will you?”
“If we don’t sail at the turn, Old Toady might have cause for complaint. What’re those bowmen doing?”
“Nothing. They’re listening to him. He seems undecided. No. Now one of them’s drawing out an arrow.”
Rodrigues prepared to stop. “Madonna, they’re too God-cursed accurate to risk anything. Is it in the bow yet?”
“Yes—but wait a moment! The captain’s—someone’s come up to him, a seaman I think. Looks like he’s asking him something about the ship. The captain’s looking at us. He said something to the man with the arrow. Now the man’s putting it away. The seaman’s pointing at something on deck.”
Rodrigues sneaked a quick look to make sure and breathed easier. “That’s one of the mates. It’ll take him all of the half hour to get his oarsmen settled.”
Blackthorne waited, the distance increased. “The captain’s looking at us again. No, we’re all right. He’s gone away. But one of the samurai’s watching us.”
“Let him.” Rodrigues relaxed but he did not slacken the pace of his sculling or look back. “Don’t like my back to samurai, not when they’ve weapons in their hands. Not that I’ve ever seen one of the bastards unarmed. They’re all bastards!”
“Why?”
“They love to kill, Ingeles. It’s their custom even to sleep with their swords. This is a great country, but samurai’re dangerous as vipers and a sight more mean.”
“Why?”
“I don’t know why, Ingeles, but they are,” Rodrigues replied, glad to talk to one of his own kind. “Of course, all Jappos are different from us—they don’t feel pain or cold like us—but samurai are even worse. They fear nothing, least of all death. Why? Only God knows, but it’s the truth. If their superiors say ‘kill,’ they kill, ‘die’ and they’ll fall on their swords or slit their own bellies open. They kill and die as easily as we piss. Women’re samurai too, Ingeles. They’ll kill to protect their masters, that’s what they call their husbands here, or they’ll kill themselves if they’re ordered to. They do it by slitting their throats. Here a samurai can order his wife to kill herself and that’s what she’s got to do, by law. Jesu Madonna, the women are something else though, a different species, Ingeles, nothing on earth like them, but the men…. Samurai’re reptiles and the safest thing to do is treat them like poisonous snakes. You all right now?”