Shogun - Clavell James (бесплатные полные книги .TXT) 📗
"For a few weeks, Sire? I will see that the barbarian learns our language. " "That'd take years. The only barbarians who've ever mastered it are Christian priests, neh? They spend years. Tsukkusan's been here almost thirty years, neh? He won't learn fast enough, anymore than we can learn their foul languages."
"Yes. But I promise you, this Anjin-san'll learn very quickly."
Yabu told them the plan Omi had suggested to him as if it were his own idea.
"That might be too dangerous."
"It would make him learn quickly, neh? And then he's tamed."
After a pause, Toranaga said, "How would you maintain secrecy during the training?"
"Izu is a peninsula, security is excellent there. I'll base near Anjiro, well south and away from Mishima and the border for more safety."
"Good. We'll set up carrier pigeon links from Anjiro to Osaka and Yedo at once."
"Excellent. I need only five or six months and-"
"We'll be lucky to have six days!" Hiro-matsu snorted. "Are you saying that your famous espionage net has been swept away, Yabu-san? Surely you've been getting reports? Isn't Ishido mobilizing? Isn't Onoshi mobilizing? Aren't we locked in here?"
Yabu did not answer.
"Well?" Toranaga said.
Yabu said, "Reports indicate all that is happening and more. If it's six days then it's six days and that's karma. But I believe you're much too clever to be trapped here. Or provoked into an early war."
"If I agreed to your plan, you would accept me as your leader?"
"Yes. And when you win, I would be honored to accept Suruga and Totomi as part of my fief forever."
"Totomi would depend on the success of your plan."
"Agreed.
"You will obey me? With all your honor?"
"Yes. By bushido, by the Lord Buddha, by the life of my mother, my wife, and my future posterity."
"Good," Toranaga said. "Let's piss on the bargain."
He went to the edge of the battlements. He stepped up on the ledge of the embrasure, then onto the parapet itself. Seventy feet below was the inner garden. Hiro-matsu held his breath, aghast at his master's bravado. He saw him turn and beckon Yabu to stand beside him. Yabu obeyed. The slightest touch could have sent them tumbling to their deaths.
Toranaga eased his kimono and loincloth aside, as did Yabu. Together they urinated and mixed their urine and watched it dew the garden below.
"The last bargain I sealed this way was with the Taiko himself," Toranaga said, greatly relieved at being able to empty his bladder. "That was when he decided to give me the Kwanto, the Eight Provinces, as my fief. Of course, at that time the enemy Hojo still owned them, so first I had to conquer them. They were our last remaining opposition. Of course, too, I had to give up my hereditary fiefs of Imagawa, Owari, and Ise at once for the honor. Even so, I agreed and we pissed on the bargain." He straddled the parapet easily, settling his loincloth comfortably as though he stood in the garden itself, not perched like an eagle so far above. "It was a good bargain for both of us. We conquered the Hojo and took over five thousand heads within the year. Stamped him out and all his tribe. Perhaps you're right, Kasigi Yabu-san. Perhaps you can help me as I helped the Taiko. Without me, the Taiko would never have become Taiko."
"I can help to make you sole Regent, Toranaga-sama. But not Shogun."
"Of course. That's the one honor I don't seek, as much as my enemies say I do." Toranaga jumped down to the safety of the stone flags. He looked back at Yabu who still stood on the narrow parapet adjusting his sash. He was sorely tempted to give him a quick shove for his insolence. Instead he sat down and broke wind loudly. "That's better. How's your bladder, Iron Fist?"
"Tired, Lord, very tired." The old man went to the side and emptied himself thankfully over the battlements too, but he did not stand where Toranaga and Yabu had stood. He was very glad that he did not also have to seal the bargain with Yabu. That's one bargain I will never honor. Never.
"Yabu-san. This must all be kept secret. I think you should leave within the next two or three days," Toranaga said.
"Yes. With the guns and the barbarian, Toranaga-sama?"
"Yes. You will go by ship." Toranaga looked at Hiro-matsu. "Prepare the galley."
"The ship is ready. The guns and powder are still in the holds," Hiro-matsu replied, his face mirroring his disapproval.
"Good."
You've done it, Yabu wanted to shout. You've got the guns, the Anjin-san, everything. You've got your six months. Toranaga'll never go to war quickly. Even if Ishido assassinates him in the next few days, you've still got everything. Oh, Buddha, protect Toranaga until I'm at sea! "Thank you," he said, his sincerity openly vast. "You'll never have a more faithful ally."
When Yabu was gone, Hiro-matsu wheeled on Toranaga. "That was a bad thing to do. I'm ashamed of that bargain. I'm ashamed that my advice counts for so little. I've obviously outlived my usefulness to you and I'm very tired. That little snot-dung daimyo knows he's manipulated you like a puppet. Why, he even had the effrontery to wear his Murasama sword in your presence."
"I noticed," Toranaga said.
"I think the gods have bewitched you, Lord. You openly dismiss such an insult and allow him to gloat in front of you. You openly allow Ishido to shame you in front of all of us. You prevent me and all of us from protecting you. You refuse my granddaughter, a samurai lady, the honor and peace of death. You've lost control of the Council, your enemy has outmaneuvered you, and now you piss on a solemn bargain that is as disgusting a plan as I've ever heard, and you do this with a man who deals in filth, poison, and treachery like his father before him." He was shaking with rage. Toranaga did not answer, just stared calmly at him as though he had said nothing.
"By all kami, living and dead, you are bewitched." Hiro-matsu burst out, "I question you - and shout and insult you and you only stare at me! You've gone mad or I have. I ask permission to commit seppuku or if you won't allow me that peace I'll shave my head and become a monk - anything, anything, but let me be gone."
"You will do neither. But you will send for the barbarian priest, Tsukku-san."
And then Toranaga laughed.
Father Alvito rode down the hill from the castle at the head of his usual company of Jesuit outriders. All were dressed as Buddhist priests except for the rosary and crucifix they wore at their waists. There were forty outriders, Japanese, all well-born sons of Christian samurai, students from the seminary at Nagasaki who had accompanied him to Osaka. All were well mounted and caparisoned and as disciplined as the entourage of any daimyo.
He hurried along in a brisk trot, oblivious of the warm sunshine, through the woods and the city streets toward the Jesuit Mission, a large stone European-style house that stood near the wharves and soared from its clustered outbuildings, treasure rooms, and warehouses, where all of Osaka's silks were bartered and paid for.
The cortege clattered through the tall iron gates set in the high stone walls and into the paved central courtyard and stopped near the main door. Servants were already waiting to help Father Alvito dismount. He slid out of the saddle and threw them the reins. His spurs jingled on the stone as he strode up the cloistered walk of the main building, turned the corner, passed the small chapel, and went through some arches into the innermost courtyard, which contained a fountain and a peaceful garden. The antechamber door was open. He threw off his anxiety, composed himself, and walked in.
"Is he alone?" he asked.
"No, no, he isn't, Martin," Father Soldi said. He was a small, benign, pockmarked man from Naples who had been the FatherVisitor's secretary for almost thirty years, twenty-five of them in Asia. "Captain-General Ferriera's with his Eminence. Yes, the peacock's with him. But his Eminence said you were to go in at once. What's gone wrong, Martin?"