Richard Blaker

Needle-Watcher


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he used his drawn sword; but the ageing man's gorge rose against the indirect service of a Lord through the agency of underlings as it rose, more and pitiably more, against hard rations and bare lodging where other men, younger and less tried, could daily be seen lording it.

      It was lawful and seemly that a swordsman should receive a fee for teaching his craft to the young, provided that they, too, were of the right blood. For twenty-five years he had taught fencing in the yard of his house and thus been able to buy, honourably, a measure of wine for occasions.

      What he wanted, however, as his years increased, was an estate. The small one to which he had been bora had gone from him, by immutable law, when the head had gone from the shoulders of the bragging and jeering young man who had drawn his sword against him; and the miserable fees of a fencing master were not likely to produce an estate to replace it. The work he did unwinkingly in the secret service of the Shogun was the simple routine duty of a soldier and its fee was no more than his house and rations.

      At other times, perhaps some stripling pupil would have cast his eyes upon the master's daughters, or would have been approachable through a marriage-agent—if Magome could have raised the agent's fee; but now—and for the past half-dozen years—noble families had been imported yearly into Yedo as hostages, and there were dowered brides and to spare for any young man whom Magome would have considered decent—a man, that is, who served not underlings of the Shogun but the Shogun himself.

      Mitsu, straight from the Shogun, billeting Adams upon the old man, had said "Treat him handsomely. He is a worthy one and approved by the General." He had produced coins to ensure entertainment that befitted a worthy one, approved by the General; and Magome had thought at first, with some hardness and bitterness in his heart, that here would be another underling to lord it over himself.

      When he saw that Adams was no dignitary, but a simple, sprawling creature who squatted with a kite-maker and played with the tools and the chips of wood in the yard of a carpenter, he saw that the wind is ill indeed that blows no good. Vaguely, too, he liked the Pilot. When he saw him push his prodigious hairy right hand into his sash instead of using it to firm the document leasing the Liefde's guns to the Shogun, he was struck into a state of most acute attentiveness. When he read the figures in the document itself his attentiveness reached a pitch of bewilderment.

      On the basis of those figures he had spent a day estimating the Pilot's share of the money at about twenty tael; and the Pilot had lounged in, as though nothing whatever had happened, with forty-three. From rousing the old man's imagination, he had proceeded, still as though nothing had happened, to touch his heart. He had done it with his smile, perhaps; or with the magnificence of five tael held out in his great paw to the threadbare cavalero, and with his simple confidence in handing over to his care all he possessed in the world.

      It is small wonder, then, that the cavalero ripped away from the loins of the Needle-watcher the close-fitting linen that was emblematic of meniality, and gave him first the nudity and then the voluminous hakama of the gentleman-at-large.

      And Bikuni, whose very humility would have made her speechless if she had not been already dumb to the Pilot, was utterly in love with him.

      Magome had been a widower for a dozen years. When he had settled in Yedo after the two old encounters that had seemed to see the end of the vendetta, his wife had joined him. She was an old woman nearing forty when she set out from her brother's house to join the husband she had not seen for twenty years. A son was beyond her; but she bore Bikuni and Magdalena with the least possible delay.

      She had done towards their education whatever could be done for genteel children by the time one of them was ten and the other seven. When she died her piety and devotion to the fencing-master with the cleft crown were already a distinguished example of conduct, and a tale that was told to the young. The children of such a mother, and of a father with sword-play that was also a tale told to the young, were companions welcome in the household of any hostage-nobleman.

      They thus grew up, with the thoughts and in the practice of the craft of ladyship. They could write so that the elegance of their writing was the envy of greater calligraphists than Magome who had summoned Bikuni to set down the pictures of three or four names. They could answer verse with verse and they could meditate upon fortitude and fidelity and obedience, and other virtues that were of the mystery of love. On the lure of it they could also meditate; upon its warmth and its depth and its sweetness.

      It was unseemly (in the writings of the sage) that young women should occupy themselves with the wearing apparel of men-folk in the household; but in a household where there was no matron and where a man was as helpless as the Needle-watcher, seemly conduct itself demanded that Bikuni should execute the duties of matron.

      It was she, therefore, who sewed and unpicked and washed and sewed again the garments of Adams; thinking, as she folded them, of the great chest they would enfold, of the broad back, white and peculiarly smooth, while the chest was rough with hair, of the arms that were prodigious in their girth, but shapely.

      CHAPTER XXI

      SANTVOORT, set upon the way of it by the sheet of paper and the point of lead that Adams had given him, compiled a price-list. Guided by this, Adams one day brought home some fruit and wine to which Magome replied on the following day with more fruit and more wine. Santvoort dined with them and it passed unnoticed, till the evening was nearly done, that neither he nor Adams nor Magome had been quite dumb. Words strung themselves together in questions and answers and comments till the Englishman and the Dutchman were aware that a great war was tearing at the country and that Mitsu was away with his lord, fighting it. Of the issue Magome seemed to be in very little doubt.

      "When?" Adams and Santvoort both asked him; for it had occurred to them both that they were still waiting for something to happen, and the something it now seemed must be the end of this war.

      Magome shrugged his shoulders as the girls came in. He did not know.

      Santvoort moved to go, but Magome waved him to his heels again. There was no hurry; he, himself, with a lantern, would see him to his home next door.

      The girls took no part in the skeleton of conversation which Magome, after laying a finger to his lips, diverted from the subject of the war to the cargo still sealed into the hold of the Liefde. He asked if it contained swords or firearms or crockery or clothes or money. He drifted from their answers into a doze.

      The girls sat away from them, sewing; and the Dutchman and the Englishman fell into a quiet conversation of their own.

      "They are a long way off, Will," Santvoort said. "In my house it is different. I'm married."

      "Married?" said Adams, his eyes startled away from their contemplation of Bukuni.

      "Aye," said Santvoort. "Three days ago. It must be that I'm married. The family approves—it's the tallest of them, the one that was trouncing the little boy the other day when you were there. A fine woman, Will. Fine. A daughter, I should think. Anyhow, the old man made a big speech three days ago when they were all present—she, too, very solemn and shy, smiling at me. We'd been talking together about the place, she and I; and I suppose the old man had come to conclusions. He wasn't far wrong. So they made a sort of festival for us, with all the family mustered, and cakes and things set out and special dishes for us two. All very solemn, and the old man asked me something very carefully and I said aye, it would be well. And I suppose it means that I'm married. Don't you? They've given us the room at the end of the place. The old man rigged it up with bits of scantling from next door, and paper."

      Adams was puzzled. Marriage had meant more to him than that, and it meant more still. It had meant, in fine, and in the perspective of jobs and domestic interludes, a burden. It had meant other things as well; but those things had, although they had varied the burden as to its content, left it, for all its variations, a burden.

      Marriage had, in short, changed him. To Santvoort it appeared to furnish only a topic that was almost casual. Santvoort was not changed, and he was not burdened.

      "Why didn't you ask me to come, Melchior?" Adams asked.

      "How was I to know what was happening?" asked Santvoort. "When she stepped out