Sano hoped he could hide his distaste for the settlement when he questioned its chief. Such different worlds Lady Harume and her lover had inhabited!
Following Mura down a dim passage, Sano looked into a courtyard. A lye pond full of carcasses bubbled. Men stirred it with sticks, while women sprinkled salt on freshly flayed hides. Cauldrons steamed on open hearths; a partially butchered horse oozed blood and viscera. When a gust of wind wafted rancid fumes toward Sano, he nearly vomited. Feeling immersed in spiritual pollution, he resisted the urge to flee. How could Lady Harume have ignored society’s taboos to love a man contaminated by this place? What had brought her and Danzaemon together “in the shadow between two existences”?
Mura halted. “There he is, master.”
Toward Sano came three adult male eta, walking with brisk, purposeful strides. The middle, youngest one immediately drew his attention.
Thin as a sapling, his body carried no excess flesh to soften the hardness of bone and muscle. Strong tendons stood out like cords in his neck. Sharp-edged planes carved his face into a pattern of angles. His thin mouth was compressed in a resolute line. Thick, cropped hair grew back from a deep peak above his brow like a hawk’s crest. Head high and shoulders squared, he projected an aura of fierce nobility at odds with his patched, faded clothes and eta status. The two swords he wore proclaimed his identity.
Danzaemon, chief of the outcasts, knelt and bowed. His two companions did the same, but while the gesture humbled them, Danzaemon’s dignity elevated it to a ritual that honored himself as well as Sano. Arms outstretched, forehead to the ground, he said, “I beg to be of service, master.” His quiet tone, while respectful, bore no obsequiousness.
“Please rise.” Impressed by the chief’s poise, which would have done a samurai proud, Sano dismounted and addressed Danzaemon politely. “I need your help in an important matter.”
With athletic grace, Danzaemon stood. At his command, his men also rose, keeping their heads inclined. The eta chief turned a measuring gaze on Sano, who saw with surprise that he wasn’t more than twenty-five years old. But Danzaemon’s eyes belonged to someone who’d seen a lifetime of toil, poverty, violence, and suffering. A long, puckered scar down his left cheek bespoke his fight for survival in the harsh world of the outcasts. He was handsome in a tough, savage way, and Sano could see the appeal he’d held for Lady Harume.
Mura performed the introductions. Sano said, “I’m investigating the murder of the shogun’s concubine Lady Harume, and I-”
At the mention of her name, instant awareness flashed in the eta chief’s eyes: He knew why Sano had come. His men sprang to attention, unhooking clubs from their sashes. They evidently thought Sano had come to kill Danzaemon for violating the shogun’s lady. Although the penalty for attacking a samurai was death, they were prepared to defend their leader.
Raising his hands in a gesture of entreaty, Sano said, “I’m not here to hurt anyone. I just need to ask Chief Danzaemon some questions.”
“Stand back,” Danzaemon ordered with the authority of a commanding general.
The men retreated, though Sano could still feel their hostility toward him, a member of the dreaded samurai class. He faced Danzaemon. “Can we talk in private?”
“Yes, master. I’ll do my best to assist you.”
Danzaemon spoke in the same soft, respectful voice with which he’d greeted Sano. His speech was more cultured than Sano had expected, probably because of his contact with samurai officials. Now Sano found himself subjected to the eta chief’s scrutiny. A kind of mutual scenting occurred, as if between two animals from different packs. A crowd of eta gathered to watch. Sano sensed in them a reverence for their leader that matched any his own people felt toward their lords. Looking at Danzaemon across the vast barrier created by class and experience, Sano knew in a flash of intuition that under different circumstances, the two of them could have been comrades. Danzaemon’s slight nod acknowledged that he realized it, too.
“You’re the friend of Dr. Ito,” he said. The statement sealed their understanding. “We can go to my house. It’s nicer there.” His manner conveyed a stoic acceptance of his squalid domain and Sano’s authority over him.
“Yes. Please.” Sano gave his relieved assent.
The house to which Danzaemon led Sano and Mura was larger and in better condition than the others. It had solid wooden walls, an intact roof, and untorn paper panes behind the window bars. Danzaemon’s lieutenants stood sentry outside, while Mura tended Sano’s horse. Inside the house, people of all ages, far too many for them all to be family members, filled the main room. A blind man and two cripples sat against the wall. Mothers cradled babies who looked too frail to live. Men awaited Danzaemon’s counsel. A young pregnant woman passed out bowls of soup. Upon Sano’s arrival, all activity and conversation ceased. The adults prostrated themselves, and the mothers pressed the infants’ small heads to the floor.
Danzaemon ushered Sano into a smaller, vacant room. Cheaply furnished but spotlessly clean, it held a desk, a chest, and open cupboards. One cupboard held folded bedding and clothes; the two others, full of ledgers and papers, suggested that the only literate member of his caste devoted more time to work than rest. The window overlooked a yard where men were butchering an ox. Evidently Danzaemon’s clan supported itself by practicing a trade; he didn’t abuse his position by extorting money from his people. Sano felt awed by the young chief’s responsibilities. Did many samurai lords have more, or attend to them with any greater apparent dedication?
Perhaps Lady Harume had admired this trait as well as Danzaemon’s looks and manner. Never before had Sano seen such strong proof that character transcended class.
Danzaemon knelt on the mat. Sano took the spot opposite him. “You’re here because you’ve found out about my relationship with Lady Harume,” Danzaemon said without straining their relations by inviting a samurai to eat and drink with an eta. “Thank you for sparing my life. I’ve committed an inexcusable crime. I deserve to die, and it’s your right to kill me.” The eta chief’s mouth thinned in a bitter smile. “But if you did, you wouldn’t get the answers you want, would you?”
In spite of the young man’s controlled tone and expression, Sano observed signs of grief: the bleakness in his eyes; lines of strain around his mouth. Danzaemon mourned Lady Harume as no one else did.
“Love may not be a good excuse for breaking the law,” Sano said, “but it’s a reason I can understand.” He would do anything for Reiko, risk any danger, betray any other loyalty. “I won’t punish you for loving unwisely. If you tell me about you and Lady Harume, I’ll try to be fair.”
The current of mutual empathy again flashed between them. Danzaemon inhaled a tremulous breath and released it in a shuddering sigh. Sano watched his need to speak of his lover warring with the reluctance to compromise himself and his people by saying something that might tax Sano’s tolerance. Need triumphed over prudence.
“We met by chance. At a temple in Asakusa.” Danzaemon spoke haltingly, looking down at his hands, clasped in his lap. “Even though a long time had passed, I recognized her at once. And she recognized me.”
“You knew each other before?”
“Yes. When we were children. My uncle used to take me to Fukagawa to gather shellfish on the beach every month. He met Harume’s mother and became her client. We would go to her houseboat. While I waited for them to finish, Harume and I played together.”
So he’d been correct in guessing that part of the solution to the mystery of Lady Harume’s life lay in her past, Sano thought. Blue Apple, the nighthawk prostitute desperate enough to accept eta clients, had unwittingly set the course of her daughter’s future.