the guardhouse in the company of the officer. The doctor’s gait
was unsteady and his path less than straight, but he made his
way over to them.
“That doctor’s as drunk as a frog in a sake barrel,” muttered
one of the pirates.
Jisei smiled. “That’s never stopped him before. He’ll look at
me now. And maybe he’ll get us better food, like last time.”
The physician ignored Jisei’s eager greeting and merely
looked at each man blearily, had them open their mouths and
perform some simple actions, before moving on to the next
man. When it was Jisei’s turn, he frowned at the wounds on his
36
I . J . P a r k e r
knees and arms and pursed his lips. But even here, he made no
comment, merely digging a small earthenware jar from his
medicine chest. Turning to the guard officer, he said, “All these
men look filthy. Have them bathe, and then put this ointment
on this man’s wounds.”
The officer stepped back, affronted. “What, me? You’re
drunk! They’re prisoners, not honored guests.”
The doctor handed the ointment to Taketsuna. “Here,
you do it.” To the guard, he said, “If you don’t keep these men
clean and well fed, they’ll sicken and die, and nobody will get
any work out of them. Do you want me to report you to the
governor?”
“My men won’t like it,” grumbled the officer. Seeing the
doctor’s implacable silence, he relented. “Oh, very well. They
can have a bath if they heat the water and clean the bath
afterwards.”
“And food!”
“Of course, Master Ogata. We’ll sauté some kisu fish
for them, with ginger shoots and sesame seeds,” the officer
sneered. “Perhaps you can spare some of your wine for their
banquet?”
The fat physician hunched his shoulders, then turned his
back on them and staggered off.
◆
But they got their bath and a hot dinner. Taketsuna appreciated
both far more than the others and was grateful for the drunken
physician’s visit. From snatches of conversation among the pris-
oners, he gathered that forced labor could be brutal and hoped
he might be spared that. Not only Jisei, whose wounds he had
tended after the bath, bore the scars of his toils. There was
also Yoshi’s missing eye, lost when a guard’s whip caught him
across the face instead of the back, and Kumaso’s crooked ankle,
I s l a n d o f E x i l e s
37
broken and badly set after a rock fell on it. And the bath had
revealed that the silent Haseo’s back was so heavily scarred by
crisscrossing stripes and welts that he must have been near
death after his punishment.
With darkness they drew closer together against the night
chill. Kumaso and Yoshi engaged in a game of “rock, scissors,
paper” like two carefree children. Taketsuna thought with long-
ing of his distant family.
The stars above were particularly clear tonight. He lay back,
his arms folded under his head against the sharp bits of gravel,
and wondered if he would get used to his new life, used to sleep-
ing on the hard, cold ground without cover and under the open
sky, used to humiliation and rough physical labor, used to beat-
ings. The last was the most difficult, a disgrace impossible to be
borne without retaliation. He wished for the warmth of silken
quilts, but being tired, he dozed off.
The discomfort of the cold night and the hard soil beneath
him woke him somewhat later. Two of his companions were
whispering softly.
“Forget it. It’s too dangerous. They might find out.”
The other man made some inaudible protest.
“Lot of good that’ll do you, when you’re dead. You know
what they say about the Second Prince’s murder.”
Startled, Taketsuna sat up. The whispering stopped. “Who
was that?” he asked softly. “Who was talking?”
Silence.
He reached over and shook the shoulder of the sleeper next
to him. The man grunted and sat up with a curse. “What the
devil d’you want? Can’t a man have a little peace at night?” he
complained sleepily.
At the gate the dozing guards came awake. “Quiet over
there,” one of them shouted, “or we’ll give you what for, you
lousy pieces of dung.”
38
I . J . P a r k e r
Taketsuna whispered an apology, lay back down, and closed
his eyes. He did not have much chance to sleep, because a short
time later someone arrived to pick up the new prisoner.
The sleepy guards grumbled but seemed resigned to com-
ings and goings all day and night. Taketsuna was chained again
and walked off behind a burly guard. This time they entered the
city. The streets were silent, and the shops shuttered. Moonlight
lit their way. The prisoner shivered in the cool night breeze and
tried to suppress his nervousness. Mano extended from the flat
shore of the bay halfway up the encircling hills, and the provin-
cial headquarters rose well above the rest of the city, with a
commanding view of its many roofs and the shimmering silver
of the bay and ocean beyond. Taketsuna risked a glance back-
ward, as they climbed the wide stairs to the gate leading into the
government compound, and was struck by the extraordinary
beauty of a scene in such sharp contrast to the misery of certain
of Sadoshima’s inhabitants.
The government compound was smaller than those Taketsuna
had known in his former life, but it seemed in good repair and had
the usual separate courtyards surrounding buildings of various
sizes. The governor’s residence occupied a tree-shaded section just beyond the tribunal and archives. Except for the guards on night
duty at the main gate and at the gate to the governor’s quarters, the compound lay deserted. Their arrival was barely noted. Taketsuna’s guard saluted the guards at the gate and led his prisoner
past the tribunal to a smaller building just behind it. Here another pair of guards nodded them through the doorway. They walked
down a long hallway lit by flickering oil lamps and stopped in
front of a pair of wide doors. The guard knocked. Someone called
out, “Enter!” and they stepped into a large room which was bare
except for a desk and the seated figure of the governor.
The guard stood to attention, and Taketsuna knelt, touching
his face to the polished floor.
I s l a n d o f E x i l e s
39
“Take his chains off!” The governor’s voice sounded remote.
His tone was clipped and his speech cultured, but there was an
abruptness and tension in his voice that made Taketsuna uneasy.
He felt the guard’s hands remove his chains but did not
change his position.
“You may leave. Tell the guards outside that I do not wish to
be disturbed.”
They must think the governor either a very brave man or a
foolish one, thought Taketsuna. A desperate and violent crimi-
nal could easily make a hostage of him and bargain his way to
freedom.
The door slammed behind the guard, and they were alone.
A rustle of silk; then soft steps approached and passed Taket-
suna. There was the click of a latch falling into place, then the
stockinged steps returned and paused next to the kneeling
Taketsuna. A hand fell on his shoulder.
“My dear fellow, please rise. It is quite safe now. We are
alone.”
C H A P T E R T H R E E
A C A N D L E I N T H E W I N D
The governor was nearly as tall as the prisoner, but age had
bent his back a little. The black cap did not hide the gray of his
hair, or his robe of office the weariness on his lined face. In the candlelight his eyes looked deeply sunken as they searched