The Ghost in the Tokaido Inn (3 page)

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Authors: Tom Hoobler

Tags: #mystery, #japan, #teen, #samurai

BOOK: The Ghost in the Tokaido Inn
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Lord Hakuseki opened the box and
held it out for the girl to see. Inside, on a bed of black silk,
was a brilliant red stone, as dark as blood. The girl’s eyebrows
rose.

“What do you think of that?” the
daimyo asked.

She shook her head. “I have never
seen anything like it.”

“Of course you haven’t,” said the
daimyo. “It comes from a place far away, farther than China. It’s
called a ruby. I am bringing it to Edo as my gift to the shogun.”
The girl said nothing, and Lord Hakuseki abruptly snapped shut the
lid of the box. “Now the paper,” he said. “How many sheets do you
have?”

She blinked. “Of this
paper?”

“The pink writing paper,” the
daimyo said impatiently. “I like it. How many sheets do you
have?”

“My mother colors it with berries
that she gathers in the mountains in the fall,” she said. ‘They are
hard to find.”

Lord Hakuseki waved his hand. “I
don’t care about that. How many sheets?”

“We have twenty sheets,” she
said.

The daimyo opened a pouch that
hung at his belt. He took two coins from it and handed them to the
girl. Seikei saw a flash of gold as she closed her hand. “You are
very generous, Lord,” she said.

The daimyo pointed to one of his
samurai. “Go with her and bring the paper,” he said. The girl
backed out of the room, looking relieved.

As she left, the servant woman
returned with a pot of tea. Seikei tensed, remembering what he was
waiting for. He watched as the woman poured the daimyo a
cup.

The daimyo didn’t pick it up. He
was still examining the pink writing paper with his poem on it.
Then he looked down, as if noticing the steaming tea for the first
time. He raised it to his lips, and Seikei held his
breath.

Lord Hakuseki put the cup down and
returned his attention to the paper. Seikei looked around and
caught the eye of one of the samurai guards. The man shook his head
slightly. Seikei waited.

At last Lord Hakuseki looked
around the room, and saw Seikei kneeling by the wall. “What are you
here for?” he asked.

Seikei bowed his head, trying to
act the way the girl had. “The tea, Lord,” he mumbled.

“Oh, yes.” Lord Hakuseki beckoned
to one of his guards. “Give him some coins,” he said.

The samurai took a few silver
pieces from his kimono and handed them to Seikei. Dismayed, Seikei
bowed humbly and made his way out of the room.

3: A Ghost Story

Father was not as disappointed as
Seikei thought he would be. “What can you expect?” he said,
shrugging. “This is not so bad. At least he paid you, and we didn’t
give him our best tea. Now, let’s go to bed.”

“Father, I cannot sleep,” said
Seikei. “I am too excited.”

“We have another long day of
travel tomorrow,” Father said.

“I can sleep in the
kago.”

“Well, I cannot,” Father said. “I
must get my rest.”

“There is a terrace at the back of
the inn,” said Seikei. “Could I go there to look at the view until
I feel tired?”

Father shrugged. “If you wish,” he
said. “But do not leave the inn. The streets of this town are
dangerous at night.”

Seikei left,
promising that he would not stay long. When he reached the terrace,
he found that rain had started to fall softly. Though the stone
floor was covered with mats, it felt cool through his cotton
tabi
,
or socks.

He walked to the
railing that overlooked a small pond. The rain clouds had covered
the moon and only a soft glow fell onto the water. He didn’t mind
the rain falling on his head. He felt feverish from his experience
in the daimyo’s quarters.
I was
afraid
, he admitted to himself,
just to be in his presence.

He jumped at the sound of a
footstep just behind him. He whirled and saw the girl.

“I’m sorry,” she said. “Did I
startle you?”

“No,” he said hastily. “I mean, I
didn’t expect to find someone here.”

“Should I leave?” she
asked.

It was hard for Seikei to speak.
The girl seemed even more beautiful than she had before. “No,
please,” he said. “Stay.”

“Was your master pleased with the
paper?” she asked.

Seikei was confused.
“Who?”

“The daimyo. I saw you in his
room.”

Now he understood. “No, no. I was
there for the same reason you were. My father is a tea merchant.
Excuse me. My name is Konoike Seikei.”

She bowed. “I am called Michiko.
My family name is Ogawa.”

“Is it true that your family knew
the poet Basho?”

She smiled, and he realized that
it was rude to question her honesty.

“I ask,” he said, “only because I
greatly admire Basho’s poetry.”

Michiko put her hand over her
mouth to hide her smile. Seikei knew why she was amused. Because he
was a merchant’s son, and merchants care for nothing except
money.

He looked away from her, feeling
ashamed. Then his eyes fell upon the pond, and he remembered one of
Basho’s poems. Seikei took a deep breath, and began to
recite:

“Clouds come
from time to time

and bring to men a chance to rest from looking at the
moon.”

The girl clapped her hands. “That
was the same poem I was thinking of before you
appeared.”

Seikei turned back to see her
smile. He realized that she was not mocking him. Without thinking,
he blurted out his secret wish: “I would so much like to be a
samurai like Basho, and devote my life to poetry.”

Michiko nodded. “But you do not
have to be a samurai for that,” she said. “Anyone can write poetry,
if they wish.”

“My father says it is not
something a merchant should do. Only a samurai, and I can never be
a samurai.”

“I do not believe that,” Michiko
said. “Did you hear the poem that the daimyo wrote?”

“Yes.”

“And did you see his
brush-writing?”

Seikei nodded.

“So you know,” Michiko said, “that
although he is a samurai he does not have a noble
spirit.”

Seikei was surprised by the girl’s
boldness. “He was rude to you,” he said. “I admired your
courage.”

“You thought I was courageous?”
She shrugged. “I only reminded myself that my family needed to sell
the paper.”

Seikei nodded.

“It is true that Basho was a
samurai,” Michiko said. “But he discarded his swords. Isn’t it
Basho’s spirit that we admire in his poetry? Though you are a
merchant’s son, you can still develop a noble spirit—brave, honest,
and faithful to your family. And if you do, who can stop you from
writing poetry?”

Seikei had no answer. He wondered
how his father would reply.

They stared across the pond for a
while. The sound of laughter came across the water from the other
side.

“Some traveling
kabuki
are giving a play at the monastery,” Michiko
said. “I wanted to see it, but my father has been feeling ill all
day. I used some of the gold the daimyo gave me to buy herbal tea
for his stomach.”

“I have never seen a kabuki play,”
Seikei said. “Father says they are improper.”

“I think they are exciting,”
Michiko said. “Some are very scary, with goblins and
ghosts.”

“I like ghost stories,” said
Seikei.

“Do you? I know one that Basho
told to my grandmother when she was a child. Would you like to hear
it?”

“Very much,” he
replied.

“I will see if I can frighten
you,” she teased. “Let us go under the roof, so that the rain won’t
fall on us.”

Seikei had forgotten about the
rain. He would gladly have stood there all night to listen to this
girl.

They sat down where the
overhanging roof gave shelter. It was darker here, and the girl’s
face disappeared in the shadows. Seikei could hear only her
voice.

“Well, then,” she began. “Long
ago, a Buddhist priest named Kokushi was traveling alone through
the mountains. It was getting dark, and he had lost his way. He
came upon a little hut, like the ones hermits sometimes live in to
meditate on the Buddhist teachings.

“An old man opened the door when
Kokushi knocked. He wore the orange robe of a Buddhist monk, but it
was faded and worn. The monk refused to let Kokushi stay with him,
but said there was a village on the other side of the hill. There,
Kokushi could find food and lodging.

“Kokushi found this to be true.
But in the village, no one answered his knock. All the houses
seemed to be empty. Finally, he found the people gathered in one
house, weeping and praying.

“The head of the village had died
that day. His body lay in this house, and everyone had brought
offerings of food to see him into the next life.

“The village had no priest, and
Kokushi offered to perform the Buddhist rites for the man’s soul.
But the dead man’s son said that no one could remain in the village
on the night after a death. ‘Strange things happen on that night,’
he said, ‘and it would be better if you came with us to the next
village.’

“Kokushi replied that he had no
fear. He would be glad to keep watch over the old man’s body. The
others tried to persuade him to leave, but he would not.

“At last, they departed, leaving
him alone with the body. Kokushi said the Buddhist prayers and blew
out all the lamps except one next to the body. He sat quietly
meditating, but he was curious about what strange things might
happen.

“Hours passed, and Kokushi began
to doze. Suddenly, he realized that something else had entered the
house. A mist gathered around the dead body. Kokushi saw the face
of a horrible demon emerge from the mist. It was a horned beast,
with ferocious teeth flashing in the mist. The demon lifted the
body with its claws and began to devour it.

“As quickly as a cat swallows a
mouse, the demon ate everything—hair, bones, even the shroud. And
this monstrous creature, after consuming the body, turned to the
food offerings and ate them also. Then it went away as silently as
it had come.

“In the morning, the villagers
returned. They did not seem surprised to find that the body had
disappeared. The dead man’s son told Kokushi, ‘Now you know why it
is a law in our village that everyone must leave on the night after
a death. But you are unharmed, and so must be a holy
man.’

“Kokushi asked,
‘Why do you not have the monk on the hill perform the funeral
service for your dead?’

“The villagers did not understand
him. ‘There is no monk living near our village.’ they said. ‘For
many years now, we have had no priest, for all fled when they saw
what you have seen.’

“Kokushi took his leave, and
walked back the way he had come. He found the little hut, and again
knocked on the door. When it opened, the monk covered his eyes and
said, ‘Ah! I am so ashamed.’

“ ‘
You need not
be ashamed for refusing me shelter,’ Kokushi said. ‘I was very
kindly treated in the village.’

“The monk replied, ‘I am ashamed because you saw me in my
true form. It was I who devoured the corpse and the offerings last
night before your eyes. For I am a
jikininki
—an eater of human
flesh.’

“The monk explained that he once
had been a priest, the only one for miles around. ‘The people would
bring me their dead so that I might pray over them. But I greedily
ate the offerings that they had brought for the dead to enjoy. And
when I died, as punishment I was sent back to earth as a
jikininki.’ He hung his head. ‘Now all men must flee from the sight
of me, or they will die.’

“ ‘
Yet I saw
you,’ said Kokushi, ‘and I did not die.’

“ ‘
You must be a
holy man,’ the jikininki said. ‘I beg you, pray for me so that I
may be released from this hideous state of
existence.’

“Kokushi began to say the proper Buddhist prayers, and when
he looked up, the monk had vanished, along with the little hut in
which he lived. Kokushi found himself alone in the grass, next to a
tombstone covered with moss. It was a
go-rin-ishi
,
the stone that marks the grave of a
priest.”

Michiko paused. “Did you ever hear
this story before?” she asked Seikei.

“No,” Seikei said. “It was a good
one, but I was not afraid.”

“I must return to my father now,”
said Michiko. “Perhaps we will meet again, and then you can read me
a poem you have written.”

“I promise,” said Seikei. He
watched as she rose and went into the inn. How graceful she is, he
thought.

After she left, a cool wind blew
across the terrace, sending a chill through Seikei. The play across
the lake was over, and now all was silent. He began to think of the
jikininki, and stood up. It was too quiet and too dark. He had the
odd feeling that something might be hiding in the darkness beyond
the terrace. He didn’t want to stay out here any longer.

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