Read Lord Oda's Revenge Online
Authors: Nick Lake
âShe looks like she might wake at any moment,' Hayao said. He had come to stand next to Taro.
âMaybe one day, when she's needed, she will,' said the abbot.
One of the monks gathering the bones of the nameless man who had died in the fire, an old one with white stubble, shuffled past, bent over. As he passed by Hana's head, he touched his own forehead, in respect.
âSee?' said the abbot. âShe is already a symbol, and an object of worship. She is like the monastery â it may burn, but it can never be destroyed.'
âWhat about food?' said Taro. âWater?'
âI'm sorry?' said the abbot.
âYou talked about men who had injured their heads. You said they starved. What will you do for Hana?'
The abbot looked confused. âI don't â I meanâ'
Taro took a step forward, feeling a new momentum pulse through him, a fierce compulsion that he knew would agitate his limbs and his mind until he had found the ball and returned to this spot with it. âShe is not just a statue, or the centrepiece of a temple. Do you understand? She is my friend, and I will wake her up again â I will return her soul to her body. Until then, I want you to keep her alive.'
âYou've tried to move her fingers,' said the abbot. âYou've seen how hard it is.'
âThen you will have to think of something,' said Taro. âDrip water onto her lips, if you must.'
Hayao put a hand on Taro's shoulder. âI will make sure she lives,' he said.
Taro smiled thinly. âThank you.' As if he needed Hana to be even more grateful to the samurai! But he kept the smile on his lips. âJust don't let her body die before my mother's cremation. I hope to be back before then.'
âBack?' said the abbot. âBut you helped to save the monastery â you and Hiro are our honoured guests. And anyway, the
sutras must be chanted. . .'
âThere are plenty of monks for that,' said Taro. âI'm sorry. I have to leave. If it wasn't for me, none of this would have happened in the first place.'
âBut you fought bravely!' said the monk. âYou couldn't have kept her from the flames.'
âThat's not what I meant,' said Taro. âI meant that if I hadn't been here, the samurai would never have attacked. All I have done is bring destruction to your door â you should be glad to see the back of me.'
âNonsense,' said the abbot. âThe samurai have wanted to crush us for decades.'
âBut it was only when I arrived that they finally tried â it was
me
they wanted. Wherever I go, I bring danger. I am cursed.' He thought of his father, of Shusaku, of Heiko and the prophetess. All dead because of him.
âNo one is cursed,' said the abbot. âEveryone is blessed equally byâ'
âNot if they have bad karma,' said Taro. âBelieve me. It's better if I go.'
âYou cannot believe that army attacked the monastery just because of you!' exclaimed the abbot.
âI
do
believe it,' said Taro. âIt has happened before. And besides, Kenji Kira told me.'
âKenji Kira?'
âThe man Yukiko killed. He was a
hatamoto
of Lord Oda's. He attacked the monastery to kill me.'
âBut why?'
âThere is. . . something I have inherited, which makes me important to the daimyo.' He didn't want to reveal too much. He couldn't tell the abbot either that he was Lord Tokugawa's son,
or that his mother, a simple ama diver, might have received from her ancestors the ball of the last Buddha himself, a world in miniature, and with it the power to command the elements. Especially since the abbot seemed to think it was all a story for children. âHiro â tell him.'
Hiro shifted on his feet. âIt's true that people are always hunting him,' he said eventually, also being careful with his words.
âBut an army!' said the abbot. âYou're saying all those monks died on your account?'
Taro hung his head. âI'm sorry.'
The abbot sighed. âDo not apologize. I am sure your burdens are heavy, but you cannot be responsible for this. The daimyo have wanted us out of the way for a long time. Even if this had anything to do with you â which I am very far from believing â it was only an excuse to finally act.' He smiled at Taro. âThere is no need for you to leave. Please, stay here with us. Perhaps you could even take orders. . .'
âNo,' said Taro. âI apologize, but I must go. It is not only the samurai. There is. . . something I need to find.'
And when I have it, I will bring Hana back to life,
he thought. And, further down in the darkness of his mind, there was another thought, one he could not admit even to himself, not completely.
Perhaps she was
not
spared,
said that thought.
Perhaps she was kept here by our karma, because she is the only woman I will ever love. As long as I live, she cannot leave me, and so she is kept in this realm till I die, or till I can make her live
.
âVery well,' said the abbot. âWhen you are ready, an escort will take you down the mountain, in case the samurai are lying in wait.'
Taro put his hands on Hiro's shoulders. â
You
can stay, if you like,' he said. âYou've done enough for me.'
âNice try,' said Hiro. âI go where you go.'
âI thought you might say that,' said Taro. He turned to the abbot. âYou
will
keep her alive?'
The abbot sighed. âWe will try.'
âGood,' said Taro. âThen when I return, I will see her again.' He bent down and kissed Hana's eyelids â the first time his lips had ever touched her skin. He felt as if he had been hollowed out, and filled with sharp things. His mother, who had survived an attack by ninjas, and travelled all the way to this mountain, was dead. Hana, who had abandoned her own father for him, was lost to him too, and it felt even crueller because she seemed to be sleeping, and only a call of her name away. He did not know how he could continue in this world, and he wished fervently that Yukiko had killed him, too.
But then, it had been her intention to keep him alive, to suffer all of this.
Focusing on revenge, he forced himself to turn away from Hana's peaceful body, and face the slope that led through cedar trees to the stone path, and farther, once he struck out north, to the sea and Shirahama.
From this moment, he would not rest.
He would get the ball. He would avenge these deaths. And then he would stand once again in this spot and hold the ball over Hana's body, and make her open her eyes and sit up.
She would hate him, he was sure. She would consider him a coward and a traitor, for leaving her alone to die. He didn't care.
She would live, and then he could die.
Â
T
ARO HAD KNOWN
that Hiro would want to go with him, of course, but he couldn't bear the thought of his friend having to suffer his company, or risk his life again on his behalf. What lay ahead could be more dangerous than anything they had faced before, such was the power and lure of the Buddha ball. That was why the next morning Taro rose earlier than the sun and crept out of the monastery on his own. He left a note, assuming that Hiro would have one of the monks read it out to him.
Dear Hiro,
I'm returning to the ninja mountain. Please don't follow me. I have done enough to place you in danger this past year
.
Your friend,
Taro
He knew that Hiro would follow him to the ninja mountain â but he also knew that his friend would be safe there, with the ninjas to protect him.
And anyway, it didn't matter if Hiro followed him to the ninja mountain, because he wasn't going there. He was going straight to Shirahama.
Â
L
ORD
O
DA NO
Nobunaga rode south. He had taken his swiftest horse â a stallion given to him by Father Valignano, the priest and spokesperson of the Portuguese. He wore no armour; just a heavy cloak and a
katana
strapped under it. Only two men accompanied him. He had sent a pigeon to his home province, the Kanto, and accordingly there would be samurai waiting for Taro in Shirahama, ready to take the ball and then kill him. Or just kill him, if that seemed necessary.
On Yukiko's suggestion, he had posted spies on the east flank of Mount Hiei. They had seen the boy leave, alone, and Yukiko was certain Shirahama was where he would go, to try to recover the Buddha ball.
Lord Oda wished to be present, physically, for the boy's demise. He had sent Yukiko to the ninja mountain. It was the only other place the boy might go â if he did choose that path, which was unlikely, then Yukiko would meet him there, and seize him. He smiled to himself. Taro had stolen his daughter from him, broken his body, turned him into a dark spirit. He enjoyed his vampire strength, but it was undeniable that he was now a tainted thing, his dignity as a nobleman corrupted. He had lost his only child, his posterity, and he had lost his humanity, too.
So he rode. Shirahama was east, but there was a ship at anchor only five
ri
to the south, which with a fair wind could carry him to Shirahama before Taro got there. His country was an island â it always paid to remember that. Lord Oda had no navy, at least not yet. The Portuguese had told him that if and when he became shogun, they would help him create one. For now, he used what was available. The ship he intended to commandeer was a pirate ship. The captain was in Lord Oda's pay and had lent his ship several times before when Lord Oda needed a vessel whose provenance he could easily deny, whose nefarious deeds he could vehemently denounce, even if he had ordered them. Pirates, ninjas, bandits â they were all useful to a daimyo with an open mind.
He pressed his heels into the horse's flank, steam blowing from the creature's nostrils as it pounded down the wooded track. They had crossed a stream a moment ago, then left behind the rice paddies that stretched over much of this land, and entered a forest. Lord Oda glanced around suspiciously. This was the kind of place, even in these civilized times, where a
kami
might lurk â some ancient spirit of the woods, housed and worshipped at a quiet shrine, dripping in moss. Lord Oda couldn't stand that kind of thing. When he was shogun, he would burn the Shinto temples, make everyone follow the way of Buddha instead.
Everyone apart from himself, naturally.
âWhat was that?' said one of the men behind him.
Lord Oda turned without slowing. He saw nervous expressions on the faces of the two samurai. They were glancing around them restlessly, allowing their horses to drop to a canter. He pulled on his reins.
âMy apologies,' he said. âI appear to have made a mistake. I asked for two men to accompany me. I seem to have been given girls.'
One of the men coughed; the other flushed red. âCome,' said Lord Oda, a little more gently. In truth he was not comfortable himself. For many months his and Lord Tokugawa's troops had been stationed below the mountain belonging to those troublesome monks. He had heard reports that parts of the country, in his absence, had become unruly â like unsupervised children. This was good land for a
kami
; but it was good land for an ambush, too.
âRide harder,' he said. âWe will see the ocean by nightfall.' Right now the spring sun was bright in the sky, riding high above the trees. Lord Oda didn't know how it was that he could be a
kyuuketsuki
and yet able to go unharmed in daylight. He had asked priests and wise men, and none of them could answer him. Certainly, though, it was useful. In fact, very few of his men, except some of the more highly placed generals â and that nuisance girl Yukiko, of course â even knew how he had changed, that night in his castle.
He spurred his horse again and heard the men behind him do the same, the beat of hooves growing faster, stronger.
And then, suddenly, he was riding the air instead, as the horse buckled and fell beneath him. For one moment he was thrown forward, stomach trying to drop out of his body, then his feet caught in the stirrups and he was snapped back, viciously. He was aware of nothing but a spinning maelstrom of leaves and ground and limbs â he thought it was how the world must look to a
taifun,
or a tsunami. He and the horse, tied together, went crashing to the earth. He heard things breaking, and he thought one of those things was himself. Then the world slammed into him all at once, stopping him, and all the breath was knocked out of him.