The Shogun's Daughter (17 page)

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Authors: Laura Joh Rowland

BOOK: The Shogun's Daughter
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“Not I,” Ienobu said with pious conviction. “Tsuruhime’s death doesn’t help me. You’re the one who wants Yoshisato to be the next shogun. If Tsuruhime had lived to bear a son whose pedigree was indisputable, she could have knocked Yoshisato out of the succession.” Ienobu pretended to have a sudden, bright idea. “But wait—you’re not the only one with a motive. Yoshisato’s is stronger. After all, the dictatorship is his to lose.”

If Yoshisato were implicated in the murder of the shogun’s daughter, he could lose more than his right to rule Japan. He could be put to death. Yanagisawa was more worried about Yoshisato’s safety than his own. His love for Yoshisato made him vulnerable. Losing one son had almost destroyed him. He couldn’t lose another. But Ienobu didn’t seem to have anyone he cared about more than his repulsive self.

“You’re speaking of the shogun’s heir. Be careful,” Yanagisawa said, his voice hushed with menace. “Or you could find yourself brought up on charges of treason.”

“No, you’re the one who should be careful. You’re playing a dangerous game, passing your son off as the shogun’s. I’m offering you a chance to get out of it with your head still attached to your body. Tell the shogun the astrologer made a mistake: Yoshisato isn’t his son.”

“You’d like that,” Yanagisawa said, astounded by Ienobu’s nerve. “That would put you back in line to inherit the regime. But if you think I’ll do it, you’re insane.”

“If you don’t, I’ll help Sano prove that you and Yoshisato murdered Tsuruhime. My uncle will put you both to death for treason. And I’ll be the next shogun.”

Although upset by the idea of Ienobu and Sano joining forces, Yanagisawa said, “Go ahead, make friends with Sano. It will make things more convenient for me: I can destroy you both at once.”

“I have to give you credit,” Ienobu said with mocking admiration. “No one else bluffs as well as you. You should really take my advice, though. If you don’t, we’ll just see which one of us comes out on top. And I have a bet with myself that it will be me.”

“That’s a wise bet,” Yanagisawa retorted. “When you lose, you can still collect from yourself.”

Ienobu smirked, as if he saw the anxiety Yanagisawa was trying to hide. “Here are my troops to escort you out. They’ve timed it just right. Our conversation is finished.”

Furious because he’d been intimidated by Ienobu, then rudely dismissed, Yanagisawa rose. Coming here had been a mistake. Instead of subduing Ienobu, he’d escalated the strife between them. Ienobu was an even craftier and more ruthless adversary than he’d thought. Ienobu was trouble that wouldn’t go away even if Yanagisawa managed to avoid being blamed for Tsuruhime’s murder.

Ienobu uttered a dry laugh, like cicada wings rubbing together. As Yanagisawa walked out of the room, he called, “I’m so glad we had this talk.”

 

17

MASAHIRO STEPPED INTO
the teahouse. The proprietor and peasants bowed. Jinnosuke ignored him. The young samurai slouched morosely over the table that held his sake cup. Masahiro walked over, knelt opposite Jinnosuke, and said, “Hello. Do you remember me?”

“No. Should I?”

“I was at Lord Tsunanori’s estate yesterday. My name is Masahiro. I helped you pick up the tiles.”

“Oh. Yes. Thanks.” Recognition glimmered in Jinnosuke’s bleary eyes. He was drunk, Masahiro realized. He motioned to the proprietor. “A drink for my friend, and another for me.”

The proprietor set a cup in front of Masahiro. Masahiro bravely downed the sake. He’d only had a few drinks in his life. This time he managed not to cough; the liquor was watery, cheap. He sought to start a conversation about Tsuruhime’s murder.

“Those men you were working with yesterday,” he began.

“Those bullies! They’re always picking on me!” Jinnosuke burst out. “They don’t understand what it’s like to lose someone you love.” His voice broke. He gulped his sake.

“Who did you love and lose?” Masahiro prompted.

Jinnosuke shook his head, pressed his trembling lips together.

“Was it Lord Tsunanori’s wife?”

“Shh!” Jinnosuke glanced nervously at the other customers. He asked in a low voice, “How did you know?”

“I guessed,” Masahiro said, “from what the bullies said.”

“They won’t keep their mouths shut. I’m going to get in trouble for sure.” Jinnosuke dropped his head in his hands and groaned. “I never meant to fall in love with Tsuruhime! When she was alive, I didn’t care what happened to me. She was all that mattered. But now that she’s gone—” His thin shoulders heaved with a sob.

“How did it happen?” Masahiro thought that falling in love with his master’s wife was a stupid thing for a samurai to do.

“I was one of her bodyguards.” Jinnosuke wiped his eyes with his sleeve. “Whenever she went out, I rode alongside her palanquin and we talked about the weather, the things we saw, anything to pass the time. One day there was a beautiful cloud in the sky. It was shaped like a swan. I made up a poem about it and recited it to her. We discovered that we both liked poetry. We started writing poems and passing them to each other at home. It was fun, a secret game.

“But the poems got more and more personal. And one night there was a moon-viewing party. We went for a walk in the woods, and I told her I was in love with her. She said she was in love with me. And, well, one thing led to another.”

Masahiro had been to moon-viewing parties and knew that other things went on there besides looking at the moon. He’d heard the whispers, scuffles, and giggling in the darkness.

“It was my first time,” Jinnosuke said. “She was so passionate, as if she was starved for lovemaking. We couldn’t get enough of each other. When her husband was away, we would meet in her chamber. We thought people wouldn’t notice. But pretty soon the fellows started making remarks, and the maids giggled when they saw me. It wasn’t smart of us, I know.”

Masahiro thought it wasn’t smart to get drunk and blab to a stranger. He remembered Detective Marume telling him,
People are stupid. That’s a real advantage for a detective.

“Then Tsuruhime got smallpox.” Tears welled in Jinnosuke’s eyes. “Nobody was allowed to go near her except her nurse. I couldn’t even send her letters. I didn’t trust the nurse not to tell Lord Tsunanori.” He choked on a sob. “I couldn’t even say good-bye.”

Masahiro felt sorry for Jinnosuke, but he remembered Detective Marume saying,
You can’t allow sympathy to get in the way when you’re interrogating a witness.

“Did Lord Tsunanori find out about you and Tsuruhime?” Masahiro asked.

“I don’t think so. If he did, he would have killed me. But maybe somebody told him. He’s been giving me dirty looks. Or maybe I’m just imagining it.” Jinnosuke pressed his hands over his temples. “Merciful gods, I’m so confused! I don’t want to go home. I can’t take any more stares or jokes, and I’m scared of Lord Tsunanori.”

You have to keep on them even if it makes you feel bad,
Detective Marume’s voice said in Masahiro’s memory. “If Lord Tsunanori did know, what would he have done to Tsuruhime?”

Jinnosuke looked up in surprise. “Nothing. What could he have done? She was the shogun’s daughter. You don’t divorce the shogun’s daughter, shave her head, or send her to work as a prostitute in the Yoshiwara pleasure quarter.”

Those were the usual punishments for women who committed adultery, Masahiro knew. But maybe Lord Tsunanori had punished Tsuruhime in a way that no one, including the shogun, would know he’d done it. Maybe he’d infected her with smallpox so that her death would seem natural. Masahiro remembered what his father had said last night:
If I didn’t want to believe Yanagisawa killed her, Lord Tsunanori would be my favorite suspect.
Now Masahiro was beginning to think that Lord Tsunanori was indeed guilty.

He wished he hadn’t found Jinnosuke, hadn’t gone to Lord Tsunanori’s estate. All he’d accomplished was to lose Taeko and find more evidence that pointed away from Yanagisawa.

*   *   *

A GUESTHOUSE STOOD
near the palace, secluded within stone walls, amid pine trees. Yanagisawa strode into the house, which the shogun had lent him because his estate wasn’t rebuilt yet. Still fuming from his clashes with Sano and Ienobu, he kicked off his shoes in the entryway and threw his swords onto the rack. On his way to his private chambers, he heard noises in the adjacent room. That was where Yoshisato had lived before moving to the heir’s residence. Yanagisawa looked in and saw Yoshisato standing by the cabinets built into one wall.

“Why aren’t you at the palace?” Yanagisawa demanded. “Didn’t we agree that one of us should be with the shogun at all times?”

“He’s reading documents in the privy. He’ll be there for a good hour. Rather than stand outside the door and smell his farts, I came to get some things I forgot to pack when I moved.” Yoshisato held up a stack of clothes. He eyed Yanagisawa curiously. “Why the bad mood?”

“I just had words with Sano and Ienobu.”

Yoshisato cast his gaze up at the ceiling. “Why am I not surprised? What happened?”

“Sano is investigating the death of the shogun’s daughter, just as I suspected. He refused to stop. He and Ienobu both accused me of infecting her with smallpox by planting a contaminated bedsheet in her room. Ienobu practically admitted he’s responsible for the whispering campaign, and he’s certainly not going to give up trying to discredit you. So excuse me if my mood isn’t more cheerful.”

Surprise lifted Yoshisato’s brows. He seemed not to have known there was any doubt that the shogun’s daughter had died a natural death or that Sano was investigating it. “I suppose you gave Sano and Ienobu as good as you got. You really know how to fan a fire.”

“Don’t.” Yanagisawa held up his hand. “I’ve had enough for one day. I’m not going to listen to criticism from you.”

“You will listen,” Yoshisato said, his eyes hot. “Because it isn’t just your future that will be affected by your actions. Mine is at stake, too.”

“All right,” Yanagisawa said, exasperated. “What do you, in your infinite wisdom, think I should have done?”

“You should never have started a feud with Sano. You should have been so nice to him that he would be licking your shoes now. You should have befriended Ienobu instead of ignoring him until he started to be a problem and then pushing him out of the court.”

“Oh, well, I’ll just travel back in time and change the course of history!”

“Since you can’t, you should go to Sano and Ienobu and apologize.”

That Yanagisawa should apologize to his enemies! “Have you lost your mind?”

“I’m trying to help you find yours. Offer them anything they want in exchange for supporting me as the shogun’s heir. Tell Sano he can be chamberlain and you step down. Promise him and Ienobu their own provinces to rule when I’m shogun. Convert them from enemies to allies who will help me control the regime when I’m shogun.”

Yanagisawa slashed the air with his hand. “I won’t put up with Sano for another term. I won’t share power with him and Ienobu.”

“You will,” Yoshisato said, deadly earnest. “Because it’s how I want to handle them. And because you have to stop creating enemies and strife everywhere you go, or neither of us will live long enough for me to become shogun.”

The nerve of this brat! “I’ve controlled the regime for the greater part of twenty years! I know what I’m doing! Whereas you have no political experience. We have to crush Sano and Ienobu and our other enemies before they can crush us!”

“Your old-fashioned ways aren’t working. It’s time for a fresh approach.”

“You’re insane!”

“I’m the shogun’s heir. You’re not.”

They must sound like two little boys fighting in the nursery, Yanagisawa thought. “You already admitted that you can’t function without me.”

“I’ve changed my mind. I’m going to give you a choice: Either you cooperate with me, or your days at court are over.” Yoshisato looked scared to be alone but seemed braced by his convictions. He stalked out of the house.

Yanagisawa gazed after him, furious at the ultimatum, helpless because Yoshisato had the power to make it stick.

“You should listen to him,” said a husky female voice. “He’s right.”

A woman dressed in a brown kimono stood in the doorway. It was Lady Someko, Yoshisato’s mother.

“What are you doing here?” Yanagisawa demanded.

“I live here, remember?” She had the same wide face, rounded chin, and tilted, sparkling eyes as Yoshisato. At age forty-three, she was as beautiful as the day she and Yanagisawa had first met. She gave a laugh that was at once seductive and unpleasant. “You moved me in with you the day you revealed Yoshisato as the shogun’s son.” She stepped into the room and flung out her arms. Her long sleeves spread like wings; the silk glinted with orange lights like flames. Gold ornaments shimmered in her upswept hair, which was still glossy black. “So here I am.”

Yoshisato had also inherited her wits, sharp tongue, and impertinence, Yanagisawa regretted. While Yoshisato would never forgive Yanagisawa for ignoring him most of his life, Lady Someko would never forgive Yanagisawa for stealing her from the husband she’d loved and making her his concubine. She’d nursed a grudge against him for more than eighteen years.

“You were eavesdropping,” Yanagisawa accused.

Lady Someko shrugged. “I’m borrowing a page from your book: Spy on your enemies, so you’ll know what they’re up to.”

Yanagisawa’s anger at Yoshisato expanded to include her. “Don’t ever do it again.”

“If you don’t like having me here, let me go home,” Lady Someko retorted. She and Yoshisato had once lived in their own villa and, after the earthquake, had shared a house with Yanagisawa’s three other sons and their mothers. “Oh, but you can’t let me go, can you? You have to keep me under control so I don’t do anything to spoil your plans.”

She was the only person who knew for sure that she’d never slept with the shogun, the only person who knew Yoshisato was really Yanagisawa’s son.

“You shouldn’t be too eager to spoil my plans for your son to be the next shogun,” Yanagisawa said. “Keep your mouth shut, and you’ll be secure for the rest of your life. Talk, and you’ll be put to death for fraud. So will Yoshisato.”

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