You keep her for the rest of your time, his secret heart told him. She merits it. Don't fool yourself like you fool others. The truth is you could keep her easily, taking her a little, leaving her a lot, just like your favorite Tetsu-ko, or Kogo. Isn't Kiku just a falcon to you? Prized yes, unique yes, but just a falcon that you feed from your fist, to fly at a prey and call back with a lure, to cast adrift after a season or two, to vanish forever? Don't lie to yourself, that's fatal. Why not keep her? She's only just another falcon, though very special, very high-flying, very beautiful to watch, but nothing more, rare certainly, unique certainly, and, oh, so pillowable....
"Why do you laugh? Why are you so happy, Sire?"
"Because you are a joy to see, Lady."
Blackthorne leaned his weight on one of the three hawsers that were attached to the keel plate of the wreck. "Hipparuuuu!" he called out. Puuuulll!
There were a hundred samurai naked to their loincloths hauling lustily on each rope. It was afternoon now and low tide, and Blackthorne hoped to be able to shift the wreck and drag her ashore to salvage everything. He had adapted his first plan when he had found to his glee that all the cannon had been fished out of the sea the day after the holocaust and were almost as perfect as the day they had left their foundry near Chatham in his home county of Kent. As well, almost a thousand cannonballs, some grape and chain and many metal things had been recovered. Most were twisted and scored but he had the makings of a ship, better than he had dreamed possible.
"Marvelous, Naga-san! Marvelous!" he had congratulated him when he had discovered the true extent of the salvage.
"Oh, thank you, Anjin-san. Try hard, so sorry."
"Never mind so sorry. All good now!"
Yes, he had rejoiced. Now The Lady can be just a mite longer and a mite more abeam, but she'll still have her greyhound look and she'll be a piss-cutter to end all piss-cutters.
Ah, Rodrigues, he had thought without rancor, I'm glad you're safe and away this year and there'll be another man to sink next year. If Ferriera's Captain-General again, that would be a gift from heaven, but I won't count on it and I'm glad you're safe away. I owe you my life and you were a great pilot.
"Hipparuuuuuuu!" he shouted again and hawsers jerked, the sea dripping off them like sweat, but the wreck did not budge.
Since that dawn on the beach with Toranaga, Mariko's letter in his hands, the cannon discovered so soon afterward, there had not been enough hours in the day. He had drawn beginning plans and made and remade lists and changed plans and very carefully offered up lists of men and materials needed, not wanting any mistakes. And after the day, he worked at the dictionary long into the night to learn the new words he would need to tell the craftsmen what he wanted, to find out what they had already and could do already. Many times, in desperation, he had wanted to ask the priest to help but he knew there was no help there now, that their enmity was inexorably fixed.
Karma, he had told himself without pain, pitying the priest for his misbegotten fanaticism.
"Hipparuuuuuuuu!"
Again the samurai strained against the hold of the sand and the sea, then a chant sprang up and they tugged in unison. The wreck shifted a fraction and they redoubled their efforts, then it jerked loose and they sprawled in the sand. They picked themselves up, laughing, congratulating themselves, and leaned on the ropes again. But now the wreck was stuck firm once more.
Blackthorne showed them how to take the ropes to one side, then to the other, trying to ease the wreck to port or starboard but it was as fixed as though anchored.
"I'll have to buoy it, then the tide'll do the work and lift it," he said aloud in English.
"Dozo?" Naga said, puzzled.
"Ah, gomen nasai, Naga-san." With signs and pictures in the sand he explained, damning his lack of words, how to make a raft and tie it to the spines at low tide; then the next high tide would float the wreck and they could pull it ashore and beach it. At the next low tide it would be easy to manage because they would have laid rollers for it to rest on.
"Ah so desu!" Naga said, impressed. When he explained to the other officers, they also were filled with admiration and Blackthorne's own vassals were puffed with implied importance.
Blackthorne noticed this and he pointed a finger at one. "Where are your manners?"
"What? Oh, so sorry, Sire, please excuse me for offending you."
"Today I will, tomorrow no. Swim out to ship - untie this rope."
The ronin-samurai quailed and rolled his eyes. "So sorry, Sire, I can't swim."
Александр Сергеевич Королев , Андрей Владимирович Фёдоров , Иван Всеволодович Кошкин , Иван Кошкин , Коллектив авторов , Михаил Ларионович Михайлов
Фантастика / Приключения / Славянское фэнтези / Фэнтези / Былины, эпопея / Боевики / Детективы / Сказки народов мира / Исторические приключения