The pale light of dawn filtered through the tiny window and rain continued
to drip sluggishly from the lintel to the sill.
A single eye stared through the gloom at Jack.
But it was not Dokugan Ryu's.
It belonged to the Daruma Doll that Sensei Yamada, his Zen teacher,
had given him during his first week of samurai training at the Niten Ichi
Ryū, the 'One School of Two Heavens' in Kyoto.
More than a year had passed since Jack's fateful arrival in Japan when
a ninja attack upon the trading ship his father piloted had left him stranded
and fighting for his life. The sole survivor, Jack had been rescued by the
legendary warrior Masamoto Takeshi, the founder of this particular samurai
school.
Injured, unable to speak the language and without friends or family to
look after him, Jack had had little choice but to do as he was told. Besides,
Masamoto was not the sort of man to have his authority questioned – a fact
proven when he adopted Jack, a foreigner, as his son.
Of course, Jack dreamed of going home and being with his sister, Jess,
the only family he had left, but these dreams often became nightmares
infiltrated by his nemesis, Dragon Eye. The ninja wanted the rutter, his
father's navigational logbook, at any cost, even if that meant killing a boy
Jack's age.
The little wooden Daruma Doll with its round painted face continued
to stare at him in the darkness, its lone eye mocking his predicament. Jack
recalled the day Sensei Yamada had instructed him to paint in the right eye
of the doll and make a wish – the other to be added only when the wish
came true. Jack realized to his dismay that his wish was no closer to
fulfilment than when he had first filled in the eye at the beginning of the
year.
He rolled over in despair, burying his head in the futon. The other
trainee warriors were bound to have heard his cries through the paper-thin
walls of his tiny room in the Shishi-no-ma, the Hall of Lions.
'Jack, are you all right?' came a whisper in Japanese from the other
side of the shoji door.
He heard the door slide open and recognized the dim outlines of his
best friend Akiko and her cousin Yamato, the second-born son of
Masamoto. They slipped inside quietly. Dressed in a cream silk night
kimono, her long dark hair tied back, Akiko came and knelt by Jack's bed.
'We heard a shout,' continued Akiko, her half-moon eyes studying his
pale face with concern.
'We thought you might be in trouble,' said Yamato, a wiry boy the
same age as Jack with chestnut-brown eyes and spiky black hair. 'You look
like you've seen a ghost.'
Jack wiped his brow with a trembling hand and tried to calm his
nerves. The dream, so vivid and real, had left him shaken and the image of
Jess being snatched lingered in his mind.
'I dreamt of Dragon Eye… He'd broken into my parents' house… He
kidnapped my little sister…' Jack swallowed hard, trying to calm himself.
Akiko looked like she might reach out to comfort him, but Jack knew
Japanese formality prevented any such outward displays of affection. She
offered him a sad smile instead.
'Jack, it's just a dream,' said Akiko.
Yamato nodded in agreement, adding, 'It's impossible for Dragon Eye
to be in England.'
'I know,' Jack conceded, taking a deep breath, 'but I'm not in England
either. If the Alexandria hadn't been attacked, I'd be halfway home by now.
Instead, I'm stranded on the other side of the world. There's no telling
what's happened to Jess. I may be under the protection of your father here,
but she has no one.'
Jack's vision blurred with tears.
'But isn't your sister being looked after by a neighbour?' asked Akiko.
'Mrs Winters is old,' said Jack, shaking his head dismissively. 'She
can't work and soon she'll have run out of the money my father gave her.
Besides, she could have become sick and died… just like my mother! Jess
will be sent to a workhouse if there's no one to care for her.'
'What's a workhouse?' Yamato asked.
'They're like prisons, but for beggars and orphans. She'll have to
break stones for roads, pick apart old ropes, maybe even crush bones for
fertilizer. There's little food, so they end up fighting over the rotting pieces
just to eat. How could she ever survive that?'
Jack buried his head in his hands. He was powerless to save what
remained of his family. Just as he had been when his father had needed his
help fighting the ninja who had boarded their ship. Jack punched his pillow,
frustrated at his inability to do anything about it. Akiko and Yamato
watched silently as their friend vented his anger.
'Why did the Alexandria have to sail into that storm? If her hull had
held, we wouldn't have been shipwrecked. We wouldn't have been
attacked. And my father would still be alive!'
Even now Jack could see the wire garrotte, slick with his father's
blood, Dragon Eye wrenching back on it harder as John Fletcher struggled
to get free. Jack remembered how he had simply stood there, his body
paralysed with fear, the knife hanging limp in his hand. His father, gasping
for breath, the veins in his neck fit to burst, desperately reaching out to
him…
Angry with himself for his failure to act, Jack threw his pillow across
the room.
'Jack. Calm down. You're with us now, it'll be all right,' soothed
Akiko. She exchanged a worried glance with Yamato. They had never seen
him like this.
'No, it's not all right,' replied Jack, slowly shaking his head and
rubbing his eyes in an attempt to clear his mind of the nightmarish vision.
'Jack, it's no wonder you're sleeping so badly. There's a book under
your futon!' exclaimed Yamato, picking up the leatherbound tome he'd
spotted.
Jack snatched it out of his hands.
It was his father's rutter. He'd kept it hidden under his futon since
there was no other place he could conceal it in his tiny featureless room.
The rutter was his sole link to his father and Jack cherished every page,
every note and every word his father had written. The information it
contained was highly valuable and Jack had sworn to his father to keep it
secret.
'Easy, Jack. It's only a dictionary,' said Yamato, taken aback at Jack's
unexpected aggressiveness.
Jack stared wide-eyed at Yamato, realizing his friend had mistaken the
rutter for the Portuguese–Japanese dictionary the late Father Lucius had
given him the previous year. The one he was supposed to deliver to the
priest's superior, Father Bobadillo, in Osaka when he got the chance. But it
wasn't the dictionary. Though they both had similar leather bindings, this
was his father's rutter.
Jack had never told Yamato the truth about the rutter, even denying its
existence to him. And for good reason. Until their victory and reconciliation
at the inter-school Taryu-Jiai contest that summer, he'd had no reason to
trust Yamato.
When Masamoto had first adopted Jack, Yamato had taken an instant
dislike to him. His older brother, Tenno, had been killed and he saw Jack as
his father's attempt to replace his eldest son. To Yamato, Jack was stealing
his father from him. It took a near-drowning experience for Jack to
convince Yamato otherwise and to bind them as allies.
Jack knew it was a risk to tell Yamato about something as precious as
his father's rutter. And Jack had no idea how he would react. But perhaps
now was the time to trust his new friend with the secret.
'It's not Father Lucius's dictionary,' confessed Jack.
'What is it then?' asked Yamato, a perplexed look on his face.
'It's my father's rutter.'