Jack sprinted across the courtyard.
Reaching the doorway, he slid back the shoji and peered in. All of the
lamps had burnt out so it was hard to see anything, but the corridor seemed
empty.
He silently made his way down the girls' corridor towards Akiko's
room. When he got there, he found that her door was slightly ajar. He
peeked in through the gap.
Akiko was fast asleep under the covers of her futon – and looked like
she had been there for some time.
Seeing her asleep, Jack became aware of just how exhausted he was.
Suffering from hunger and lack of sleep, could he have imagined the
intruder?
He decided he would speak with Akiko in the morning, but now the
pull of his own bed was too much to resist and he stumbled back to his
room. Collapsing on to his futon, Jack's mind whirled. He stared at his
Daruma Doll, willing himself to sleep, and after a while he felt his eyelids
grow heavy.
He could have sworn he'd closed his eyes for only a moment before
Yamato was at his door, the bright morning sunshine flooding his room.
'Come on, Jack!' said Yamato, rousing him out of bed. 'You've missed
breakfast and Sensei Kano's said we're to meet at the Butokuden right now.
We've got our first lesson in the Art of the Bō.'
Leaving the bustle of Kyoto city behind, the students crossed the wide
wooden bridge that spanned the Kamogawa River and headed north-east in
the direction of Mount Hiei. Despite being the tail end of summer, the
weather was warm and dry, the sky cloudless, and in the sharp light of
morning the burnt-out temples, that could be seen scattered over the
mountain's forested slopes, glinted like broken teeth.
The enormous bulk of Sensei Kano, a mountain in himself, strode out
in front, his great white bō staff striking the ground with each step. Like
sheep following their shepherd, his students trailed behind in two
regimented rows, their pace dictated by the rhythmic thunk-thunk of the
sensei's staff.
As instructed, the class had gathered outside the Butokuden to await
their new teacher. Jack and the others had been watching the early morning
workers digging the foundations for the new Hall of the Hawk when Sensei
Kano appeared. He acknowledged his students with a brief bow before
instructing them to collect a wooden bō staff from a pile stacked against the
weapons wall inside the Butokuden. They had then left the school at a brisk
march.
Their teacher hadn't spoken a word since.
By the time they reached the foot of the mountain, the morning sun
had risen high in the sky. The forced march, combined with the dust of the
road, soon left the students hot and thirsty, so the cool shade of the cedar
trees was a welcome relief when they entered the forest and began their
ascent of Mount Hiei.
As they weaved their way up its slope, the students spread out a little
and Jack finally spotted an opportunity to speak with Akiko.
'So where do you think Sensei Kano's taking us?' he asked
nonchalantly.
'Enryakuji, I presume.'
'Why there? Didn't you tell me a samurai general destroyed it?'
'Yes, General Nobunaga.'
'So what's there left to see?' asked Jack.
'Nothing. Apart from the remains of several hundred deserted temples.
Enryakuji has been a tomb for over forty years.'
'It seems a rather odd place to take us to train.' Jack drew closer,
checking no one was listening before he whispered, 'By the way, what were
you doing last night?'
Akiko momentarily faltered at the question. Then, keeping her gaze
fixed on the path, replied, 'I was folding cranes.'
'No, I mean just before dawn,' pressed Jack. 'I'm sure I saw you
outside the Shishi-no-ma. You were dressed all in black like a ninja!'
Akiko's face was an odd mixture of disbelief and alarm.
'You must be mistaken, Jack. I was asleep. Like everyone else.'
'Well, I saw someone – and I swear it looked like you. But when I got
inside, there was no one around.'
'Are you sure you didn't imagine it?' She studied his face with
concern. 'You look dead on your feet. Did you get any sleep last night?'
Jack shook his head wearily and was about to question her further,
when the students behind caught them up.
Out of the corner of his eye, Jack continued to study Akiko, but her
face gave nothing away. Perhaps he had been mistaken. Akiko had no
reason to lie to him. But if it wasn't Akiko, then who else could it have
been?
THUNK!
Jack's thoughts were interrupted by the final beat of Sensei Kano's bō
staff upon the ground. The students all came to an abrupt halt.
'We cross here,' announced Sensei Kano. His voice was deep and
booming, as if a temple gong had been rung inside his chest.
The students gathered round. Jack edged his way forward with Yamato
and Akiko by his side. In front of them was a ravine splitting the forest in
two, with a fast-flowing river far below. Shimmering in the watery mist, the
remains of a footbridge jutted out over the abyss.
'Where shall we cross, Sensei?' asked Yamato.
'Is there not a bridge?' enquired Sensei Kano.
'Hai Sensei,' Yamato replied, bemused at the question, 'but it's been
destroyed.'
Sensei Kano raised his eyes to heaven, as if listening to some distant
sound, then said, 'What about the log?'
A little way down from the bridge, spanning the gorge, was a small
felled cedar tree, its branches pruned, the trunk stripped bare of its bark.
'But, Sensei,' objected Yamato, a tremor in his voice, 'the log is barely
wide enough for one foot… it's covered in moss… and it's wet… someone
could easily slip and fall.'
'Nonsense. You'll all cross here. Indeed you, Yamatokun, will go first.
You are Masamoto's son, aren't you?'
Yamato's mouth fell open, his face going a touch pale. 'Hai, Sensei,'
he replied weakly.
'Good, then lead the way!'
The sensei gave Yamato an encouraging prod with his staff and
Yamato shuffled to the edge of the ravine. He stopped at its lip.
'Why haven't you crossed yet?' asked Sensei Kano.
'S-s-sorry… Sensei,' stammered Yamato, 'I… can't do it.'
Jack knew his friend was scared of heights. He had discovered
Yamato's phobia when they had climbed the Sound of Feathers waterfall at
the culmination of the Taryu-Jiai contest. The same vertigo was defeating
him again.
'Nonsense. If it's the height that scaring you, simply don't look,'
instructed Sensei Kano.
'What? Close my eyes!' exclaimed Yamato, backing away from the
chasm.
'Yes. Become blind to your fear.'
Everyone stared at the sensei, aghast. The thought of crossing the log
was unnerving enough, but to cross it with one's eyes closed. That was
sheer lunacy!
'It's perfectly safe. I'll even go first,' said Sensei Kano, slipping off his
sandals and threading them on his staff. 'It would be helpful, though, if
someone could show me where the log is.'
The students exchanged bewildered looks. The log was in plain sight.
After a brief pause, several of the students pointed to the makeshift
crossing.
'No use pointing,' said Sensei Kano. 'I'm blind.'
Jack, along with the rest of the class, was stunned. Sensei Kano had
led them all the way to the gorge without a guide or even a single request
for directions. How could he be blind?
Jack studied his new sensei properly for the first time. Sensei Kano's
sheer size dominated his appearance, being a head taller than most
Japanese. Upon closer inspection, though, Jack realized that Sensei Kano's
eyes were not grey by nature, but clouded as if a sea mist had seeped into
them.
'Excuse me, Sensei,' said Akiko, recovering first. 'The log's almost in
front of you, no more than eight shaku ahead and twelve shaku to your left.'
'Thank you,' replied Sensei Kano, striding confidently up to the lip of
the ravine.
His bō found the edge and he followed it to his left until it struck the
fallen tree. Without a moment's hesitation, he stepped on to the narrow log.
Holding his staff out in front of him for balance, he crossed in several easy
strides.
'You have just witnessed your first lesson,' announced Sensei Kano
from the opposite side. 'If one sees with the eyes of the heart, rather than
the eyes of the head, there is nothing to fear.'
As if in response to his words of wisdom, a shaft of sunlight broke
through the forest canopy, suspending a tiny rainbow within the veil of mist
that swirled above the void.
'Now it's your turn.'