The alleyway swung left, then right, and Jack emerged into a small
courtyard. But Akiko was nowhere to be seen.
He heard footsteps receding down a passageway off to his right. He
followed the sound until the passage opened out into a large tree-lined
courtyard. Before him was a temple with an arched roof of compact green
tiles overlapping like the scales of a snake. A set of stone steps led up to a
pair of solid wooden doors.
Jack cautiously approached the entrance. Above the door was a
wooden sign upon which the name of the temple had been carved.
He immediately recognized the last symbol as 'temple' and tried to
remember the other kanji characters Akiko had taught him. He thought the
first might be 'dragon', the second 'peace'.
The sign spelt Ryōanji.
The Temple of the Peaceful Dragon.
He tried the door, but it was locked.
Jack sat down on the steps to consider what to do next. It was then that
he noticed a tiny gap in the outer wall of the temple, on one side of the
doorway.
The wall was constructed of an alternating pattern of dark cedar
panelling and white-washed stone. One of the wooden panels was not quite
flush to the wall. Jack put an eye to the gap and was rewarded with a
glimpse of an inner garden. A series of small stepping stones led across a
mossy manicured lawn to a wooden veranda on the opposite side.
Jack pushed his fingers into the gap and the panel slid smoothly aside.
Through the concealed entrance, Jack slipped into the temple garden.
Perhaps this was where Akiko had disappeared to.
He crossed over to the veranda and followed it round to where it
bordered a long rectangular Zen garden of raked grey pebbles, in which
fifteen large black stones had been placed in a pattern of five irregular
groups. Under the pale moonlight, the garden looked like a ridge of
mountain tops thrusting through a sea of clouds.
The garden was deserted.
Through an archway on the far side, Jack spied a smaller plot of raked
pebbles, decorated with one or two shrubs but little else. At the end of a
stone pathway that bisected the garden was a simple wooden shrine. Its
shoji doors were drawn shut, but the warm halo of a candle could be seen
through the washi paper and Jack thought he heard voices coming from
within.
He stepped off the wooden walkway towards the shrine, the pebbles
crunching underfoot.
The voices stopped suddenly and the candle was extinguished.
Jack jumped back on to the walkway, silently cursing his haste to cross
the stone garden. He hurried round the edge, keeping close to the shadows.
He hid in an alcove near the entrance to the shrine and waited.
No one emerged.
After what seemed an age, Jack decided to risk a peek inside. Ever so
slowly, he approached the shoji and slid it back a touch. There was a waft of
freshly burnt incense. A statue of a Buddha sat upon a small stone pedestal
surrounded by offerings of fruit, rice and saké, but otherwise the shrine was
empty.
'Can I help you?' asked an authoritative voice.
Jack spun round, his heart in his mouth.
A monk in black and grey robes stood over him. The middle-aged man
was muscular and compact, with a shaved head and dark glinting eyes. Jack
thought about running, but there was something in this man's demeanour
that suggested it wouldn't be a good idea. The monk exuded a lethal
stillness. The tips of his fingers were held together as if in prayer, but his
hands looked as deadly as two tantō blades.
'I… was looking for a friend,' stammered Jack.
'In the middle of the night?'
'Yes… I was worried for her.'
'Is she in trouble?'
'No, but I didn't know where she was going –'
'So you were following her?'
'Yes,' replied Jack, the guilt striking him like a slap across the face.
'You should respect people's privacy, boy. If your friend needed you,
she would have asked for your company. She is clearly not here, so I think
it's time you left.'
'Yes. I'm sorry. It was a mistake…' said Jack, bowing low.
'It is only a mistake if you do it twice,' interrupted the monk, though
his expression remained unforgiving. 'Mistakes are lessons of wisdom. I
trust you will learn from this one.'
Without another word, the monk escorted Jack back to the main gate
and indicated for him to leave.
'I do not expect to see you here again.'
He then closed the double doors and Jack was left alone on the stone
steps.
Jack walked slowly back to school, contemplating his actions. The
monk was right. What business did he have spying on Akiko? She had only
ever shown him trust. When he'd asked her to keep his father's rutter
secret, she had. He, on the other hand, had not respected her privacy and
was breaking her trust by following her around. Jack hated himself for it.
Still, doubt plagued his mind. Akiko had denied going out at night, so
what was she doing that was so secret she had to lie about it?
When he returned to the Hall of Lions, he passed Akiko's room and
couldn't help peeking inside. He realized then that he must have followed
someone else to the Temple of the Peaceful Dragon.
For there Akiko was, fast asleep in her bed.