The cup in Jack's hand drooped and slowly melted like hot tar to the floor.
Jack stared at the gooey mess, then looked up at the Mountain Monk for an
explanation.
The skinny monk smiled serenely as if nothing unusual was
happening, his saffron robes now an intense orange and his head like a
round citrus fruit ripened under the Mediterranean sun. His eyes sparkled as
if sprinkled with stardust and his grin was as wide as a crescent moon.
'What's happening?' exclaimed Jack in panic.
'What's happening?' repeated the monk, his words slow and slurred
like they were molasses in Jack's ears. 'A very good question and one you
must ask when you meet your maker.'
Jack's head swirled. At some point during their conversation, the
cavern had expanded to the size of a cathedral and its rock walls now
breathed in and out in steady contractions. The circle of candles around the
shrine had become a multicoloured rainbow that left tracer lines of light like
fireworks exploding inside his eyeballs. The fire between Jack and the
monk suddenly roared, flaring into a white-hot furnace too bright to look at.
Jack rubbed his eyes, trying to clear the crazy visions.
When he dared open them again, the fire had died down to glowing
embers and the monk had disappeared. Only the teapot remained, lying on
its side.
What had just happened? Was his mind playing tricks on him? Was it
an after-effect of Dragon Eye's Death Touch?
Jack looked around for the monk, but the cavern was deserted.
Akiko had been right. He had pushed himself too far by taking on this
final challenge. He was too drained to cope and now he was seeing things.
Jack picked up the teapot.
It squealed at him and Jack dropped it in shock. The pot suddenly grew
hundreds of little black legs like a millipede and scuttled away in a mad
panic. Before he could comprehend what he had just seen, he was distracted
by a harsh cracking sound behind him.
Jack forced himself to turn his head.
His scream caught in his throat, unable to escape alongside the rush of
terror and panic that tried to claw its way out at the same time.
A giant black scorpion, big enough to devour a horse, skittered over
the cavern floor towards him. Jack couldn't move for fear. The creature
scuttled closer and examined its prey.
'It's not real, it's not real, it's not real…' Jack feverishly repeated to
himself.
Then the scorpion raised one of its powerful pincers and swiped at
Jack. It struck him in the chest and Jack went flying against the cavern wall.
'It's real, it's real, it's real…' stammered Jack, struggling to his feet.
The scorpion attacked, its stinger swishing through the air straight at
Jack's heart.
Jack dived to the right and the barb ricocheted off the rock face behind.
It struck again as he rolled across the floor, just managing to avoid its
poisoned tip.
Scrambling to his feet, he ran for the gap in the wall, but the scorpion
was too quick and blocked his path. The creature, aware it had him trapped,
slowly advanced, its pincers crackling and its stinger flicking like a
poisoned spear.
Backed up against the rear wall, Jack had nowhere left to hide. He bent
down to pick up a rock to defend himself with and there, lying discarded on
the floor, was the little paper crane Yori had made for him.
Origami.
Nothing is as it appears.
All of a sudden, he understood that he was in the midst of the Spirit
challenge. The High Priest had instructed them to 'be the master of your
mind, rather than being mastered by your mind'.
Whether the scorpion was real or not didn't matter.
His mind believed it was. And…
Just like a piece of paper can be more than a piece of paper in
origami, becoming a crane, a fish or a flower; so a samurai should never
underestimate their own potential to bend and fold to life.
Yori's answer to the origami koan flashed bright and clear like a
beacon in Jack's head. He had to strive to become more than he appeared,
to go beyond his natural limits.
Jack roared at the scorpion in defiance.
The creature hesitated a moment.
Then it went for the kill.
Jack roared louder as if he was a lion and struck out with his fist. But it
was a fist now armed with the claws of a lion. It batted the scorpion's tail
away and Jack pounced cat-like on to the creature's back.
The scorpion bucked and reared, but Jack rode it out, driving his claws
deep into the creature's exoskeleton. The scorpion struck wildly with its
stinger, Jack dodging from side to side to avoid its poisoned tip.
As it struck yet again, he flung himself on to the creature's head. At
the last possible moment he leapt away. It was too late, though, for the
creature to pull back its strike. Its barbed tail sunk deep into its own solitary
eye, a single green lidless orb that glowed in the dark.
Blinded, the scorpion whirled in frenzied agony, emitting an unholy
high-pitched screech that echoed around the cavern. The scream was then
drowned out by the sound of a thunderclap and the fire flared again, as
bright as the sun.
The scorpion was gone and Jack was sitting opposite the Mountain
Monk, who was throwing incense powder on to his fire, each handful
turning the flames a bright purple and sending out heady waves of lavenderscented smoke.
'Would you like some?' he asked, handing Jack a cup of lemony
liquid.
Jack refused to take it, afraid of what horrors it might unleash.
'I would advise drinking it,' the monk insisted. 'Together with the
incense, it counters the effects of the tea.'
Jack did as he was told and within moments he felt his world returning
to its normal dimensions.
'Well?' asked Jack as the monk began to prepare another pot of water
for a brew.
'Well, what?' replied the Mountain Monk, bemused.
Jack was becoming irritated with the man's obtuse attitude. 'Have I
passed?'
'I don't know. Did you?'
'But you set the Spirit challenge, surely you decide.'
'No. You decided your opponent. To know your fears is to know
yourself.' He put the teapot down and looked Jack in the eye. 'The key to
being a great samurai in peace and war is freedom from fear. If you defeat
your nemesis, then you become the master of your fears.'
With a wave of his hand, the monk indicated the way out to Jack.
'Please, I have to prepare for the next guest.'
Jack gave the monk a bewildered bow then headed for the crack in the
wall.
'Jack-kun,' called the Mountain Monk just as he reached the hole.
Jack stopped in his tracks, trying to recall when he had told the monk
his name.
'Understand that those who successfully complete the Spirit challenge
are not free of fear, but are simply no longer afraid to fear.'
* * *
Jack stood in the centre of the grassy plateau alongside Akiko and Kazuki.
The sun beat down with a glorious warmth and the three highest peaks of
the Iga mountain range towered majestically over them in the bright blue
sky.
The students, sensei and temple monks formed three concentric circles
around the three of them. On the command of the High Priest, the three
circles clapped three times then cheered at the tops of their voices three
times, their shouts echoing across the valley.
Jack's heart swelled with pride. He had done it. Against all the odds,
he had conquered the Circle. He had survived.
Turning to face Akiko, he saw that she was trying to hold back her
own tears, a mixture of relief and delight sparkling in her eyes. When she
had come down off the mountain after him, Jack had rejoiced as she
recounted how she'd defeated her inner demon, a host of vampire bats, with
the aid of her protecting spirit, a pure white falcon. Jack had thought how
appropriate that a bird of swift beauty and sharp instinct was her guardian.
Akiko had been equally delighted to hear that his spirit had taken the form
of a lion.
Then there had been a tense wait, while Kazuki scaled the peak and
entered the Spirit cave himself. For a long while, he failed to emerge and
Jack, going against the spirit of bushido, secretly hoped that Kazuki had
failed in his final challenge. But no sooner had this thought occurred than
his arch-rival had returned triumphant. Jack didn't discover what Kazuki's
protective spirit was, though he assumed it was a snake or something
equally venomous.
'Young samurai, the Circle is complete,' announced the High Priest,
stepping up to join them in the centre of the Circle of Three. 'Your mind,
body and spirit will forever form a never-ending circle.'
He indicated for the three of them to link hands to form a fourth and
final inner circle. Jack and Kazuki reluctantly grasped one another's hand
and Akiko couldn't help but laugh at their discomfort.
'But while your body and mind have been strengthened by these
challenges,' continued the High Priest, 'always remember that the most
important thing for a samurai is not the sword you hold in your hand or the
knowledge between your ears; it is what is in your heart. Your spirit is your
true shield. If your spirit is strong, you can accomplish anything.'