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Authors: John Donohue

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BOOK: Enzan: The Far Mountain
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“Honor,” the old man snapped. His Japanese was guttural and harsh, but the word
makoto
, honor, rang out in the room. “Look at him!” A claw waved in my direction. “What does this one know of honor?” He probably thought a barbarian like me wouldn’t understand him when he spoke Japanese.

I turned my head and stared at him. “
Saya wa naku tomo mi wa hikaru
,” I spat back at him. He looked shocked.
Though the scabbard is lacking, the blade gleams
. It’s an old samurai chestnut, and even now I’m amazed I was able to locate it in the dingy, cluttered storage space of my memory, but it seemed to stupefy them all. I was relieved I had come up with a somewhat elegant rejoinder. My original impulse had been to tell him to shove it.

Ito suppressed a wry smile. The old man seemed incensed: probably offended that I had the nerve to speak his language. His mottled face flushed and his lips grew wet with spittle as he spun himself up for a tantrum. Miyazaki rose in alarm. “Ito,” he said, “my father is not well.” He reached the old man and began to wheel him away. “Please continue with our guest,” he commanded over his shoulder as he pushed the old lizard out of the room.

Ito stood watching until the door shut firmly behind them. He sighed. “Perhaps it is just as well.” He moved to the table and sat down, his hands resting on the folders before him. “The rest of the story is not so pleasant. As a father, it would be distressing for Miyazaki-san to share these things about his daughter.”

I raised my eyebrows and sat down. Now at least I was getting somewhere. There was no reason I could see why a highly placed Japanese family would need my help in corralling a wayward daughter. I’ve got a degree in history, not social work. I give lots of advice in the dojo, but most of it is highly specialized: I don’t care about how you feel about your relationship with your father. I am concerned with proper hip placement and correcting that really bad grip you’re using on the sword.

But they knew that. They knew about me: my background, my likes and dislikes. My skills. So there had to be something more to the situation. Something that made them reluctant to go to the authorities.

“So,” I offered. “Let me guess. Drugs?”

Ito nodded solemnly. “In part. What you call party drugs. Ecstasy. Crystal meth.”

“Some party.”

“Yes,” he sighed. “And there is more.” He fished around in his files and spread out a series of black and white surveillance shots: Chie with an Asian man in wraparound sunglasses and spiky hair. Another picture of the same man without the shades, lighting a cigarette outside a bar. “Lim Ki-whan,” Ito said. “Her boyfriend.” He tried to be dispassionate, but I could hear the note of disdain creeping into his voice. The name was Korean, and even today there is a deep chauvinism among some Japanese regarding the Koreans. For a family like the Miyazaki, it would have been bad enough to have a daughter wander off the reservation in America. To do it with a Korean would be beyond the pale.

“He’s her drug connection as well, I suppose?” Ito nodded in response. “Love is a wonderful thing,” I told him.

He didn’t think I was funny. He was probably right.

“There is more, Dr. Burke. Chie has a troubled psychological profile … issues with behavior. Issues with authority.”
Don’t we all.
He rustled through some papers, dense with text. “And sex.” He paused for a moment, clearly uncomfortable.

This was curious. Japanese attitudes regarding sexual matters are considerably different than traditional Western ones. The same culture that has elevated tea making to an art form is also the largest producer of pornographic comics in the world. So I waited for Ito to say more. He sat there, arranging and rearranging the order of the folders in front of him. Finally, he simply slipped one folder across the table in front of me. He shrugged. “There. Please take a look.”

There were a great many photos of Miyazaki Chie with a variety of men. The pictures seemed to have been carefully posed to be both sexually graphic and to ensure she could be clearly identified. Many times, she was looking right at the camera, her eyes slightly unfocused, and I assumed that was from the drugs. But you clearly got the sense that she knew she was being photographed. That she knew someone was going to be looking at her in these photos. And that she liked it. I shuffled through the collection quickly and wondered once more at the human capacity for making something potentially good so deeply creepy.

Ito watched me, waiting for a comment.

“I see she’s gotten some tattoos as well,” I offered.

“She is a nymphomaniac,” he said curtly. “And a drug user.” His voice took on heat and speed as he continued. “She is the daughter of one of the most respected families in Japan and she is being exploited by this Korean thug.”

There are lots of ways you could exploit someone, so I pressed for more information. “Has he turned her out?” I said.

Ito cocked his head, taking a moment to make a mental translation of the phrase. “Ah, has he made her a prostitute? No, Dr. Burke.” He reached over and took possession of the photos, sliding the folder beneath the others.

I nodded. “At least there’s that.” But Ito didn’t seem comforted.

“She is with him, we believe. But we do not know where. We want her back, Dr. Burke.”

“I can understand that, Ito-san, but I don’t see why you need me to help.”

Ito rubbed his hands together as if he were thinking about using them to mangle Chie’s boyfriend. It seemed to calm him. He peered up at me. “You have resources that could help us find him.”

“True.” My brother had been a cop for twenty years before he retired to set up a security consulting firm. He’s widely connected, deeply cranky, and very busy. But he could probably find Chie in about twenty-four hours if I asked for his help. “But there are many people in New York who could help you do this,” I told him.

Ito nodded. “Just so. But as we have stated, there are complicating factors. The drugs. The prominence of the family. We would insist on the utmost discretion.”

I thought of the pictures I had just seen. “That would be refreshing.”

“We know of your past service to the Kunaicho,” he told me. The Kunaicho, the Imperial Household Agency, was deeply involved in matters relating to the Japanese royal family. At one time, in another life, Yamashita had been instrumental in training its security personnel. It was a complicated history, filled with good things and bad. Some of them had almost gotten us both killed.

I didn’t respond to his comment and Ito took a sipping breath. “We would be honored if you would help us, Dr. Burke.”

“I think,” I said as I stood up, “that you are not telling me everything, Ito-san. I think you’re looking for someone who can find her, sure, but you also know she’s not going to want to come home, and whoever finds her is going to have to knock some heads together.” He started to respond but I held up a hand to silence him. “And it wouldn’t look good to have some Japanese government agents involved in what would essentially be a kidnapping. So you figured I could do the scut work for you and take the heat. You know, for old times’ sake. Am I right?”

His eyes never wavered. “We will pay you generously.”

“Great. I can buy extra cigarettes in prison,” I told him. I headed toward the door.

“Wait,” Ito called. His partner, who had remained in the background during our discussion, moved to block my way out of the suite.

“Get out of my way,” I told him. But he didn’t move.

“Please, Dr. Burke,” Ito continued. “It is an extremely delicate situation. And extremely complicated.”

I turned my head back toward Ito. “Not half as complicated as your friend’s life is going to be if he doesn’t get out of my way.” I felt the early tremble of an adrenalin dump start to work its way through my muscles. Ito must have sensed it as well. He made a quick motion and the man by the door stood aside.

“Did I tell you how we got those pictures?” Ito called as I headed out into the hall. I kept moving, but his voice followed me.

“Chie sends them to her father.”

Chapter 3

The training hall is called a dojo—a place of the Way. The name has all the exotic allure of the Mystic East: the promise of hidden wisdom and esoteric powers. But step inside a training hall and stay awhile. Venture out onto the floor with us. There are no wizened sages popping out cryptic advice. Instead there is the bark of commands and the hard, relentless gaze of your sensei. There is sweat in the eyes, the burn of muscle, and the constant presence of fear, surprise, pain, and frustration. Yet occasionally, as your hand slides in to grip the hard wooden shaft of the training sword, in the steamy pause between bouts when your heart is hammering in your ears and your breath scrapes in and out, something wells up inside you. It touches you like a phantom hand: the sense of connection, of potential, and the overwhelmingly clear beauty of the moment. Then it’s gone.

So if there’s a way we pursue in the dojo, it’s a way back to that sensation, as intense and fleeting as a flash of light at midnight. It’s as simple and as complicated as that.

I’ve been chasing the spark for almost thirty years. I’ve spent close to twenty of them with Yamashita, practicing the brutally elegant system he teaches. It encompasses sword and staff arts, unarmed combat, and more. If modern systems like judo or karate specialize on one segment of the fighting spectrum, the Yamashita-ha Itto Ryu blends as many of these segments as possible into an integrated whole. My teacher uses sword and staff as the main vehicles for his teaching, but insists they are merely means to an end. He trains warriors, and uses whatever is on hand to do so.

He once showed us a
tanto
, a short knife. Yamashita held it comfortably in his thick hand, moving the blade so the light played dully along its surface. “This,” he said, “is a sharp piece of metal. Nothing more. In one man’s hand it is good for cutting carrots. In another …” he held it up for the assembled class to take another look. He smiled. Then his face went totally blank. The sudden movement of his arm was fluid and almost too fast to see. The
tanto
shot across the room and buried its point into one of the wooden pillars along the dojo’s perimeter. You could almost hear the metal hum as it struck home.

“In another,” Yamashita concluded, “it is something very different. So …” He smiled at us. “In swordsmanship there is
ki, ken, tai
.” Spirit, sword, body. “Without spirit, without the force of the warrior, there is no sword.” He shrugged. “It is a spike, perhaps, or a cleaver. Just metal.” His eyes narrowed. “
You
make it dangerous. You
create
the sword.”

And then the lesson continued. He left the knife buried in the wood of that pillar as a reminder to us all.

I carry on that tradition, but without the elegance of my master. All of the pupils he accepts for training are required to have black belts in more than one martial art. Many of them have trained with bokken, the oak sword that forms the centerpiece of Yamashita’s training, but they have rarely plumbed its depths. As a result, new students often focus on the sword too intently, momentarily forgetting the other valuable lessons they have learned.

So I have to remind them. I like to think of it as an awareness exercise. But as some of my students limped off the floor after one session, I heard them ruefully calling it “hammer time.”

I’m not a cruel man, you understand. Yamashita used to chide me for sometimes being too gentle with the students. And over time, I’ve learned ours is an austere discipline, set against a hard world. Compassion is only possible when it follows mastery. But even in the rigors of training, I remind myself what is taking place is not mere battery, but a pounding more akin to the blows of a swordsmith as he forges metal into a blade of terrible beauty.

That day on the dojo floor we were working on different counters for attacks at distant and close intervals. Most sword work takes place in
issoku itto no ma
, the distance where you cross swords with an opponent and one small step will bring your weapon into striking distance. Some of the students had spent time studying kendo, the modern version of Japanese swordsmanship, so the concept was second nature to them. And the others quickly got the hang of it. They all had the body awareness of fighters.

The members of the class were paired off, a long line of swordsmen in the midnight blue of the traditional uniform, gripping the white oak bokken. I worked their wrist and forearm muscles in the quick jerking parries that are designed to deflect a strike and, with luck, expose an opening for a counterattack. We moved on to the sliding deflection of the
suriage
technique, then the move known as
kaeshi
, and finally to
uchiotoshi
. By that time, I could see the fabric of their heavy training jackets growing limp with sweat. In the pauses when we would rotate partners, people wiped their hands on their uniforms to keep their swords from slipping out of their hands. The constant repetition of the training session, the ceaseless back and forth of attack and counterattack, was taking its toll on them. They were straining to maintain focus, working hard at their swordsmanship. It was, as they say, a teachable moment.

I called the class to a halt and asked for a volunteer. A guy named Rick stood up. He had been training with me for almost a year, a diligent student who was skilled enough to be a good demo partner. We paired off and the others dropped to one knee to watch, grateful for the break. “So,” I began as I squared off with Rick. The tips of our bokken crossed. We were in
issoku itto no ma
. “From this interval, a number of attacks are possible. And a number of parries.” I nodded at him and we began, running in sequence through the techniques we had been practicing. As the senior member of the duo, I would attack, giving my junior a chance to respond. He did. Then we squared off once more and I came at him with a different technique. Again, the smooth response. I held up a hand to pause as we squared off one more time. “But now, what happens if something changes?”

Up to this point, I had been moving in what I call training speed. It was fast enough to be dangerous, but not so fast that a student like Rick didn’t have the opportunity to counter my attack. There was no point going at him full speed. I would have struck him every time and he would have simply grown frustrated. That would have been battering, not forging. And a good sensei must teach, not simply humiliate.

But now, I came at him for real. I shot toward him so fast that I got inside the striking radius of his sword. For a moment, Rick froze. I shot diagonally to the left across his front my right hand let go of the bokken
,
and my free arm curled up and across his neck. I saw the realization of what was happening come into his eyes, but by then it was too late. I was facing his rear, our hips on the same line. I extended forward and down, driving him into the floor. It wasn’t a hard throw, and I didn’t put all my energy into it, but coming down like that onto a hard wooden floor is bound to ring some bells in your head. I kicked his sword away and it skittered across the wooden floor.

Rick looked slightly cross-eyed for a moment, and then he shook it off. Even half stunned, he began to roll to his feet. I nodded in approval. Training is designed to help your body respond even before the conscious mind orders it to. But I must have dumped him harder than I had intended. His movements seemed slower than usual. Yet he doggedly began the long slog to his feet. I liked him for that, and felt the urge to help him up. But I didn’t. In the end, what we teach is not victory, but the capacity to endure. He deserved the small dignity of the struggle to stand upright once again.

Rick took a breath and set himself for the next attack. His sword was gone, so he set his hands in front of him in the unarmed
tegatana
posture, and waited. I nodded in approval, then backed away, showing him there would be no further attack.


Irimi nage
,” I told the class. “You’ve probably all seen it at one time or another, right?” Rick nodded ruefully and some other heads nodded as well. “So what happened?” I gestured to him, someone handed him his bokken, and we slowly went through the motions of what I had just done.

“We’re working on sword techniques and you’re getting tired. So you’re trying to compensate and you’re trying really hard. But your brain is sticking, focusing on the idea of using the sword.” I looked at Rick. “Here I come.”

I replicated my move and got in close. “For Rick to strike me, he needs to take a step back and swing the sword up, right? But that’ll be too late. So …” I smiled at them, “here’s Burke’s secret technique for the day.” I gestured at Rick. “You come in at me and do the same thing I did.” Rick glided in and across my front. He was now inside my strike radius to my right and my arms were extended in front of me, holding the bokken in the classic two-handed grip. “Now the sword is useless, yes?” I could hear Yamashita’s vocal cadence sneaking into my own. “But look!” I let go of the bokken with my left hand and raised the weapon horizontally and mimed hammering the butt of the sword into the side of Rick’s head. Well, maybe I gave him a poke in the nerve point under the ear where the jaw hinges. I pivoted around and placed my left hand against the back of the sword, slicing it down in a deep, vicious arc across the triceps of the arm that should have been snaking across my neck to throw me.

Rick nodded. I ran through the sequence again, letting him try the technique. We bowed to each other.

“The sword is a great weapon,” I told them. “But don’t get locked into thinking about it one way. It’s a spear. It’s a cleaver. A hammer. And sometimes it’s just an impediment. In fighting, there’s only one way to use a sword,” I told the class. “The way that gets the job done.” I swept my arm up and they reformed the line.


Hajime
,” I said. Begin.

Some people won’t take no for an answer.

Ito unfurled the small tube of paper, carefully smoothing it down on the coffee table between us. Below the loft apartment, the dojo was silent and empty. I could hear the refrigerator’s compressor cycle on in the kitchen and the distant hum of street traffic. Before me, the old paper crinkled.

It was a sheet of calligraphy in a vaguely familiar hand. The two large characters at the head of the paper were clear enough:
seiyaku
, a written vow.

“Can you read this?” Ito asked. He wasn’t being arrogant: the grass writing of personal calligraphy is cursive and often more suggestive than precise. But the characters were simple enough. It was addressed simply to a woman named Chika-hime.

I glanced at Ito. “
Hime?
An honorific of some sort?”

He nodded. “Princess.”

I scanned the lines, striving to get an English translation that mirrored the elegance on the page. “Each snow an … echo of this warrior’s promise … heart and sword.”


Kokoro ken to
,” Ito repeated—heart and sword—pleased with my rendering. “You see the signature below, Dr. Burke?”

I said nothing, staring at the calligraphy. It was the product of a younger brush, but the underlying stylistic structure was there. There was no denying I knew the handwriting: it was the same thick sprawl of ink that marked my training certificates as authentic, the signature of Yamashita Rinsuke. My sensei.

I didn’t know what to think or what to say. Yamashita’s past was largely a mystery to me. This note offered a glimpse into his secret life. It was as if a heavy curtain had shifted in a breeze and a shaft of light had briefly flickered across a dark room. I was intrigued, yet felt vaguely guilty. A pledge from the heart. Surely it was meant for only one pair of eyes other than his, and they weren’t mine. Yet the impulse to question Ito was real and irresistible. I gave in, but only a little. “It’s not dated,” I said.

“No, it isn’t,” Ito admitted. “If we were to ask Yamashita Sensei, however, he would surely remember the date.”

I squinted at the man sitting across from me. “Why would I ask him that?”

Ito shrugged. “You wish to know the date.”

“No, I don’t. Not enough to bother him.” But the protest sounded feeble and untrue, even to my ears.

Ito smiled tightly, then sat back and watched me calmly for a time. He leaned forward and carefully rolled the note up and placed it in the narrow bamboo tube. “It was written in the winter of 1962. Your master was twenty, Dr. Burke.”

“And the woman?”

Ito’s eyes widened. “It does seem a heartfelt note, does it not? Terribly sincere. Terribly young.”

“Terribly sad, I think,” I told him.

Ito nodded in agreement. “Oh, very much so. It was the last … well, the only note between them, Dr. Burke.”

“But someone went to great pains to preserve it,” I noted.

“Just so,” Ito agreed. “It must have seemed important. And a pledge is something to honor.” The implication was unmistakable. It had occurred to me even as I read the note. But Ito didn’t know me very well; he wouldn’t suspect that I’d be sensitive to issues of honor. The Japanese tend to believe they have a monopoly on this quality. When he looked at me, despite his polish, Ito looked with Japanese eyes and saw just another gaijin, a foreigner with little or no subtlety.

“I’d like to meet this woman,” I said. “For Yamashita Sensei to write this … She must be a remarkable person. I assume you know her, Ito-san? After all, she gave you this very personal note.” I was needling him a little, letting him know I was wondering how he got hold of something that wasn’t meant for anyone but her.

Ito let out a sigh. “Miyazaki Chika was a remarkable woman, Dr. Burke. A precious child of a cadet line of the royal house. A princess, truly.” He smiled. “It sounds comic to speak of a princess, does it not? But even today, they exist.” He gathered his thoughts. “And even were she not related to the Imperial House, she would have been remarkable. Beautiful. Gifted. But so sad—a woman who knew well the fleeting nature of happiness.”

The mention of the Miyazaki name piqued my interest and got me wondering all sorts of things. But I held myself back and covered the emotion with a tangential comment instead. “
Mono no aware
,” I said. The Japanese aesthetic of frail and transient beauty that makes life so bitter and so sweet.

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