Author's note: this story has been re-edited to bring it up to my current standards as part of an effort to make Ebooks. It features improved editing, grammar, punctuation, and also includes rewrites and expanded scenes where necessary. Please see my bio for more information.
CHAPTER 1: WANDERLUST
"Onward, you dumb beast," Satou said as he slapped the ox on its rump. The animal lurched, digging its cloven hooves into the soil and dragging the plow that was strapped to its back. It was May, rice planting season, and the terraced paddies were being tilled in preparation.
He removed his straw hat for a moment and wiped his brow with the sleeve of his
kasode
, the hemp rough against his skin. It was a hot day, and the dragonflies were swarming, knowing that the paddies would soon be filled with water in which they would then breed. There was a rhythm to life here, like the beating of some celestial heart. The men irrigated the fields, the water brought the insects, then the insects brought the frogs which in turn brought the storks.
His family's farm was built into the pocket of a valley amidst rolling hills, surrounded by dense woodland and encircled by the grand peaks of a mountain range. Their snowy caps stood tall, their rocky faces partially obscured by a blue haze and their sprawling lowlands enveloped by forest, the trees gently swaying in the breeze. The rice paddies were carved into the foot of one such mountain, where the valley channeled life-bringing water that was used to irrigate the crops. They were tiered one on top of another, with rock retaining walls to hold the soil in place, each one a unique size and shape to conform to the available land. When they were full of water, they shone like mirrors, reflecting the natural beauty that flourished around them and serving as habitats for all manner of wildlife. But right now they were just dirt waiting to be tilled before the planting could begin.
"Gazing longingly at the mountains again, Satou?"
He turned to look over his shoulder, seeing one of the laborers standing behind him. It was Nagao, an older man, one of the villagers who lived on his father's land. He was clad only in a loincloth and a sweatband, the heat of the spring afternoon making his already taxing work all the more difficult. His face was leathery, and his skin was tanned by his years of hard labor, but he always seemed cheerful. All of the inhabitants of their mountain enclave were tasked with cultivating the land, even the son of the proprietor was not exempt from such duties.
"Nagao," Satou replied, the man's comment snapping him out of his stupor. "Aren't the mountains beautiful today?"
"Indeed they are," the old man chuckled. "But your task is to plow the paddies, not to appreciate the mountains. Come now, or your father will become angry."
Satou reluctantly tore his eyes away from the far-off peaks and resumed his tilling, guiding the ox along as the hoe churned up the earth behind it.
"You're always looking ahead Satou," Nagao said as he walked along beside him, spreading ash on the disturbed soil as he went from a straw pot that was slung across his shoulder. It would serve to fertilize the earth before the planting of the seedlings. "You should pay more attention to where you are right now. That is your chief concern."
"Are you to be my mentor now, Nagao?" Satou asked sarcastically.
"No," the old man laughed, "but you would do well to listen to your elders."
"You've worked these lands longer than I've been alive," Satou began, "what do you know of the mountains and forests?"
"When your grandfather led a group of farmers up into the valley," the old man began, "it was to escape the harsh labor and the crushing taxes imposed by the provincial governors. He founded a
shōen
, a farming community out on the edge of what is known. Because of its remoteness, it continues to enjoy autonomy. Beyond the boundaries of your family's holdings, there is naught but wilderness."
"So nobody has ever explored these forests?" Satou asked, "nobody has ever scaled those peaks?"
"Not to my knowledge, no. Where is this wanderlust coming from, Satou? You have a privileged position in this community. One day you will inherit these lands from your father, and you will be tasked with managing the
shōen
in his stead, as his father did before him. You are becoming a man, you can no longer while away your days playing in the woods."
They reached the end of the paddy, and Satou turned the ox around, leading it back in the opposite direction. At least the sun was beginning to dip behind the mountains in the West now, and his work would soon be over. His gaze was drawn to the East, where the golden rays illuminated the naked mountainsides in an orange glow, casting deep shadows on every crack and crevice. Their skirts of dense forests seemed all the deeper and more mysterious in that eerie light.
"There is one thing that I can tell you," Nagao added, noticing the youth's wistful expression. "The Northeast is bad luck, it is
kimon
, the demon gate."
"A demon gate?" Satou asked incredulously.
"Yes, legends say that evil spirits travel from that direction. Temples must be built facing that way, and you must never venture Northeastward alone lest you encounter a
gaki
, a hungry ghost that preys on unwary travelers."
"Those are just stories told to scare children," Satou insisted, disappointed that the old man was telling him folk tales rather than anything useful. "How could a direction be bad luck? We must be Northeastward of someone, somewhere. Does that make us unlucky?"
"That is the wisdom of our ancestors, you should not be so quick to dismiss it. If I were you, I would keep my head out of the clouds and focused on the earth beneath my feet. There is nothing for you out there, Satou, you would do well to realize that."
He didn't reply, keeping his hand on the ox's lead as it stumbled through the mud, his eyes wandering back to the distant horizon.
***
Satou accepted the bowl of stew from his mother, bringing it up to his lips and shoveling a piece of meat into his mouth with his chopsticks. It had the texture of venison or perhaps rabbit. The game was plentiful at this time of year, and the community was able to supplement its diet of grains and vegetables, mostly barley and soybeans, with some much-needed protein. While they grew rice, it was rarely eaten by the farmers themselves. Most of it was carted off to be sold or traded with other settlements. Although their
shōen
was autonomous, they could not avoid paying taxes to the local government in the form of produce. There was a lot of politics and social maneuvering involved that Satou did not yet understand, but that he would no doubt be expected to learn once he took over stewardship of the farmland from his father.
His family sat around a squat table in the center of the room, kneeling or sitting cross-legged on a reed mat, his father seated across from him as he ate from his bowl. His mother was on his right, clad in a colorful silk
kimono
, and his younger brother Nishio was on his left. Their house was lavish by local standards, the floors were made from wooden boards instead of bare dirt, and the roof was lined with tiles instead of straw. As the leaders of the community and the owners of the land, the Hisatomo family had accumulated a great deal of wealth and status.
They were beloved by the peasants who lived under them, their methods less stringent than those found in the
shōen
down where the land was flat, as was the tradition passed down by his father's father. Satou had never visited such a place before, he was accustomed to the slopes and crags of the mountains and valleys, but he could imagine what it might look like. On a clear day, he could see far enough to make it out in the distance, land as level as the table that he was eating from. Down there were the great cities and the battlefields where warriors fought for
Shoguns
and Emperors. It all seemed so far removed from their peaceful rural life.
"Satou, how goes the tilling?" his father asked.
"It's going well, father" he replied as he set down his bowl. "The dragonflies are already back, it's like they know that the paddies will be filled with water soon."
"That they do. It must be twenty-five years ago now that the hillside was burned and cleared. Those dragonflies have been spawning there since before you were born. I think the yield will be good this season, the weather has been favorable."
"There's something that I wanted to ask you, father," Satou said hesitantly.
"Go ahead."
"I was talking to one of the laborers today while I was working in the paddies, and he told me a legend about bad spirits traveling up from the Northeast. I wondered if there was any truth to it?"
"Satou!" his mother sighed, "I wish that you would concern yourself with more important matters rather than letting your imagination wander so. Leave the ghosts stories to your younger brother."
"It's a superstition," his father grumbled, pausing to take a draw from his bowl. "Some of the older members of the community believe that evil spirits dwell in the Northeastern forests and that they will travel down to our
shōen
if they are not appeased. The old women like to scatter roasted soybeans as a ward against them."
"Would you say it's frivolous?" Satou asked.