Three men came out of the American Emba.s.sy, and looked for a moment over the roofs below them, half conscious of the beauty of this autumn time. They chatted for a few moments, then one of them motioned to a servant to put his mail bag in the jinrickshaw and slowly stepping into the tiny carriage he was whirled away.
The other men watched him for a few moments in silence, then as they turned to go to the English club, the elder shook his head slowly as he rather viciously bit the end from his cigar.
"Freeman"s made a big fool of himself," he said. "Nice man, too."
The younger man looked after the fast disappearing jinrickshaw and asked after a moment"s hesitation:
"He"s married a j.a.p, hasn"t he? I"m new here but I have heard something about him that"s queer."
"Yes," the Amba.s.sador replied. "Married her, preacher, ring, the whole thing."
"How did it happen? Why did he _marry_ her?" the younger man asked with a laugh.
"We all talked to him. I talked to him like a father, but he wouldn"t listen to reason. Saw her at the mission school, fell head and heels in love with her and wouldn"t take anyone"s advice. Even the missionary was against it. Told him that mixed marriages never came out right; that the girl always reverted to type," said the Amba.s.sador a little bitterly.
"Well, has it turned out as they predicted?" inquired the secretary interestedly.
"Well, no," admitted the Amba.s.sador. "It"s been two years, and everything seems to be all right so far. No one ever sees much of either of them. You meet her with him once in a while in some garden admiring the wistaria, or the lotus. She"s a beauty--a real beauty--and belongs to one of the old Samurai families up north somewhere."
"How did the mission get her? I thought they went in more for the lower cla.s.ses," asked the secretary.
"Well, it seems that some missionary up north saw her and was attracted by her cleverness and her pretty face, and she persuaded the girl"s parents to send her to school here. They"re as poor as Job"s turkey; but they live in a great old palace and observe all the old time j.a.p customs. Haven"t changed a bit for centuries. The real thing in old-time aristocracy. But the missionary got past them some way and the girl came down--when was it?--six years ago, I think. Missionary says she"s clever, has become a Christian, and evidently forgotten that she"s a j.a.p."
"It"ll perhaps be the exception that proves that all mixed marriages are not failures," said the optimistic secretary.
"No," said the older man, "I know j.a.pan and the j.a.panese. There"s something in them that never changes--the call of the blood or whatever it is. No matter how much education they have, change of religion, life in foreign countries--anything--they"re j.a.panese, and in a crisis they go back to their G.o.ds and the instincts of their race. We all told Freeman this--the missionary, myself, everybody took a hit at him when we found he really meant business, but he only laughed. He said Yuki was as European as he was. Never thought of the G.o.ds, hardly remembered her people, and all that rot. He ought to know better: this is his second post in j.a.pan. Was out here twelve years ago and got in some kind of trouble. I was surprised when the government sent him back; but I suppose they thought it had all blown over, and I presume it has, although the j.a.ps don"t forget."
The Amba.s.sador was quiet for a few moments, then he said:
"No, I don"t believe at all in intermarriage between the Oriental and the Occidental. Their traditions, customs, everything is different.
They have no common meeting ground, and that racial instinct, that inherent something is stronger in the Oriental than in the Westerner.
A woman here in this country, for example, is taught from babyhood that she must obey her parents, her clan, _absolutely_. Her family is first, and she must sacrifice her life if necessary for them, and they will go to any lengths in this obedience. I told this to Freeman, everyone did, but he just gave his happy laugh, and said that his wife-to-be was no more j.a.panese in feeling and sentiment than he was--that she had outgrown the old religion, the old beliefs. He laughed at the idea that her family would have any influence over her after she was his wife. Yet--I know these people--and have always been a little worried----"
The two men chatted until they entered the doors of the English club.
Morris Freeman with his fast runner was drawn swiftly through the modern streets of new j.a.pan, then more slowly through the little alleys, where the shops were purely native. Finally he drew up at an entrance and stopped under the tiny roof of a gateway. He had been expected, evidently, because no sooner had he stopped than the great gate was swung open and a smiling servant stood in the entrance.
Freeman handed him the mail bag and said:
"Tell the Ok San that I will be back in about an hour," and was taken swiftly up the street. The coolie at the gate was still watching the disappearing jinrickshaw when a j.a.panese approached, and bowing to the servant asked: "Is your mistress within?" The servant answered in the affirmative, looking at him interestedly, as he was different from the average man one sees in Tokio. He was dressed in an old-time costume that immediately told the city-bred servant that the man was from some distant province.
The visitor went to the veranda, dropped his clogs, and entered the doorway. A young girl was kneeling before a koto lightly strumming its strings and did not hear the entrance of the man. He stood for a moment looking around the room; then he saw Yuki and walking over to her sat down facing her. Yuki stared at him first in astonishment; then a look of fear came into her black eyes. He was silent for many minutes, then he coolly remarked:
"You do not speak to your uncle. You do not care to make me welcome in this your home." He looked down at her contemptuously.
She saluted him, touching her head to her folded hands upon the floor.
After a few polite phrases she rose, went to the hibachi, fanned the flame a moment, poured water from the kettle into the teapot, and brought a tiny tray on which was a cup and the pot of tea. She poured out the tea, and, taking the cup in both hands, slid it across the floor to him; when he took it, she again touched her head to the floor, and inquired:
"I trust my honorable Uncle is in the enjoyment of good health?"
The man sipped the tea slowly, gazing around the room, taking in all its details. His eyes especially rested upon the shrine in the corner.
Then he regarded her long and intently.
"I see you have brought your family shrine to the house of the foreigner with whom you live--the man who has made you forget your people. Have you opened it; do you offer the daily incense; or is it simply an article of furniture for your foreign husband to admire?"
Yuki said nothing; she could not explain to this old man that the shrine had meant nothing to her, but having come from her old home she had kept it simply as a remembrance of the past.
Not receiving an answer the man continued:
"The foreigner is kind to you?"
Yuki smiled and said softly to herself: "Kind--kind--my Dana San."
Then seeing her uncle expected an answer, she said in a quiet tone:
"Most kind, my honorable Uncle."
"You wonder why I come to you to-night?" he inquired.
Yuki took the tea-things and put them behind her, then remarked:
"My humble house is honored by your presence."
"Honored, yes," sneered the uncle. "But still you wonder. I will tell you why I came to you to-night. Once upon a time there was a family in j.a.pan--happy, honored--proud of their t.i.tle, of their history--and, more than all, proud of their overlord. He was impetuous, and like many of the older j.a.panese, resentful of the foreigner"s intrusion.
Here, one day on a visit to his capital, he met a stranger, one of that hated race who spoke slightingly of his country, of his G.o.ds.
There was the quick retort, the blow, and he our lord went to the Land of Shadows. The evil G.o.ds of the foreigner protected the man who gave the blow. His name was never discovered--it was claimed he did the cowardly act in self-defense and he got safely away."
Yuki leaned forward eagerly.
"Oh, it is of my honorable father you speak?"
"Yes, it is of your father I speak," said the man in a low, bitter voice. "Since his death the G.o.ds have not favored our house; we have lost position, money, everything. But at last--at last our prayers to the G.o.ds have been answered. The enemy of our house is delivered into our hands--into _your_ hands."
Yuki looked bewildered.
"_My_ hands? What do you mean, my honorable Uncle?"
"Yuki San, we have learned the name of the man who struck your father!" he exclaimed in a low, tense voice.
Yuki looked at the tragic face before her a moment, then she said: "At last, at last you know?"
"Yes," replied her uncle. "At last, after all these years of patience, revenge is in our hands. Oh, Yuki San, the foreigner, your husband, is the man who killed your father."
Yuki drew back, her face pallid, her body trembling.
"Morris, my Dana San?"
"Yes, your Dana San."
Yuki sat for a moment in bewilderment, then the color came back to her face and she leaned forward eagerly.