Sekah
Star
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2021
- Location
- Your mom's house.
Instead, he leaned his forearms on the railing of the wall that held the Byzantine Consulate, and looked out over the sea, towards the shore, where Nagasaki lay. Sweet Nagasaki with her hills rolling in endless susurrations over the land - Dejima was made by us, created out of nothing, but the Gods made Nagasaki who she was, and she was beautiful; perfect.
It was a shame so many foreign louses were allowed to suck blood from her fertile soil.
Taiga had been called to the Consulate for a meeting, which was quite a galling thing to happen. As such, he had arrived late to it. This was quite unusual, but he thought disrespect should match disrespect - unfortunately, they'd played mahjong too well. His disrespect was matched with a further disrespect - and they made him and his entourage wait out in the hot sun for them to allow Taiga and his men in.
It was an issue of royalty, as so many aspects of his life were. The Byzantine princess was here, and etiquette demanded a person of equal rank meet her. Taiga was unclear, of course, if that etiquette was Byzantine or Japanese, only that somebody had decided sending the youngest prince was the correct method of scouting this damned woman out. Now, though, she'd made the Mikado's youngest son wait for an hour, ostensibly because he'd arrived late (or that was the only reason the gentry who'd come with Taiga would harp on), and there was likely to be an international incident.
Taiga didn't really want to have an international incident, and the streets of Dejima were interesting to him because they were common, when so much of his life was grandiose and secluded and majestic, so he wasn't unhappy - not even particularly miffed. Nobody'd been able to persuade him to stay in the palanquin (which was an international incident all of itself brewing).
But if Taiga just continued to avoid his father's advisor Hokushin's eyes, focus on the water, and pretend he wasn't staring at that lovely, lazy cat, with her gleaming white coat, he'd get a little sun, fresh air, and be able to watch the busy traffic on consular row.
They walked past in geta and boots, in slippers and Mongol gutuls. They carried long yokes with burdens on each end, or packages wrapped in cloth or rice paper. Palanquins carried by slaves had passed a couple times; samurai walked hither and thither, their wakizashi and katana proudly gleaming, even if many who were here in Dejima instead of back in their father's homes were ruinously poor, ronin, or both.
The Byzantine embassy was quieter than one might expect, which was of itself surprising, since the other embassies the Empire was slowly allowing to enter Dejima - most here on this road - were hives of activity, buzzing like kicked hornets nests as merchants, traders, lesser dignitaries, servants and slaves passed in and out like locusts swarming on crops. How they suckled the sweet rice and sorghum of Japan, Taiga thought.
The cat stretched, and Taiga stretched too, elongating his lean back.
Perhaps they were out, he thought. But out where? Surely not looking for the damned princess? He'd heard she was prone to wandering, but surely not during a prince's meeting -
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