For the span of about an hour, in the early morning, Irontown seemed to be alone. Mist lay gently all around it like a gossamer cloak, veiling the water that gently lapped at the shores below its palisade. The dark walls, stained by years of smoke, reminded all who beheld them of its past as a blight upon the landscape. Deep in the dark heart of the town, bellows fed sparks into flames, and dark smoke once again billowed forth, as if to remember the sins of the past.
But then, as if planned by some harmonist, a wind blew over Irontown. The smoke and the mist alike dispersed on the eddying currents, and light shone bright on the eastern horizon. The new growth of trees shimmered with dew, their leaves forming a carpet like jade carvings that surrounded Irontown as arms surround one embraced. The blotch of human civilization now more resembled a beauty-mark upon the landscape, or at least seemed to be more closely approaching that ideal appearance.
Deep within this dark beauty-mark upon the forest, Ashitaka was already awake and washed. His hair, once shorn as a sign of his exile from the land of his birth, was now long enough to arrange in the traditional topknot again. He found the motions easy to his hands, a living reminder of a dying people somewhere closer to the sunrise. Once he was dressed—his scarred right arm, as always, giving him a moment of pause—he went about a business known only to him, fetching some rice-cakes here, some water there, some strips of smoked meat elsewhere. He paused a moment before his sword, enshrined alongside his bow as a reminder of what this peace had cost. He left that blade there, only taking a knife in his belt along with the other supplies.
"Going out for a ride," was the only explanation he gave to the various people asking him his business so early in the morning, and nobody questioned it. All of them had seen Yakul's energy and agility enough to know that a ride was scarcely more than the elk deserved. When others were around, Ashitaka simply repeated this reassurance to his mount, but when they were alone, he made one final clarification: "Going to see San."
At that, Yakul nearly leapt for joy, and they rode out from the stables at the gates of Irontown almost too quickly for the sentries to react beyond a dumbfounded wave. They left the path almost immediately for the forest, taking the path Ashitaka had first trodden himself, bearing his own burdens, but now traveled with joyous anticipation. After all, they were going to see San.
But then, as if planned by some harmonist, a wind blew over Irontown. The smoke and the mist alike dispersed on the eddying currents, and light shone bright on the eastern horizon. The new growth of trees shimmered with dew, their leaves forming a carpet like jade carvings that surrounded Irontown as arms surround one embraced. The blotch of human civilization now more resembled a beauty-mark upon the landscape, or at least seemed to be more closely approaching that ideal appearance.
Deep within this dark beauty-mark upon the forest, Ashitaka was already awake and washed. His hair, once shorn as a sign of his exile from the land of his birth, was now long enough to arrange in the traditional topknot again. He found the motions easy to his hands, a living reminder of a dying people somewhere closer to the sunrise. Once he was dressed—his scarred right arm, as always, giving him a moment of pause—he went about a business known only to him, fetching some rice-cakes here, some water there, some strips of smoked meat elsewhere. He paused a moment before his sword, enshrined alongside his bow as a reminder of what this peace had cost. He left that blade there, only taking a knife in his belt along with the other supplies.
"Going out for a ride," was the only explanation he gave to the various people asking him his business so early in the morning, and nobody questioned it. All of them had seen Yakul's energy and agility enough to know that a ride was scarcely more than the elk deserved. When others were around, Ashitaka simply repeated this reassurance to his mount, but when they were alone, he made one final clarification: "Going to see San."
At that, Yakul nearly leapt for joy, and they rode out from the stables at the gates of Irontown almost too quickly for the sentries to react beyond a dumbfounded wave. They left the path almost immediately for the forest, taking the path Ashitaka had first trodden himself, bearing his own burdens, but now traveled with joyous anticipation. After all, they were going to see San.