As I leave Ryoko Owari, I find myself thinking of Shortcut surprisingly often. He is thirteen asI depart - my successor will see him
grow into manhood.
Shortcut first saw me during my fight with
the Fire Eaters. He did not approach me then, but later he told me
(in his childish, excited fashion) of his admiration for my
swordplay. (He was then only eleven years old.)
I explained to him that swordplay is only the most superficial
level of bushido, and he seemed fascinated.Seeing an opportunity
to teach at least one child about honor, I told him my real strength
came from the knowledge thatI was doing a noble deed.
Imagine my surprise when, a week later, he came and told me
about an extortionist threatening to sink ships in the southwest
harbor.
From that moment on, Shortcut became my eyes and ears
around the southwest piers. As he aged, he became well known
throughout the Fisherman Quarter, where he now works as a
messenger and courier.
IfI had hoped to mold him into a miniature, heimin samurai
I have certainly failed; Shortcut is too much a creature of the
streets, too crafty and slippery and self interested. Yet I have given
him a sense that justice exists and that there are higher things
than self interesL
Perhaps I'm a fond old woman; but I can see in him a better
future for Ryoko Owari. Perhaps he can be the first of a new breed - still cunning and self interested, but without the brutal
edge that has left its mark on so many in this city.