"Seibei Iguchi Hiroyuki Sanada" "Tomoe Rie Miyazawa" "Directed by Yoji Yamada" "Not that way." "No, no, no!" "Thank you." "You may go." "After a long illness my mother died when I was five." "She had consumption so from when I can remember I wasn't allowed near her." "Thus I have almost no memory of my mother." "Ito..." "Ito..." "You poor little darling!" "I am from Unasaka, in the northeast in what is now Yamagata Prefecture." "Before 1868 it was the castle town of the Unasaka clan a small fief of 70,000 koku of rice per year." "Well done, one and all." "That's it for today." "Sakaguchi..." "I've heard there's a good drinking place in Hakkenmachi..." "Oh, you mean "Hisago"?" "Feel like a drink?" "A fine idea." "Kawanami, will you come?" "I will." "Iguchi?" "For a change?" "Not me, thanks." "We can't twist your arm?" "If you'll excuse me..." "Twilight's not very exciting, is he?" "With a sick wife, two young daughters and an aged mother in his care my father was unable to drink with his colleagues." "He had to hurry home every evening at dusk." "I was told the men he worked with gave him the cruel nickname of "Twilight Seibei"." "THE TWILIGHT SAMURAI" "Ito..." "Father!" "Up you go!" "Your face is dirty." "Father's back!" "Welcome home." "Codfish stew tonight, Kayano?" "Don't drop it." "I'm home, Mother How are you this evening?" "Of what household are you, sir?" "I am Seibei Iguchi of the Unasaka Clan, Castle Stores." "I see..." "She's getting worse." "She doesn't even know her own son!" "Kayano, I've simmered some burdock." "Take some." "Thank you." "You're always so kind to my daughters." "Naota...you can go home now." "Yup." "Good evening." "But Yazaki, can't we do something about Twilight?" "His kimono's all ripped and hardly ever takes a bath." "There's this smell when you get close to him." "It just won't do!" "Yes, sir." "We all find it very hard to stomach." "We've asked around about finding him a new wife but no woman would want his situation." "Indeed!" "He's got two young girls a senile old mother and 20 of his 50 koku gone in debt." "Any woman who went to him would have to take in work." "Yes, he owes money all over the place." "I don't know how he paid for his wife's funeral." "Not even selling your sword would pay for a funeral like that." "A funeral!" "That's something I have to worry about, too." "My father's not going to last much longer." "Kawanami's lucky." "Young parents and a pretty wife!" "You'd better go easy with her." "It could hurt your work." "Is that why you're always cat-napping on the job?" "I am not!" "Listen to him!" "Kumi..." "Welcome!" "Isn't she gorgeous!" "Kume..." "Bed-time, Gran." "Good night, Seibei." "Good night." "It looks like she remembered me." ""The Master said:" "To rule a land of a thousand chariots..."" "Kayano..." "That's Confucius, isn't it?" "When did you start learning that?" "At the end of last month." "The teacher says from now on even girls will need book learning." "That's good." "When I was a boy I read Confucius over and over again." "Father..." "If I learn to do needlework someday I can make kimonos." "But what good will book learning ever do me?" "Well, it probably won't ever be as useful as needlework." "But you know book learning gives you the power to think." "However the world might change, if you have the power to think you'll always survive somehow." "That's true for boys and for girls." "All right?" "Yes." "Keep reading, then." ""Tseng Tzu said:" "Each day in three ways..." ""..." "I ask myself..." ""...if I have faithfully carried out what I undertook for another..."" "My mother's illness had left my father deep in debt." "As Grandmother lost her wits, all the housework, the gathering of fuel and the field work fell to him." "Left with little time to attend to himself he gradually became unkempt and grimy." "As his daughter, I felt terrible about this." "Wipe off that dust!" "They're coming!" "His Lordship attends!" "Kawanami!" "Quick!" "Provisions." "Vital stores of food for when the clan must fight, or the castle is besieged." "Next we have the Salt Storehouse..." "Here you have your beans green, soy and red..." "We pay particular attention to keeping them dry." "Dried giant horse-radish dried fiddleheads, miso paste..." "Kusaka!" "This is dried codfish very important provisioning in times of war." "How much have we got?" "Iguchi..." "Iguchi?" "You may answer directly." "By your leave." "We have 760 strips by weight approximately 120 kan." "How long does it keep?" "Between five and ten years." "This here is the oldest we have." "It was acquired six years ago." "This dried cod from Kansaki is best." "It holds its taste for ten years." "That strange smell I noticed, is it you?" "Clan retainers must serve as examples to the common folk." "Keep yourself clean." "Yes, Milord!" "Carry on." "Idiot!" "Sir, I..." "I'll speak to you later." "But..." "Be quiet!" "Iguchi!" "You damn fool!" "The story spread throughout the castle." "My father became a laughingstock." "My Great-Uncle came from the main house in a foul humor." "Hello!" "Seibei!" "It's Uncle..." "I'm in for it now." "Is anybody here?" "What, are you all dead?" "!" "Coming!" "Kayano, make some tea." "Who is it?" "Great-Uncle!" "Disgraceful!" "You appeared before His Lordship unbathed, smelling like dried cod." "The unpleasant impression you created shames the house of Iguchi." "That was inexcusable." "I went to Senior Retainer Terauchi and apologized for you." "His Lordship is a generous man so he did not find fault." "Had that been his father, though this would have meant hara-kiri!" "I never dreamed it would cause so much trouble." "I beg your forgiveness." "Kayano?" "How old are you now?" "I am ten years old." "Are you working at your lessons?" "I'm learning needlework and Confucius." "A girl has no need of the classics." "All you need is to write women's script." "Too much book learning and you'll never be a bride." "You can go." "I am here today on an important matter." "A marriage arrangement." "You need a hard-working wife to escape the misery you are in." "A village-headman acquaintance has an unmarried daughter whom he agrees to marry to you." "He knows you are poor, have two young daughters and a senile mother." "I'm sure you realize that you are in no position to demand beauty." "You need a healthy wife with big haunches to bear children." "Her face is of no concern." "So I'll proceed with this, if you don't mind." "With all due respect I must differ." "How?" "I am not nearly as miserable in my living as you may think." "Of course, offending His Lordship by appearing unbathed before him was wrong, and I vow never to repeat it." "However watching my daughters as they grow day by day is how shall I put it?" "It's like watching crops ripen or flowers grow in a field." "I enjoy it very much." "I'm not sure if the lady of whom you speak would understand that." "Who would understand such foolishness?" "!" "You've always been like this tormenting your poor father with this prattling of yours!" "What has your marriage got to do with crops in a field?" "Then I beg leave to speak more clearly." "I ask that you not concern yourself with questions of my marriage." "You defy the main branch of your family?" "!" "You are welcome here." "Kinu...are you well?" "I am, thank you." "May I ask of which household you come?" "I'm your damn brother!" "Take her away, Seibei." "She's a nuisance." "Mother..." "Most unseemly!" "What will the neighbors think?" "Tie her to a post somewhere!" ""Expect no more help from me!" shouted my great-uncle as he left in high dudgeon." "Can you do that?" "Let me see." "Here...twist it as you fit it in." "Is Gran asleep?" "Yes." "Good." "Father..." "Gran was crying, you know." "Uncle shouted at her." "Poor Gran!" "Do you like Uncle?" "You don't?" "I hate him." "He came to talk about a new wife for me, but I said no." "I don't want to take any help from him." "You'd think we were buying a cow!" ""All she needs is to be healthy." That's rude to the lady as well." "Are you two lonely without a mother?" "I'm not lonely, if you're here." "Me, too." "That's my girls." "Do you want the toilet, Gran?" "Look!" "Butterbur buds!" "Get lots, all right?" "What's that?" "A child!" "The poor thing!" "He's nothing but bones!" "Where'd he come from?" "Matsukawa, maybe." "Rise to Buddha!" "As children we loved to go gathering herbs by the river in early spring." "But those were times of famine." "The cold meltwater often brought the bodies of peasants dead of starvation." "Aim..." "Fire!" "All of you, watch me" "Elbows up..." "Brace the right knee..." "Seibei!" "Sorry to keep you waiting." "You went to Kyoto?" "Yes, with the Majordomo to talk to merchants there and in Osaka." "What's Kyoto like?" "I had high hopes for it but it was horrible." "I've never seen the like of Miyako-oji Boulevard." "Filthy masterless samurai from all over the country everywhere cursing and swearing in dialects you can't understand." "Then someone shouts "Divine punishment!" and the swords come out." "The Kamo River's full of headless corpses all swollen up..." "I thought it'd be geishas in Gion..." "Dear me!" "Prime!" "Aim!" "Fire!" "Misfire!" "Wait!" "What's wrong?" "Ow!" "Fool!" "I told you to wait!" "They're a bit late." "The Choshu clan may have been beaten once, but they'll be back with Satsuma." "They'll snuff out 250 years of Shoguns like the wind does a candle." "What's our clan doing?" "Our leaders aren't thinking!" "How would you like to go to Kyoto?" "The Emperor's palace is short of guards." "I'll recommend you." "You'll see how things are." "Someone like you shouldn't be stuck in a field here right now." "I'm afraid you over-estimate me." "The times are changing." "When they do, I'll give up samurai status and be a farmer." "That's what I'm suited for." "You're a strange one." "But you always were." "No ambition at all." "Oh, I nearly forgot..." "My condolences on your bereavement." "Burn a joss stick for her." "You didn't have to..." "I wanted to send my sister to the funeral in my place, but she was having some troubles of her own." "I'm sorry." "Miss Tomoe?" "What's wrong?" "You know she married the son of Captain Koda..." "It turns out this Toyotaro is a mean drunk." "If I'd known I'd never have agreed." "A mean drunk?" "He'd hit her, kick her..." "She'd come running to my house to get away." "I was worried one day he'd kill her so I got the Castle to order them divorced." "Divorced?" "Just recently." "So now Tomoe's back at my house." "Really?" "And here I thought she was the wife of a fine 1200-koku samurai." "I had no idea." "I made a mistake." "She's gone through hell because of me." "Well done, one and all." "That's it for today." "Sakaguchi..." "Sakaguchi!" "Feel like dropping in at "Hisago"?" "You want to see O-Kume!" "Quiet!" "You come too, Kawanami." "Again?" "Damn right!" "I'll be going." "Iguchi..." "You should come see the girls." "Take your mind off things." "I'm fine, thanks." "Iguchi..." "Don't waste your breath." "Look, Naota." "The azaleas are out." "Yup." "Kayano, Ito, I'm home!" "No one's here..." "Welcome home." "It's been a long time." "Uh...perhaps there's...um..." "You were out when I came by..." "Have you forgotten me?" "I'm Iinuma's younger sister, Tomoe." "Oh, Miss Tomoe!" "I didn't know you." "I've just seen your brother today." "He told me what had happened." "So you know all about it, then?" "Yes." "Because of that I'm back living at his house." "There's nothing for me to do so they have me weaving." "I came here to escape." "You're very welcome." "Let's go inside." "Your sock..." "Oh, yes..." "It seems your father had forgotten me!" "We always played together!" "Welcome home." "Kayano, Ito, this is Miss Tomoe." "We're, uh..." "Childhood friends." "He always used to tease me." "I did not!" "I got a present." "Me, too." "Aren't they pretty!" "Mother, I'm home." "Welcome home." "Do you know this lady?" "She's Miss Tomoe, the Iinuma girl." "See?" "She remembered me." "That's good." "And of course you remember me, don't you?" "Of which household are you?" "I'm your son." "You are, are you?" "Hello." "Tane, watch the hotpot." "It was as if our house was brighter from the moment Miss Tomoe arrived." "I've never forgotten." "It was when I was five." "I always wanted to do whatever the boys did." "Once I was climbing a pine tree and a branch broke and I got hurt." "Really?" "Yes!" "Your father happened to be there that day and he carried me piggy-back all the way to the doctor!" "I think he was 12 or 13." "His back was this big!" "Just like a grown-up's." "He made me feel so safe..." "Do you remember, Seibei?" "I remember something like that..." "When I was nine my mother told me I couldn't play with boys any more." "I was so sad..." "Being a girl's no fun, Kayano." "Drip, drip drip..." "Drip, drip, drip..." "Let's catch his falling tears and wipe them away..." "Wipe them away..." "Let's take his tear-soaked kimono and wash it clean..." "Wash it clean..." "Let's take the kimono we've washed and wring it out..." "Wring it out..." "Let's take the kimono we've wrung out and hang it to dry..." "Hang it to dry..." "You haven't changed at all, have you." "It's as if I'm a completely different person." "That's not true." "You still smile just like you used to." "You don't have to console me." "I know I've changed." "People told me how radiant a bride you were when you went to the Koda house." "I don't want to remember." "It's very late." "I'll leave you here." "Say hello to your brother." "Your beard's growing out..." "It's so soft!" "Iinuma!" "I want the truth!" "That man's here!" "My husband..." "My ex-husband..." "I'd know that drunken voice anywhere." "I'm going!" "Your master's leaving." "Hands off!" "I'm not drunk!" "My sandals!" "Iinuma!" "Where's Tomoe gone?" "I told you, she's at her aunt's." "You're lying!" "Please!" "Keep your voice down!" "There are elderly people here!" "To hell with her." "Listen, Iinuma..." "If I'm not good enough for Tomoe, she's welcome to leave." "But Iinuma I've got a bone to pick with you." "You went to His Lordship and got him to divorce us." "Squire Koda, I've told you time and time again..." "Shut up!" "You made me a joke in front of the whole castle!" "I demand satisfaction!" "Squire Koda!" "My sword!" "Stop this, will you?" "!" "Tomoe..." "Where've you been till this hour of the night?" "Where I go is no one's business but mine." "And I'll say this, too." "I am not your wife now." "It's "Miss Tomoe" to you." "Tomoe!" "Get inside!" "Perhaps that's enough?" "Who are you?" "!" "I am Seibei Iguchi, friend to Iinuma." "Perhaps I could accept your challenge in his name?" "But here we are in the town." "And you are drunk." "Let's settle this another time, when the alcohol has worn off." "If you've put yourself forward this way you must know how to fight." "I make no such claim." "Fine." "We fight tomorrow." "Tomorrow?" "By the river behind Hannyaji Temple, at the 8th hour?" "Done." "Behind Hannyaji, 8th hour." "See you." "Seibei, he's serious!" "Are you?" "I had no choice." "He's good with a sword." "It'll work out." "I'll say good night." "Don't tell Tomoe about this." "Wait!" "What if you kill him?" "The Clan forbids dueling." "I'll think of something." "Good night." "Naota..." "We're going." "Ito!" "Yu Tzu said:" "Harmony is the greatest beneficence of the rites." "Good morning." "Sit down!" "I'm leaving." "This is no good." "I'm slow." "You think you can take me?" "Damn right!" "Then get ready." "He's afraid!" "Hold it!" "I said last night I'd take your place!" "I should do this." "You're no match for him." "Go over there and watch" "I'm sorry I'm late, Squire Koda." "I will be your opponent." "What's that stick?" "My school of swordfighting uses this for practice." "Do you mock me?" "Draw your sword!" "A sword might kill." "This stick will not." "It will break bones at worst." "I won't take this from a samurai of your rank!" "I'll cut you down!" "Watch for the draw-and-slash!" "You can still apologize." "The apology is yours to make." "With a real sword, you'd be dead." "Do you apologize?" "Or do you continue?" "Splash some water on him." "That'll bring him to." "Come on, Iinuma." "You're all right?" "Don't tell Miss Tomoe about this." "Or anyone else, either." "Those men will talk." "No." "A whipped dog doesn't bark." "Is that soy sauce?" "Over here." "Excuse me for interrupting." "I am Zenemon Yogo, Master of the Watch." "I know that." "Are you the "Twilight Seibei" who thrashed Toyotaro Koda and left him with a great big lump on his head?" "I didn't really "thrash" him." "He asked for a match, and my sword caught him on the head." "Koda is a drinking companion of mine." "The other day he came crying to me, asking if I would take revenge for him." "That's the kind of man he is." "But it seems you can fight." "What school are you?" "Many years ago I trained under Toda-Sensei." "So you're a disciple of Jinsai Toda?" "I merely attended his dojo." "Perhaps we could try a match one day." "I'd be no match for you I'm afraid." "If you'll excuse me..." "I wish I wasn't getting old." "I can't read once the sun sets." "First your teeth go, then it's your eyes." "And how's number three?" "That went long ago!" "That's it for today, everyone." "I'll be going." "Excuse me." "Sir Twilight's gone?" "Didn't you hear?" "The other day "Sir Twilight" fought the son of Captain Koda." "A fight?" "And what happened?" "Wood against steel." "Sir Twilight went bang!" "Knocked him senseless." "He did?" "I always thought he was strange." "I never thought he was a fighter, though." "Maybe we shouldn't be calling him "Sir Twilight"." "You think he knows?" "Sure he does." "Fumi!" "It's raining!" "It's raining!" "Is the laundry in?" "Yes!" "Welcome home." "Miss Tomoe was here." "She left you this letter." "She's got even nicer writing than the schoolmaster." "Let me!" "No!" "I have finally learned what happened from my elder brother." "I must apologize for all the trouble I have caused you." "I am, however, delighted." "I very much want to see you and thank you in person." "Today I intruded upon you and with your daughters cleaned your house and did your laundry." "Please do not scold your daughters for allowing me in." "I would like in the future to be of what use I can." "Written in haste," "To:" "Seibei Iguchi, Esq." "From:" "Tomoe" "Tomoe started coming every second day or so." "The two of us looked forward to coming home from school." "We're back!" "Hello!" "You know what the teacher did today?" "He farted out loud!" "She cleaned with us, did laundry with us and taught us to cook." "On rainy days we'd practice calligraphy and sewing." "And she'd tell us all kinds of stories, the like of which we'd never heard before." "Finished." "Bring this line over." "Finished!" "That's good, Ito!" "Hey!" "Stop it!" "Ito!" "Write on your own paper, all right?" "No!" "Don't you look nice!" "How much fun it was to go off to a festival in kimonos she had made us." "Shoo!" "Go away!" "Samurai then were strictly forbidden to attend the festivals of the peasants and townsfolk but Tomoe cared not a whit." "I remember well what she said:" ""It was because of the peasants that we lived as samurai."" "Why are you catching them all?" "We're using the same bait!" "You're trying too hard." "The fish sense it." "Your shoulders are too stiff." "It's like swordfighting." "Aw, stop lecturing!" "Show me your rod." "This hook's too big!" "Seibei I want to talk to you." "It's about Tomoe." "She's had a few proposals." "She's beautiful and talented." "There's not many like her in our clan." "Any good ones?" "She won't say yes and I can't pressure her." "I asked her, half in jest if she'd like to marry you." "You what?" "!" "We may be old friends, but that isn't funny!" "She didn't take it as a joke." "She said she wouldn't mind and turned all red." "That's enough!" "You're both making fun of me!" "You dolt!" "She was serious." "Stop it." "Listen I've already put her through hell marrying her to Koda." "If it's all right with you, I'd like to make that up to her." "It's a bit sudden..." "I don't need an answer now, but I will within two or three days." "I might have to go to Edo." "You've been really busy lately." "What's going on?" "You probably haven't heard." "His Lordship's dead." "A month ago." "He is?" "Why have they kept that from us?" "They're not agreed on who's going to succeed him." "The Castle Warden, Lord Hori has asked the Shogun for permission to adopt His Lordship's third boy, Tadaatsu and seize control himself." "If that happens the clan will split and blood will wash away blood." "I might not come through this unscathed myself." "So if you could give me an answer before I leave for Edo." "All right." "I'll answer you." "I'm very grateful to Tomoe for all she's done for my daughters all the cooking and sewing and everything else." "It's like a dream come true." "However having her come to my house as my wife is something else again." "She's a daughter of the Iinumas, a 400-koku family." "She doesn't know what life is like for a 50-koku petty samurai." "Are you sure you're not under-estimating her?" "She's very much her own woman." "It'd be fine at the start, but when it sunk in that 50-koku would be her life forever she'd be sorry." "My late wife was." "Hers was a 150-koku family." "She never got used to the fall in status." "Rise in the world, she told me or my family will grieve." "She said that all the time after she got sick." "I don't want to put Tomoe through that torment." "Tomoe's not 15 or 16." "I'm sure she'd thought about what she said." "No more." "Let's forget this." "Let's try up there." "It's a girl!" "What a stink!" "Rise to Lord Buddha." "Eat your fill in heaven!" "Let's call it a day." "From that day forward Miss Tomoe stopped coming to our house." "Make way!" "Stand aside!" "Turning left!" "The Warden has returned!" "Go!" "What's that?" "!" "It's the alarm!" "Stop what you're doing and listen." "I have important news from Lord Hori, Castle Warden who returned this morning from Edo." "The 12th head of the Unasaka Clan Lord Tadatomo, died of measles at the beginning of this month." "He was 32 years old." "He was a good and wise ruler intelligent and tolerant a true hero." "Only last spring we had the honor of meeting him and having him speak to us." "Iguchi, you haven't forgotten that, I'm sure." "What a fine and gentle man he was!" "Senior retainers will remain in the castle." "The rest of you are to leave and pray for the repose of His Lordship's soul." "This could mean open war!" "I doubt that but Lord Hori's sure to go after His Lordships reformers" "Dispositions?" "Yes." "Which side is our Commissioner on?" "The reformers or the Hori faction?" "He'll be with the mainstream." "Just like me." "While there were fearsome rumors that the Castle was preparing for war, it didn't seem to involve a petty samurai like my father." "All right?" "We wanted to ask Father why Miss Tomoe no longer came but for some reason, we couldn't." "This was because even in our children's hearts we knew something had happened between them." "Squire Iguchi!" "I'm sorry you've come for nothing." "My husband isn't back from Edo." "I expect him in a day or two." "Has he written anything about what's happening in Edo?" "No." "There was a letter yesterday, but all he talked about was what he wants to eat when he gets home." "That's good." "I'm sure you know they're handing down dispositions." "Some people have even been ordered to commit suicide." "I was worried about what might have happened to Iinuma." "I'm happy to hear he's all right." "Give him my regards when he gets home." "You came just for that?" "Yes." "Good day." "It was very kind of you." "Carry on." "Where's Squire Iguchi?" "He went away." "Where are you going?" "Squire Iguchi may still be close by." "Why do you want to see him?" "No reason in particular." "I haven't seen him for a while." "I'd like to say hello." "Wait!" "Tomoe it is unseemly for a young woman to be seen talking with some samurai on the street." "And you are a returned bride with a proposal being discussed." "You shouldn't be doing that in broad daylight with people around." "I've been meaning to tell you that for a long time now." "What's wrong with a girl talking to a samurai?" "Are you questioning your elder brother's wife?" "Shouldn't I?" "You should not." "A young women does not question her elders." "With 60 from last month that comes to 550 mon." "Could I have a receipt?" "You know the bath fee went up to seven mon last month." "Prices are going up everywhere." "Could you pay more for these cages?" "With things as unsettled as they are no one's buying insect cages." "Could you ask your boss for me?" "Well, I'll ask." "I take this work as seriously as my duties." "I understand that." "If you'll excuse me." "Come on." "We're not thieves." "We're just picking up some insect cages from Squire Iguchi." "Is he doing piece-work?" "Hello!" "Who is it?" "Commissioner Kusaka." "It's very late, I know." "I'd like you to accompany me to Lord Hori's quarters." "Yes, sir." "They said you don't need full formal dress." "Just a hakama skirt." "So you're Iguchi's girl?" "How old are you?" "Five." "You're a sweetheart." "I'm ready." "Kayano...you all get to bed." "Let's sleep." "Seibei Iguchi of the Castle Stores..." "That'll do." "Iguchi, come over here." "We called you here this late, because an awkward situation has arisen." "You know there was a revolt among our retainers in Edo?" "Yes, sir." "Fortunately no word of this reached the Shogun." "His Lordship ordered Shima Hasegawa and his faction to commit suicide." "But one of Lord Hasegawa's men Zenemon Yogo, Master of the Watch says he was merely following the orders of his superior asks why he should be punished and refuses to commit suicide." ""If you want me dead come and kill me!", he says!" "And with these disgraceful words has barricaded himself in his house." "This evening we sent our Master of Foot, Genba Hattori, against him." "Zenemon Yogo!" "I come at the order of the clan!" "But he died himself." "He's a "one-sword" fighter." "No one in the clan is his match." "We were talking about who to send against him and your name came up." "Iguchi, raise your head." "You're a "short-sword" fighter of the Toda school?" "It's been years since Toda-Sensei taught me." "I merely attended his dojo." "We don't have time for modesty." "We've learned that you were an instructor at his dojo." "He must be beaten inside his house." "The short sword will help there." "That is another reason we have chosen you." "Kill Zenemon Yogo by twilight tomorrow." "That is an order from the clan's Senior Retainer." "Kusaka...what's this man's stipend?" "50 koku." "20 koku bespoken for a net of 30." "That must be hard, with two young daughters and an aged mother." "Bring us the head of Zenemon Yogo and life will be easier." "Do you accept?" "Answer him." "This is an honor." "You shut up!" "Well?" "By your leave..." "I am ashamed to say that over many years of hardship with two daughters, a sick wife and an aged mother I have lost the desire to wield a sword." "A serious fight, the killing of a man requires animal ferocity and calm disregard for one's own life." "I have neither of those within me now." "Perhaps in a month alone with the beasts in the hills I could get them back." "But tomorrow, I am afraid is completely impossible." "I ask that you extend the honor of this commission to another man." "What complete and utter nonsense!" "We are not here for foolishness from a petty samurai!" "Your clan orders you to kill Yogo." "Do you understand that?" "!" "The Clan's orders are His Lordship's orders." "The very thought of refusal is an offense!" "You are relieved of your post!" "You are expelled from the clan!" "Please, Warden..." "What do you say, Iguchi?" "Do you accept?" "Of course he does!" "Don't you?" "May I request an evening or two in which to give my answer?" "You may not!" "You will answer now!" "I obey." "I accept the commission to kill Zenemon Yogo." "Well said!" "An officer will call at the hour of the snake." "Have your preparations made." "Withdraw." "Iguchi..." "Don't worry." "Who's Zenemon Yogo anyway?" "You're sure to win." "I have decided exactly that." "Good." "One should, however always prepare for the worst." "That's true." "The worst can always happen." "In that event, Commissioner, this will be farewell." "Thank you for everything you've done for me." "Please convey my regards to my colleagues in the stores." "I understand." "And, uh I'll take responsibility for those you leave behind." "I'll see they are looked after." "That's a relief to hear." "All the best to you." "A strange noise made me open my eyes." "Looking for the sound, I saw my father sharpening his sword." "He looked so strange it was hard to believe he was my father." "I still remember clearly how he looked that night." "The Heart Sutra:" "The bodhisative clearly saw the emptiness of the five states thus relieving misfortune and pain." "Form is only emptiness, emptiness only form..." "We're going." "Kayano!" "The Master said: a man cunning of word and smiling of face is rarely benevolent." "Tseng Tzu said:" "Each day..." "Naota, do something for me." "Yup." "You know Miss Tomoe's house in Nishikicho, don't you?" "Yup." "Go there, and speak to Miss Tomoe." "Now, this is important." "You have to see Miss Tomoe herself." "And then say "I'm really very sorry, but could you come right away?" ""I'll explain why when you get here."" "All right?" "I'm really very sorry but could you come right away?" "I'll explain why..." "Uh, I'll explain why..." "I'll explain why when you get here." "When you get here." "That's fine." "Hurry!" "Look where she laid her egg!" "Could you come..." "I'll explain why when you get here." "Whatever's the matter at this hour?" "I'm really very sorry but could you come right away?" "When you get here...uh..." "He'll explain why?" "Squire Seibei sent you to tell me that?" "All right." "I'll get ready." "I didn't think you'd come." "The clan has ordered me to go and fight another retainer." "I'm going out under orders, so I must be properly dressed and I can't do my hair alone." "I'm in a bind, so I asked you to come." "If you can spare the time, could you help me?" "When do you have to go?" "The hour of the snake." "There's not much time." "Where's your kimono?" "It's laid out over there." "Naota, boil some water." "Who's coming for you?" "A clan officer." "Naota, will you wait out by the gate?" "Sit down." "I'll comb your hair." "May I ask why you're going out to fight?" "I can't refuse a clan order." "Petty I may be, but I'm still a samurai." "Bamboo baskets, hampers!" "Your elder brother asked if I would take you as my wife." "I refused." "Did you know that?" "Yes, I did." "But..." "But since that day when I told him no I've started thinking about you." "Now I think of it ever since we were small and I made dolls to give you I always dreamed one day you'd come to me as my wife." "That dream stayed with me even after I got married and you married Koda." "It's never faded." "I'm going out now to fight to the death." "I'm going to win and return to this house." "At that time, if I were to ask you to be my wife would you accept?" "A few days ago I had a proposal from a retainer in Aizu." "I accepted." "I've been very rude." "I should never have asked you to come here." "No." "I'm happy that you asked me." "I've been a fool." "Please forget everything I've said." "Really?" "A retainer from Aizu..." "That sounds like." "Are they here?" "Yup." "Well, I'll be going." "Thank you very much for everything." "Um I'm afraid I can't wait here until you come back." "I pray with all my heart that luck is with you and you come back safely." "Naota, see Miss Tomoe home when she goes." "Take care of the kids." "Mrs Iguchi how are you today?" "Fine, thank you." "Of which household would you be the daughter?" "Me?" "I am Squire Seibei's childhood friend Tomoe." "Sir..." "Squire Iguchi?" "Zenemon Yogo has closed himself in with the shutters down." "That is Genba Hattori, Master of Foot." "We should remove his corpse but no one can get in." "Take care." "Zenemon Yogo is no longer human." "He is a beast!" "Leave to enter!" "Sir Twilight..." "So they sent you?" "Zenemon Yogo...by order of the clan, I come for your life." "Draw your sword, please." "Have a drink?" "I know you're all keyed up, but I'm going to run." "Run?" "Yep." "I want you let me get away." "If you please." "I didn't expect that from the clan's best one-sword man." "My orders are to kill you." "I can't let you escape." "Don't be so impatient." "You can kill me any time." "I'd like to talk to you." "Have a seat." "It's a nice day." "Sit down." "What's going on?" "They're talking." "Even if you escaped where would you go?" "Over that mountain and I'm out of the clan's domain." "There are masterless samurai everywhere." "I can lose myself in them, go to Kyoto, to Edo..." "If I do that for a few years the world will have changed." "The samurai's day is done." "This isn't the time for that talk." "Pick up your sword, please." "I am under orders from the clan to..." "Like hell!" "You're the clan's errand boy out to claim a reward." "Have a drink." "I was an errand boy, too." "I served Lord Shigemasa Toki." "Twelve years ago he was ordered to commit suicide after a power struggle within his clan." "Then I wandered for seven years with my wife and daughter in search of a new situation." "Seven?" "With no income?" "Of course not." "I did manual labor and helped peasants plant and harvest to get a little rice." "Or we'd slink into a temple and beg alms there sometimes." "Three years ago the Unasaka clan made me an official retainer but by then hardship had killed my wife." "I'm good with a sword, but I'm hard to get along with and I can't hold my liquor." "But this time I promised myself it'd be different." "I would do my duty as a true Unasaka retainer." "I worked hard to do that." "My superior was Lord Shima Hasegawa." "He liked me, and did all he could for me." "To me the tasks he assigned were the tasks of the clan." "His orders were the clan's orders and I carried them out faithfully." "What was wrong with that, Twilight?" "Why do I have to cut open my stomach?" "I haven't come here to answer that kind of question." "I heard your wife died of consumption." "Is that true?" "I'm surprised you know that." "And her fever went up as night came on?" "Yes." "Consumption is a hard disease." "And it's catching." "My daughter died of consumption caught from her mother." "You're not the only one who's suffered." "How old was your daughter?" "Sixteen." "When she should have been a bud swelling into bloom she died nothing but skin and bones." "A sad, sad sight." "I'm very sorry to hear that." "Her ashes." "She was a pretty girl with pale skin." "I guess Lord Hasegawa took pity on me." "He gave me money for a funeral well above my station." "If only for that I'm very much in Lord Hasegawa's debt." "What's your stipend?" "50 koku." "A sick wife, and children all on 50 koku?" "That must be hard." "Doctor and medicine alone cost a ryo and 2 bu a month." "Piece work wouldn't cover that." "I borrowed from relatives but it still wasn't enough." "Sometimes we didn't even have tomorrow's rice left." "I know how bad it feels to see the bottom of your rice chest." "You've had hard times, too." "Where I really ran into trouble was at my wife's funeral." "The family's main branch wanted a funeral that wouldn't shame them." "I couldn't afford it." "I was desperate so I finally sold my sword." "It was a fine sword I'd inherited from my father but I figured the age of the sword was over." "I'm afraid this is just bamboo." "You're going to kill me with a bamboo sword?" "No." "I learned short-sword from Toda-Sensei" "I meant to fight with that." "Short-sword?" "You mean to kill me with some kind of cheap trick?" "You're not taking me seriously, are you?" "Wait!" "I won't have it!" "I only told you that because you wanted me to let you go!" "Draw!" "Sir!" "You're very good..." "If you want to run, now's your chance." "After I kill you." "Draw!" "Sir!" "There's still time to stop." "Calm down and think!" "You haven't rested since yesterday." "You're already breathing hard." "You mock me." "Sir!" "Continue this and I'll cut you down." "Is that what you want?" "That's fine by me." "Draw." "You've cut me, Twilight." "This is what you get for taking me lightly." "Have a seat." "Will you let me go, Twilight?" "That was my intention." "It's dark." "I can't see." "Hell." "Twilight..." "Is it over?" "It's all yours." "Careful!" "He's dead!" "Ito..." "Go buy some tofu." "Don't lose the money." "Miss Kayano!" "It's the Master!" "Ito I'm home." "Miss Tomoe!" "Father's back!" "You're still here..." "Thank heaven!" "I was sure you were dead!" "Finally Miss Tomoe became our mother." "My father was happy." "But peace prevailed in our house for less than three years." "With the Meiji Restoration came civil war." "Our clan supported the former Shogun and fought as rebels against the emperor's government." "During this "Boshin War" my father was shot and killed" "Tomoe took us, her step-daughters to Edo, now "Tokyo" and supported us until we were both married." "Now she sleeps with my father beneath this stone." "In the new Meiji era, many men who had worked with my father rose to positions of great authority." "I often heard them say that "Twilight Seibei was an unlucky man."" "But I do not agree." "My father had no desire to rise in the world and I don't think he considered himself unlucky." "He loved his daughters and the beautiful Tomoe loved him." "His life, I think was short but full." "I am proud to have had such a father."