Shogun_ A Novel of Japan - James Clavell [50]
Vinck was next for water and he took his cup and stared at it, sitting near the barrel, Spillbergen on the other side. “Thanks,” he muttered dully.
“Hurry up!” Jan Roper said, the cut on his cheek already festering. He was the last for water and, being so near, his throat was torturing him. “Hurry up, Vinck, for Christ’s sweet sake.”
“Sorry. Here, you take it,” Vinck muttered, handing him the cup, oblivious of the flies that speckled him.
“Drink it, you fool! It’s the last you’ll get till sunset. Drink it!” Jan Roper shoved the cup back into the man’s hands. Vinck did not look up at him but obeyed miserably, and slipped back once more into his private hell.
Jan Roper took his cup of water from Blackthorne. He closed his eyes and said a silent grace. He was one of those standing, his leg muscles aching. The cup gave barely two swallows.
And now that they had all been given their ration, Blackthorne dipped and sipped gratefully. His mouth and tongue were raw and burning and dusty. Flies and sweat and filth covered him. His chest and back were badly bruised.
He watched the samurai who had been left in the cellar. The man was huddled against the wall, between Sonk and Croocq, taking up as little space as possible, and he had not moved for hours. He was staring bleakly into space, naked but for his loincloth, violent bruises all over him, a thick weal around his neck.
When Blackthorne had first come to his senses, the cellar was in complete darkness. The screams were filling the pit and he thought that he was dead and in the choking depths of hell. He felt himself being sucked down into muck that was clammy and flesh-crawling beyond measure, and he had cried out and flailed in panic, unable to breathe, until, after an eternity, he had heard. “It’s all right, Pilot, you’re not dead, it’s all right. Wake up, wake up, for the love of Christ, it’s not hell but it might just as well be. Oh, Blessed Lord Jesus, help us all.”
When he was fully conscious they had told him about Pieterzoon and the barrels of seawater.
“Oh, Lord Jesus, get us out of here!” someone whimpered.
“What’re they doing to poor old Pieterzoon? What’re they doing to him? Oh, God help us. I can’t stand the screams!”
“Oh, Lord, let the poor man die. Let him die.”
“Christ God, stop the screams! Please stop the screams!”
The pit and Pieterzoon’s screams had measured them all, had forced them to look within themselves. And no man had liked what he had seen.
The darkness makes it worse, Blackthorne had thought.
It had been an endless night, in the pit.
With the gloaming the cries had vanished. When dawn trickled down to them they had seen the forgotten samurai.
“What’re we going to do about him?” van Nekk had asked.
“I don’t know. He looks as frightened as we are,” Blackthorne said, his heart pumping.
“He’d better not start anything, by God.”
“Oh, Lord Jesus, get me out of here—” Croocq’s voice started to crescendo. “Helllp!”
Van Nekk, who was near him, shook him and gentled him. “It’s all right, lad. We’re in God’s hands. He’s watching over us.”
“Look at my arm,” Maetsukker moaned. The wound had festered already.
Blackthorne stood shakily. “We’ll all be raving lunatics in a day or two if we don’t get out of here,” he said to no one in particular.
“There’s almost no water,” van Nekk said.
“We’ll ration what there is. Some now—some at noon. With luck, there’ll be enough for three turns. God curse all flies!”
So he had found the cup and had given them a ration, and now he was sipping his, trying to make it last.
“What about him—the Japaner?” Spillbergen said. The Captain-General had fared better than most during the night because he had shut his ears to the screams with a little mud, and, being next to the