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Reincarnated As A Peasant
Chapter 10: Market

Chapter 10: Market

Chapter 10: Market

Sakura

The walk through the forest was pleasant. Yu and I chatted evenly about things of little consequence, and through that conversation I learned a lot about the world. As memories from Sakura’s life surfaced, prodded on by seemingly random things, I felt the two aspects of myself slowly getting stitched together like a rip in cloth slowly being mended.

When I asked about Ka’jin, Yu grew quiet and melancholy.

“I so wished for that boy to take to cultivation and magic as you did dear. But he just didn’t have the grit for it. I fear this year might be his last visit with us. But he will do his duty and oversee the Choosing.”

“What is the Choosing mother? Uncle said something about it, but before he could explain we were interrupted.”

We were growing close to the edge of town, the industrious peasants were going about the market in a frenzy. So much so it reminded me of a small ant colony, as workers brought in wood from the forest, parents watched their children play as they shopped for goods, and craftsmen sold their creations to the handful of traveling merchants who had arrived not long before we had.

“Odd your tutors have yet to explain it. But then again, your studies were interrupted by your illness. The Choosing happens once every ten years when the Grand Kame are once again ready to lay eggs. All the young Kame from the previous cycle will be about to hatch and bond with those lucky enough to be chosen. While the great tortoises who have lost their cultivator companions will look to bond with new ones.”

“And being chosen by a Kame is important?”

Yu smiled and did a poor job of covering it with a hand.

“Of course dear. Every member of the inner family has either been chosen by one of the great tortoises, or has married someone who has been. I am not bonded with any of the grand creatures, but from what your father has said it is an incredible honor. And from what I have observed, it is in some ways a heavy burden.”

“Duty is as heavy as a mountain, and death as light as a feather.” I said the words quietly, quoting from a Japanese proverb I had heard my father use, during that ill-fated year I lived with him on Earth.

Yu was intrigued by the saying. “Where did you hear that? It is true, but rather stark myWise words to live by I think. But never forget how much joy and wonder life brings us that every day.”

She motioned around us, towards where the peasants haggled with merchants and craftsmen over prices on food, clothing, and other goods. “Even here, on the edges of civilization, in a small town with no greater defender than a Knight. These people are content. Their lives are toil and filled with strenuous work. And yet, I do not think many of them would trade it for the blissfulness of the void. Do you?”

The Genji part of me rebelled against that sentiment. But as I observed the faces of the surrounding people, I found most were happy. Not all perhaps, but even those with good lives did not live every moment in pure bliss.

Sakura’s eyes fell on the toil, and the inefficiencies, the dark places where a handful of people lived in gutters covered in mud. Those who were crippled, ill, or simply without work. But here, in this village, there were few of those. And of those that did exist were largely still engaged with the people around them. Perhaps they did not have the best lives, but they still had their measure of happiness.

And I, for the first time in either life, saw it.

The love of life, despite hardship. Despite the deprivation and difficulties. It reminded me of Shen, and the other women at the farm. Though to an even greater degree.

Here, the people were free to act as they would, to pursue their goals as they would. Perhaps it was not this way everywhere in the Empire. But here in this village, the people, even those in the most dire of straits, found some comfort. They had found some opportunities and had made for themselves a life worth living.

It wasn’t perfect by any means, but it was worth continuing.

At that moment, I felt something shift inside me. A reason, a purpose grew like a seed my parents and experiences in both lives had planted long ago finally watered by rain.

“These people are worth protecting.” I said it quietly, so no one without a cultivator's ears could hear. More of a whisper than a spoken word.

Yu smiled broadly as she pulled me into a hug. When she let me go, I caught her blinking away moisture from her eyes.

“That’s my girl. Yes dear. These people are worth protecting. It usually takes cultivators born to privilege decades to learn that lesson. If they ever learn it at all.” She trailed off, as if remembering something from long ago.

“Oh, there’s that tailor shop!”

***

“By the gods you are our savior Mr. Fen, thank you so much!” Yu was excited, much more so than I was at the lineup of dresses and traveling clothes the man had available.

“Yes well, I can see you were getting somewhat desperate, my lady. It is my duty and honor to serve you my lady, in the humble way that one of my station might.” The old man bowed so low he had to use his cane to right himself. “I have three sets of traveling cloths, breaches, along with a cut that is specifically designed to protect and provide for modesty.”

It was essentially a scort, or a skirt with trousers. It was all made from a sturdy material that; I was not happy to learn, it itched badly. But he assured me it would get softer with each washing.

When I asked Mr. Fen what it was made of, his response intrigued me. “It's a material few other towns cultivate. It is only thanks to the hard work of our Lady Ta’wen that we even have silkworms as she keeps and cares for them. This fabric is grown from the byproduct of silk worms after the silk is harvested. Mixed with flax, and a few other regional products in a bath. The process is involved, but it leads to a material that is hardy, and after a few washings, nearly as comfortable as silk.”

Sensing I was about to ask the man for detailed information on the methodology of its harvesting, cleaning, and use, Yu cut in.

“Yes, of course. Thank you again Mr. Fen. Please excuse us. We have yet to introduce ourselves to your Lord.”

“Of course my lady.” Mr. Fen bowed and left.

“Did he think we were just some traveling nobility?” I asked, realizing he had never addressed my mother by her proper title.

Yu hesitated for a moment. “In small towns like this, it is much easier to get work done if the peasantry believes you to be closer to them in station. Unless there is a need for an official state visit, doing so would be both unwise and unkind. If we marched in with a full procession, or with my aura unveiled, it would disrupt these people's lives to an unacceptable degree. And it would have frustrated our own efforts.”

Yu gathered the clothes, including my old grimy ones and put them into a bag we had purchased from Mr. Fen. Yu gathered the clothes, including my old grimy ones and put them into a bag we had purchased from Mr. Fen.

She put one of my arms in hers as we made for the door.

“Come dear, we still have food shopping to be about.”

You might be reading a pirated copy. Look for the official release to support the author.

While we walked among the stalls in the small market, Yu examining fruit, vegetables, and various forms of dried and fresh meat, I considered her words. To Genji the idea of a leader disrupting other’s lives by their mere presence being a bad thing was a new concept. Leadership in my life on Earth had always flaunted their influence and authority, no matter the occasion. And I had firsthand experience of that disruption, though I had always taken it as a reality in the world. Like the sun shining, or the tides cycle.

Though the responsibility of leaders to be good to their people was a known principle to Sakura. Which was an even more foreign idea to Genji. Sakura of course knew this intellectually. The lessons on responsibility and treating those of lesser station with decency if not respect, drilled into her from a very young age.

But here, faced with the clear and simple example my mother had set for me the lesson seemed to click. It created a new understanding of the lives of those in the lower social strata.

By the time our quick trip to the market was complete and we were heading towards the Knights manor, I felt something had shifted inside me.

Though, nothing had really changed.

***

“Duchess Yu Gamra, it is a pleasure to meet you again.”

The tall, broad shouldered, and heavily muscled man bowed from the waist as he welcomed us into his home's central hall. A woman who I assumed was his wife, stood nearly behind him. She looked like she was about to pass out, her normally darker skin had turned nearly pale white at the realization of who we were.

“And little Sakura. You have grown tall, and mighty in the five years since I last saw you. You were this tall before.” He put his hand down near his knee. “Both of you, please, be welcome in my home. Though there is little in the way of proper fare for rulers such as yourselves.”

“Do not fret good Sir Knight Ta’wen. My brother-in-law informs me of your excellent service to him and towards the duchy. You have earned your peace here. We do not wish to disturb you overmuch, but we would have been remiss to pass by your village, take advantage of your market, and not even offer so much as a hello.”

“In such a case, if lodging and hospitality are not what you seek, perhaps a tour of my family’s gardens? They are nothing compared to the shelled city’s hanging estates of course. But my daughters and wife are proud of what they have built, modest as it is.”

“It would be my honor,” Lady Ta’wen bowed. She was a mousy thing, short, and thin. The type of woman that looked like she could barely stand up to a hearty breeze, let alone a cultivator like her husband. And yet, it was clear to me from the way he looked at her, that she had him wrapped around her finger.

There was love there, and admiration.

“We would be delighted. Wouldn’t we, Sakura?”

I bowed slightly, low enough for a child to show honor to an adult, while offering no concessions on social standing. “Of course. Your local tailor suggested that your Lady Ta’wen keeps silkworms for harvesting. Your garden must be beautiful to attract them. I would love to learn more about the practice.”

I saw approval in my mother’s eyes for a moment. Then she realized what I was probably up to.

“Yes, of course! Are you considering taking up the hobby young miss?” I nodded and the mousy woman continued. “That is wonderful. I would be honored to teach you the little of the art I know. My family earned their status of nobility by cultivating the precious creatures into spirit beasts. Our breed is particularly productive, I assure you.”

Where before she looked intimidated the woman came alive as she led us out to the gardens. They weren’t that extensive, at least not by Sakura’s standards with memories of multi-tiered gardens with walkways paved of the finest marbled stone that literally hung off the shell of the great city running through my mind.

But the Genji side of me found them wonderful. She, I, had never been through a garden cultivated for beauty before. Only ones designed for sterile utility. It was an unfamiliar experience.

It took us only a few minutes to be shown around the gardens, and the tour ended near where we had started. Only on the other side of the small manor house where there were sturdy and fine crafted wooden benches. My mother and Sir Ta’wen ordered tea for the four of us as Lady Ta’wen finished her explanation.

“So you see, you must be careful and watchful for when the worms are ready to become moths. Else you will lose them and the next generation that they present. Once they have entered their cocoon, you need to take the plant they have taken too, and place it in a netted yet open space with fresh air for them to lay new eggs.”

“Can we see this netting?” I asked, taking careful mental notes of everything the woman said. Contrary to her own belief she was a warehouse of knowledge on this subject.

“That would be up to your mother dear.” Lady Ta’wen blushed, but I just looked to Yu.

“Can I?”

“Where is this netting?” Yu asked, narrowing her eyes at me in suspicion. I got the feeling she was more concerned about me working on one of my little ‘projects’ than anything else these kind people might do.

“Right now it is in our cellar. There are always moths that sprout off season, so I have a small hatchery there under a mana lamp that imitates the sun.” Lady Ta’wen sipped the tea one of her daughters had brought them. “I would be happy to show her.”

Yu smiled, but I could tell she wasn’t happy about it. “That should be fine then. But please, don’t allow my daughter to bore you with her fascination with things best left to others.”

Lady Ta’wen’s face turned an almost beat red. “Of course my lady. A child's fancy with the work of a lower class should not divert their path.”

My mother must have realized what she had said because a moment later she tried to redirect her meaning.

“Yes. Not that there's anything wrong with your work Lady Ta’wen. Only that Sakura flits from thing to thing, like a butterfly and grow distracted from her work at cultivation or mana craft. Please forgive—”

“My lady is too kind.” Sir Ta’wen said, interjecting himself before something else could happen. “Your meaning is clear my lady. We would not make someone as kind, honorable, and esteemed as you are into an offender for a misunderstood word.”

He shared a look with his wife.

“Of course.” Lady Ta’wen stood and bowed.

“Yes. Thank you.” Yu sipped her tea as Lady Ta’wen led me inside.

***

The cellar of the manor house was smaller than I expected. It contained several shelves where the noble couple kept their wine stock, and two boxes filled with gestating silkworms. The only other thing in the cellar was a wooden frame that ran from floor to ceiling, and between the wooden frame pieces was a thick netting. While spools of netting were stocked off to one corner, that would be used later when the worms outside would transform.

Moths danced inside, flitting from plant to plant that filled the small space. With Lady Ta’wen, and her two youngest daughters, the cellar was pretty cramped. But even looking at the setup gave me ideas of how to replicate it.

“This is incredible. I’d love to learn more. Might I strike up a correspondence with you Lady Ta’wen?” The noble woman looked uneasy for a moment, but as suddenly as the dawn rose she smiled.

“Of course young miss.”

We stood there for a while, as she explained the plants that the moths typically liked to lay eggs on, and how best to care for the creatures until they did. It took nearly an hour before I felt I understood enough to stop pestering her with questions.

“Thank you. I have learned a lot about this process. You said your family are known for this skill?”

Lady Ta’wen took on a pained expression. “Yes, young miss. My family was known for our silk growing prowess. But even more, our skill at developing spirit-beast lines of silk worms that were highly sought after.”

“You say was. What happened? Did your family lose its position?”

She hesitated. “N—no. They lost their lives. The core family lived on the far southwestern boarder. Nearest the elven territories. We had always had a peaceful understanding with our sharp eared neighbors. We were not a family of warriors. Never had been, and had no designs on becoming such. And yet, that did not stop them from burning our villages, and taking what few remnants of my family were alive back to their forest as slaves.”

I stood there shocked. I knew, Sakura knew on an intellectual level that border clashes with the elves along their Great Forest near the southern tip of the mountain range that made up most of the western border of my family’s territory had increased. But for entire families, albeit non-combat oriented families, to have been destroyed overnight seemed far more than a slight escalation.

It sounded more like a declaration of open war.

“I am sorry to hear about your family's fate.” Sakura was talking now, the Genji side of me had retreated. The desire to run, to flee as far east as possible filled her soul. An urge that Sakura rejected outright. I embraced Sakura’s instincts. “How did you survive?”

I had promised to protect these people after all. I fully intended on keeping that promise.

“I was visiting your uncle's encampment, bringing freshly made garments enchanted by some of our best crafters, and infused with powerful chie constructs. They were an order for his lieutenants. Lords and Knights all. I received word of the raid when a patrol party found the ruins of my family’s home.” Lady Ta’wen wiped at unshed tears. “But that is not a concern for one so young. Your family has done right by what remains of my family, and our arts.”

“I would like to begin a correspondence with you and your husband Lady Ta’wen. Primarily on the processes you and your family were so well known for. They sound revolutionary in many respects, the way you explain them. Would you be willing?”

“Of course young miss.” As we began ascending the stairs to go back with my mother, she stopped. “Young miss please wait one moment. I have something for you.” I waited there in the staircase heading back up to the manor house for nearly ten minutes until she re-emerged. This time carrying a small box, and a much smaller version of the net from before. “I would be honored if you would begin learning this art the way I did. With a single pair of worms.” She bowed and handed them to me.

I took them awkwardly. The stairs made it difficult to return the gesture of respect. “Thank you.”

The only thought other than gratitude that filled my mind was Yu is going to be mad.