the bones and decapitating the then
governor of the five provinces,
himself an
adherent of Chong Mong-ju, I was made
governor of the
seven home provinces of ancient Koryu. In Cho-Sen seven is the
magic number. To complete this number two of the provinces were
taken over from the hands of two more of Chong Mong-ju's
adherents.
Lord, Lord, a sea-cuny . . . and dispatched north over the Mandarin
Road with five hundred soldiers and a retinue at my back! I was a
governor of seven provinces, where fifty thousand troops awaited me.
Life, death, and
torture, I carried at my
disposal. I had a
treasury and a treasurer, to say nothing of a
regiment of scribes.
A
waiting me also was a full thousand of tax-farmers; who squeezed
the last coppers from the toiling people.
The seven provinces constituted the northern march. Beyond lay what
is now Manchuria, but which was known by us as the country of the
Hong-du, or "Red Heads." They were wild raiders, on occasion
crossing the Yalu in great masses and over-running northern Cho-Sen
like locusts. It was said they were given to
cannibal practices. I
know of experience that they were terrible fighters, most difficult
to
convince of a beating.
A
whirlwind year it was. While Yunsan and the Lady Om at Keijo
completed the
disgrace of Chong Mong-ju, I proceeded to make a
reputation for myself. Of course it was really Hendrik Hamel at my
back, but I was the fine figure-head that carried it off. Through
me Hamel taught our soldiers drill and
tactics and taught the Red
Heads
strategy. The fighting was grand, and though it took a year,
the year's end saw peace on the northern border and no Red Heads but
dead Red Heads on our side the Yalu.
I do not know if this
invasion of the Red Heads is recorded in
Western history, but if so it will give a clue to the date of the
times of which I write. Another clue: when was Hideyoshi the
Shogun of Japan? In my time I heard the echoes of the two
invasions, a
generation before,
driven by Hideyoshi through the
heart of Cho-Sen from Fusan in the south to as far north as Pyeng-
Yang. It was this Hideyoshi who sent back to Japan a
myriad tubs of
pickled ears and noses of Koreans slain in battle. I talked with
many old men and women who had seen the fighting and escaped the
pickling.
Back to Keijo and the Lady Om. Lord, Lord, she was a woman. For
forty years she was my woman. I know. No dissenting voice was
raised against the marriage. Chong Mong-ju, clipped of power, in
disgrace, had
retired to sulk somewhere on the far north-east coast.
Yunsan was
absolute. Nightly the single beacons flared their
message of peace across the land. The Emperor grew more weak-legged
and blear-eyed what of the
ingenious deviltries devised for him by
Yunsan. The Lady Om and I had won to our hearts' desires. Kim was
in command of the palace guards. Kwan Yung-jin, the provincial
governor who had planked and
beaten us when we were first cast away,
I had shorn of power and banished for ever from appearing within the
walls of Keijo.
Oh, and Johannes Maartens. Discipline is well hammered into a sea-
cuny, and,
despite my new
greatness, I could never forget that he
had been my captain in the days we sought new Indies in the
Sparwehr. According to my tale first told in Court, he was the only
free man in my following. The rest of the cunies, being considered
my slaves, could not
aspire to office of any sort under the crown.
But Johannes could, and did. The sly old fox! I little guessed his
intent when he asked me to make him
governor of the paltry little
province of Kyong-ju. Kyong-ju had no
wealth of farms or fisheries.
The taxes
scarce paid the collecting, and the
governorship was
little more than an empty honour. The place was in truth a
graveyard--a
sacred graveyard, for on Tabong Mountain were shrined
and sepultured the bones of the ancient kings of Silla. Better
governor of Kyong-ju than retainer of Adam Strang, was what I
thought was in his mind; nor did I dream that it was except for fear
of
loneliness that caused him to take four of the cunies with him.
Gorgeous were the two years that followed. My seven provinces I
governed
mainly though needy yang-bans selected for me by Yunsan.
An
occasionalinspection, done in state and accompanied by the Lady
Om, was all that was required of me. She possessed a summer palace
on the south coast, which we frequented much. Then there were man's
diversions. I became
patron of the sport of wrestling, and revived
archery among the yang-bans. Also, there was tiger-hunting in the
northern mountains.
A
remarkable thing was the tides of Cho-Sen. On our north-east
coast there was
scarce a rise and fall of a foot. On our west coast
the neap tides ran as high as sixty feet. Cho-Sen had no commerce,
no foreign traders. There was no voyaging beyond her coasts, and no
voyaging of other peoples to her coasts. This was due to her
immemorial
policy of
isolation. Once in a
decade or a score of
years Chinese ambassadors arrived, but they came
overland, around
the Yellow Sea, across the country of the Hong-du, and down the
Mandarin Road to Keijo. The round trip was a year-long journey.
Their
mission was to exact from our Emperor the empty
ceremonial of
acknowledgment of China's ancient suzerainty.
But Hamel, from long brooding, was ripening for action. His plans
grew apace. Cho-Sen was Indies enough for him could he but work it
right. Little he confided, but when he began to play to have me
made
admiral of the Cho-Sen navy of junks, and to inquire more than
casually of the details of the store-places of the imperial
treasury, I could put two and two together.
Now I did not care to depart from Cho-Sen except with the Lady Om.
When I broached the
possibility of it she told me, warm in my arms,
that I was her king and that
wherever I led she would follow. As
you shall see it was truth, full truth, that she uttered.
It was Yunsan's fault for letting Chong Mong-ju live. And yet it
was not Yunsan's fault. He had not dared
otherwise. Disgraced at
Court,
nevertheless Chong Mong-ju had been too popular with the
provincial priesthood. Yunsan had been compelled to hold his hand,
and Chong Mong-ju,
apparently sulking on the north-east coast, had
been anything but idle. His emissaries,
chiefly Buddhist priests,
were everywhere, went everywhere,
gathering in even the least of the
provincial magistrates to
allegiance to him. It takes the cold
patience of the Asiatic to
conceive and
execute huge and complicated
conspiracies. The strength of Chong Mong-ju's palace clique grew
beyond Yunsan's wildest dreaming. Chong Mong-ju corrupted the very
palace guards, the Tiger Hunters of Pyeng-Yang whom Kim commanded.
And while Yunsan nodded, while I
devoted myself to sport and to the
Lady Om, while Hendrik Hamel perfected plans for the looting of the
Imperial treasury, and while Johannes Maartens schemed his own
scheme among the tombs of Tabong Mountain, the
volcano of Chong
Mong-ju's devising gave no
warning beneath us.
Lord, Lord, when the storm broke! It was stand out from under, all
hands, and save your necks. And there were necks that were not
saved. The springing of the
conspiracy was premature. Johannes
Maartens really precipitated the
catastrophe, and what he did was
too favourable for Chong Mong-ju not to
advantage by.
For, see. The people of Cho-Sen are fanatical ancestor-worshippers,
and that old
pirate of a booty-lusting Dutchman, with his four
cunies, in far Kyong-ju, did no less a thing than raid the tombs of
the gold-coffined, long-buried kings of ancient Silla. The work was
done in the night, and for the rest of the night they travelled for
the sea-coast. But the following day a dense fog lay over the land
and they lost their way to the
waiting junk which Johannes Maartens
had privily outfitted. He and the cunies were rounded in by Yi Sun-
sin, the local magistrate, one of Chong Mong-ju's
adherents. Only
Herman Tromp escaped in the fog, and was able, long after, to tell
me of the adventure.
That night, although news of the sacrilege was spreading through
Cho-Sen and half the northern provinces had risen on their
officials, Keijo and the Court slept in
ignorance. By Chong Mong-