Hot Springs Pleasure Trip Nene Yoshitaka Japane... -

The late autumn air was crisp, carrying the faint scent of burning cedar from the valley below. Nene, now in her later years and having taken the tonsure as a Buddhist nun, felt a rare flutter of youthful excitement. The great unifier of Japan, her late husband Hideyoshi, had been gone for many years, and the weight of the regent’s seat had passed to others. Today, however, was not for politics or duty.

Her palanquin, simple but sturdy, swayed gently as the retinue of a dozen loyal attendants, guards, and her favorite court ladies ascended the wooded path to the secluded hot springs of Yoshino. The leaves were a tapestry of crimson and gold, each gust of wind sending a silent prayer of colour fluttering to the earth.

Soon, the other women joined her. Their chatter was a soft, comforting melody—gossip about a kimono pattern, a rumour from the capital, a silly poem one of the maids had written. For a single, perfect hour, Nene was not the “Mother of the Nation.” She was just an old woman with sore knees, laughing at a story about a clumsy stable boy. Hot Springs Pleasure Trip Nene Yoshitaka JAPANE...

Nene smiled, her face lined but serene. “Then it shall certainly help an old nun’s knees.”

She was the first to enter. The water was searing, miraculous. She gasped, then sighed, lowering her thin shoulders beneath the milky, mineral-rich water. The heat sank into her marrow, loosening decades of grief, of war, of the terrible, glorious burden of building a nation. The late autumn air was crisp, carrying the

Later, as the moon climbed higher and the others retired, Nene remained. She floated on her back, looking up at the stars, the water lapping at her ears.

It was for a kyūjitsu —a pleasure trip. Today, however, was not for politics or duty

And as her palanquin began the slow journey back to Kyoto, she felt not the ache of age, but the quiet, flowing strength of the hot springs still moving within her, a secret pleasure for a journey's end.

The inn was a modest, elegant ryokan nestled beside a rushing river. The owner, a stooped but sharp-eyed woman, bowed so deeply her forehead nearly touched the tatami. “Lady Nene, it is an honour beyond measure. The private bath has been prepared.”