Shogun Direct

In Osaka, Mariko becomes a heroine. She refuses to bow to Ishido, confronts the Jesuits, and demands her right to leave. When Ishido surrounds her with soldiers, she walks calmly to the castle gate. The standoff ends in chaos: assassins sent by the Jesuits (or by Ishido) attack. Mariko is mortally wounded while shielding Blackthorne and Toranaga’s family. Her death is the ultimate act of giri —duty to her lord—and her final rejection of Ishido’s power.

The story begins in 1600, in feudal Japan. An English ship, the Erasmus , piloted by the experienced sailor , washes ashore near the coast of a village controlled by Lord Yoshi Toranaga, a powerful regional lord. Blackthorne is a "barbarian" (a foreigner) and a Protestant heretic in the eyes of the Portuguese Jesuits who already have a strong foothold in Japan. The Jesuits, led by Father Carlo dell’Aqua, control the trade in guns, silk, and knowledge, and they see Blackthorne as a threat to their power. Shogun

After the battle, Toranaga is named —the supreme military ruler of Japan, answerable only to the Emperor. He controls all of Japan. In Osaka, Mariko becomes a heroine

Blackthorne, now a broken but wiser man, is offered a choice: he can return to England on a new ship, or stay in Japan as Toranaga’s permanent vassal (a hatamoto —a direct retainer). He chooses to stay, partly because he has nowhere else to go, but mostly because he has found his soul in Japan. The standoff ends in chaos: assassins sent by