Bone Mountain (11 page)

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Authors: Eliot Pattison

BOOK: Bone Mountain
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Shan saw that the red-cheeked girl with the braids was watching Tenzin, too. She finally turned and cast a shy, sidelong glance toward Shan, then limped toward a man in a ragged fox-fur hat who was digging with a shovel fifty yards from camp. The man was surrounded by several small piles of earth.

“I thought the salt was taken from the surface,” Shan said in a perplexed tone. As soon as the girl arrived at his side, the man handed her something and she turned in excitement to run with a crooked, shambling gait to the tent where the old herder stood guard.

Lhandro followed his gaze, then gestured in the opposite direction. Shan turned to see an old woman sitting on a hill above the camp.

“Tonde,”
Lhandro said, referring to the sacred objects that Tibetans sometimes retrieved from the earth. They could be arrowheads or shards of pottery or carvings in the shape of ritual objects. Once a prisoner in Shan’s camp had found a corroded bronze buckle he had proclaimed to have belonged to Guru Rinpoche, the ancient teacher, and built an altar for it out of cardboard.

“Holy men have been coming to this place for a thousand years. That old dropka woman, she found a piece of turquoise carved into a lotus flower which she says has great power. Yesterday she said a Chinese airplane came and she used the tonde to scare it away,” he said solemnly, then shrugged. “But she’s nearly blind with cataracts.”

“Our Anya,” Lhandro continued after a moment, nodding toward the limping girl, “Anya saw her waving her fist at the sky and said it was just a goose that had lost its way from the flock. Now the old woman says if the soldiers come close she’ll call another hailstorm against them.”

Shan and Lokesh exchanged a glance. The army patrol they had seen had been many miles from the camp. The people of the changtang always seemed to have their secret ways of knowing things.

“Don’t underestimate the tonde,” a voice interjected from behind them. They turned to see the woman in the rainbow-colored apron carrying a leather bucket past their tent. “Some are just pieces of pretty stone, perhaps. But others,” she studied Shan a moment then stepped closer. “They say it was a tonde in the hands of a monk that destroyed that Chinese mountain.”

“Destroyed a mountain?” Shan asked.

“In the far south, near Bhutan,” the woman said with a nod. “One of the army mountains. Their slaves had dug it out, and soldiers had arrived with their machines.” The woman meant one of the massive military installations that gulag prisoners were often forced to construct for the People’s Liberation Army, carving out vast networks of tunnels inside mountains, mostly along the southern border. Some had become barracks for entire divisions of Chinese troops, some depots for equipment, others sophisticated listening and command posts.

“That mountain, they filled it with computer machines and radios and army commanders. But they didn’t know one of the prisoners was an old monk with a tonde that had belonged to that mountain deity. He could talk to that deity and explain what had happened. When that deity finally understood, the mountain fought back,” the woman declared with a satisfied air.

Shan gazed at her expectantly, but she spoke no more.

“There was some kind of collapse,” Lhandro said, glancing uncomfortably at the woman. “The newspapers said nothing, but people talk about it everywhere. The tunnels fell in, the machines were destroyed. Some soldiers were trapped and killed, and many Tibetan workers. Afterwards the army went on alert, rounded up local citizens for questioning. But experts from Beijing came and said it was just the wrong mountain to use. The Himalayas are unstable, they said, and something inside shifted.”

“The wrong mountain,” the woman repeated with a knowing nod.

At his side Lokesh grunted. “What do they expect, when they have soldiers for combating mountains?”

Shan looked at his old friend. Lokesh had strangely misunderstood what a mountain combat brigade was; he had taken the words too literally. Shan opened his mouth to explain, but then realized that maybe Lokesh wasn’t far from wrong. Some said Beijing’s ultimate campaign in Tibet was against nature, for all the mountains it gutted, the wooded slopes it deforested, the valleys laid waste with open pit mines.

Shan pressed Lhandro and the woman in the apron for more news, asking them if they knew of Public Security or military crackdowns between Lamtso and Lhasa. They shrugged. “Only the usual,” Lhandro said. “That Serenity campaign. Howlers are appearing everywhere, more often than ever, all over the district.” He shrugged. “It’s just more words for the same thing, like always, another way of saying it.” The campaign, he meant, was just another political initiative for eroding the influence of the Buddhists.

The woman, however, sometimes took wool to Amdo town, the nearest settlement of any size, and read newspapers there. A famous abbot was fleeing south to India, with Public Security and howlers racing to catch him. A manhunt was underway for two terrorists, one a recent Dalai Cult infiltrator from across the border, the other the notorious resistance leader called Tiger, a general of the purbas, who had been sighted in the region. The troops were telling people they would be imprisoned for helping him, she announced, and in the next breath offered a quick prayer for the man. Heroes of the army and model workers were being assembled in Lhasa for the biggest May Day parade in years. Shan listened closely to the woman, who seemed bursting with news and rumors. But she made no mention of a stolen stone eye or killers of purbas.

“Has there been word of the murdered Religious Affairs official?” Shan asked. The question silenced everyone within earshot. Alarmed faces stared at Shan. “His name was Chao, from Amdo town.”

Nyma appeared from inside Lhandro’s tent. “I knew of Chao,” she said with a worried expression. “Those howlers from Amdo come over our mountain into Yapchi sometimes. He was the only one who did not examine private altars when he visited homes, never ordered people to open their gaus. He was Tibetan, but had taken a Chinese name.” It was a practice the Chinese encouraged among young Tibetan students.

“That monk spoke to you about the murder?” Shan asked. He remembered the ride from their encounter with the minibus. Nyma had been unusually quiet, sharing none of Lokesh’s excitement over seeing more flocks of geese.

“Only briefly.” Nyma kept her eyes on the ground as she spoke. “It was very violent, very bloody. Chao was stabbed in the back. It happened in a garage that used to be a stable, at the edge of town, just two nights ago.”

Shan stared at her.

“Is that important?”

“Two nights ago was probably when Drakte was attacked,” Shan explained. “The wound that killed him was inflicted many hours before we saw him.”

Nyma’s eyes welled with moisture and she turned away for a moment, looking at the lake. “You don’t know that for certain,” she said.

“No,” Shan admitted. But he was almost certain. He had seen many stab wounds in his Beijing incarnation.

“Drakte? Drakte!” a woman gasped behind Shan. He turned to see the woman in the brightly colored apron, her hands at her mouth. “Our Drakte!” she cried, and the other dropka in earshot pressed closer as she told them the news in low, despairing tones.

Shan patiently answered their questions about the purba’s death, then asked his own.

“He was here only last week,” the woman explained, “talking with us, asking us questions, playing with the children. One afternoon he took all the children and made a new cairn on a hill.” Shan followed her gaze toward a tall grass mound half a mile away crowned by a small tower of stones. The woman slowly sank upon a boulder by the fire.

“What questions? What did Drakte ask?” Shan inquired, squatting beside the woman.

“The number of sheep and goats we have,” the woman said woodenly. “Who has yak and who has goats. Where the nearest fields of barley might be. How much fodder we cut for the winter.”

Barley. Shan stared at the woman, then at Lhandro and Nyma. The abbot and the Director of Religious Affairs had been counting fields of barley. Counting them on the changtang pastureland, where no barley grew. He darted to his blanket and unrolled it to find the pouch the dropka woman had brought through the storm. They leafed through Drakte’s book together until they found a page near the end captioned Lamtso Gar—Lamtso Camp—dated the week before. There was a column for barley, marked none, and others for sheep, yak, and goats.

“This camp is our home for much of the year,” the woman explained. “Everyone else just visits for the salt.” She pointed to the columns with obvious pride. One yak, eighteen sheep, five goats read the entry for Lamtso Gar. And two dogs.

If it made no sense that the abbot and a senior howler were collecting such data, it made even less sense Drakte would be. But Drakte had not only collected the data, he had certified it. At the bottom of the page were signatures, and beneath the signatures a note Shan suspected was added later. Last year, Drakte had written, a two-year-old girl died of starvation here.

Shan leafed through the following pages and pointed to entries that had no signatures, only circles or X’s.

“Even those who could not write had to sign,” the woman explained. “He insisted there be an entry for every family, every home. He said bad things until they made their marks,” she added in a low, perplexed voice.

“Bad things?”

The woman hung her head, as if embarrassed. “He was tired, and worried. He was a good boy.”

“What things?” Shan asked again.

The woman stared at the ground and whispered so low Shan had to lean toward her to hear. “He said sign or else all your children will grow up to hate you.” She shivered and folded her arms over her breast.

Shan stared at the woman, then at the ledger.

Suddenly a loud curse echoed through the camp. Dremu was yelling at a middle-aged woman who was throwing pebbles at him and encouraging the children to do likewise. The Golok raised his fist threateningly, but turned and broke into a fast stride toward the fire. When he reached the ring of stones he paused, looked at Lhandro, then stepped behind Shan. Lhandro, the soft-spoken rongpa, had thrown stones, too.

“This Golok is not welcome,” Lhandro said stiffly.

“You would welcome me…,” Shan said in confusion, not needing to ask the obvious question: Why would Lhandro welcome a Chinese but not another Tibetan?

“I don’t mean all Goloks,” Lhandro explained in a heavy voice. “But this man’s clan were bandits. Once that band raided many camps and villages between here and the ranges in Amdo the Goloks call home. They attacked many innocent clans, stole many herds and bags of barley.”

“Those bandits died a long time ago,” Dremu muttered. “Caught by Public Security and executed.”

“Is this man still a bandit?” Lhandro demanded of Shan.

Dremu gave a grunt-like laugh, as though to say, if only he could have it so good.

“You don’t need this man,” Lhandro said when Shan did not reply. “You are going to Yapchi with us.”

“But the purbas arranged it,” Nyma interjected. “I think they wanted someone who knows the mountains, knows the hiding places, knows where patrols look. We aren’t used to knobs. Drakte arranged it,” she whispered soberly, as if it settled the matter.

“I don’t understand,” Shan said. “Who else is going to Yapchi Valley?” Their trip was supposed to be a secret.

“We have been waiting for you,” Lhandro said, sweeping his hand toward the white tent where the men had begun sewing a mound of the filled salt pouches shut. “Those from my village who came to the salt camp. Five of us from Yapchi, and forty sheep. We leave at dawn.” As though to ease Shan’s doubt, the rongpa produced a tattered map from his pocket and unfolded it, showing Shan the lake, a large oval blue shape at the edge of the changtang. Then he traced a route east along the shore and north through the mountains into Amdo, the part of Tibet that Beijing called Qinghai Province. Shan studied the map. It was surprisingly rich in detail, including a fifty-mile-wide sector of red hash marks along the far shore of Lamtso. Along the top of the map was a large legend.
Nei Lou.
It meant classified, a state secret. He glanced up at Lhandro, who returned his gaze with challenge in his eyes, then pointed to the red marks. The legend over the marks said Toxic Hazard Zone.

“An army base?”

“No,” Lhandro sighed. “Worse. There are places in this region where special weapons were tested. Things that caused disease, or killed everything with chemicals. Some say they were used on herds of wild animals. Some say on bands of nomads who refused to be registered. But no one goes in the places with red marks, not even the army. Sometimes people find things, canisters on the ground, or a herd of sheep that has died for no clear reason, and the army comes and declares a new zone. The army puts signs up, and fences sometimes.”

Shan looked at Nyma, then the sturdy farmer. “You planned this with the purbas? The salt caravan?”

Lhandro smiled. “My village has always done a caravan to Lamtso, every spring. The purbas learned about it,” he said with a glance toward Nyma. “They said it would be a way of making you and the stone inconspicuous.” He stepped away to help sew the salt bags shut.

Nyma began to move among the other tents, speaking in gentle, reverent tones, straightening prayer flags that had been strung from tent lines. She sat by the old dropka woman with cataracts and began reciting her beads. Dremu stared warily at the people walking about the camp, who either refused to acknowledge him or glared at him with obvious resentment. He cursed, then stepped toward his horse. Shan assumed the Golok was going to groom the animal, but suddenly he was mounted. He ran his horse out of camp and disappeared into the hills. The man had been paid already. Shan doubted they would see Dremu again.

Shan and Lokesh wandered about the camp, Shan watching for any sign of a man with a fish, or anything to explain the monk’s cryptic warning. They lingered by a fire where a woman was frying sweet dough for the dropka children until Lokesh decided he should join the search for tonde. His old friend was always seeking the little treasures and, like many older dropka they had met, he tried to keep nine in his possession at any one time, a number that was said to bring powerful luck.

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