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Authors: Eliot Pattison

BOOK: The Skull Mantra
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It was not unusual for the lead work team, assigned to clear the largest boulders and loose surface rocks, to encounter the unexpected. A discarded pot or the skull of a yak was often discovered along the routes surveyed by the engineers of the PLA. In a land where the dead were still offered to vultures, it was not uncommon even to encounter the shards of human beings.

A half-smoked cigarette appeared in the rubble. As Jilin snatched it with a purr of delight, a pair of brightly polished boots appeared beside them. Shan leaned back on his haunches and watched as Lieutenant Chang's expression changed to alarm. His hand jerked to the pistol at his belt. A shrill outburst died on his lips, and he stepped behind Feng.

This time, the People's 404th Construction Brigade had beaten the vultures. The body lay outlined by the rocks that had covered it. Its shoes, Shan saw at once, were of real leather, in an expensive Western fashion. Under a red V-necked sweater, a freshly laundered white shirt glistened.

“American,” Jilin whispered with awe, not for the dead but for the clothing.

The man wore new blue jeans—not the flimsy Chinese denim for which street vendors sold pirated Western labels, but the real thing, made by a company in the United States. On the sweater was an enamel pin of two crossed flags, American and Chinese. The man's hands were folded over his belly, giving the impression of someone lying in repose at a guesthouse, waiting to be called for tea.

Lieutenant Chang quickly recovered. “The rest, dammit,” he snarled, shouldering Feng forward. “I want to see the face.”

“An investigation,” Shan said without thinking. “You can't just—”

The lieutenant kicked Shan, not hard, but with the motion of one accustomed to dealing with troublesome dogs. Beside Shan, Jilin flinched, reflexively shielding his head with his hands. Lieutenant Chang impatiently stepped forward and
grabbed the exposed ankles. With a peevish glance at Feng, he jerked the body away from the remaining rocks. Instantly the color drained from Chang's face. He turned away and retched.

The body had no head.

 

“Idolatry is an attack on the socialist order,” a young officer barked into a bullhorn as the prisoners were marched toward a line of decrepit gray troop trucks long ago retired from army service. “Every prayer is a blow against the people.”

Break the Chains of Feudalism,
Shan silently bet to himself,
or Honoring the Past Is Regression.

“The dragon has eaten,” called out a voice from the ranks of prisoners.

A whistle blew for silence.

“You have failed to make quota,” the political officer continued in his high-pitched drone. Behind him was a red truck Shan had never before seen at the construction site.
MINISTRY OF GEOLOGY
, it said on the door. “You have shamed the people. You will be reported to Colonel Tan.” The officer's amplified words echoed off the slope. Why, wondered Shan, would the Ministry of Geology need to be there? “Visiting rights suspended. No hot tea for two weeks. Break the Chains of Feudalism. Learn the will of the people.”

“Fuck me,” an unfamiliar voice muttered behind Shan.
“Lao gai
coffee again.” The man stumbled into Shan's back as they waited to climb into the truck.

Shan turned. It was a new face to the squad, a young Tibetan whose small rugged features marked him as a
khampa,
from the herding clans of the high Kham plateau to the east.

As the man saw Shan his face instantly hardened. “You know
lao gai
coffee, your highness?” he snarled. The few teeth he had left were blackened with decay. “A spoonful of good Tibetan dirt. And half a cup of piss.”

The man sat on the bench opposite Shan and studied him. Shan turned the collar up on his shirt—the tattered canvas that covered the rear of the truck did little to shield them from the wind—and returned the stare without blinking. Survival,
he had learned, was all about managing fear. It might burn your stomach. It might sear into your heart until you felt your soul smoldering. But never let it show.

Shan had become a connoisseur of fear, learning to appreciate its many textures and physical reactions. There was a vast difference, for example, between the fear of the torturer's bootsteps and the fear of an avalanche descending on an adjacent work crew. And none compared to the fear that kept him awake nights as he searched through his miasma of exhaustion and pain, the fear of forgetting the face of his father. In the first days, during the haze of hypodermics and political therapy, he had come to realize how valuable fear could be. Sometimes only the fear had been real.

The
khampa
had deep scars, blade marks, on his neck. His mouth curled with cold scorn as he spoke. “Colonel Tan, they said,” he growled, looking about for acknowledgment. “No one told me this was Tan's district. From the Thumb Riots, right? The biggest son of a bitch in an army of sons of bitches.”

For a moment it seemed as though no one had heard, then a guard suddenly leaned through the flap and slammed his baton against the man's shins. A grimace of pain twisted the
khampa'
s face, fading into a spiteful laugh as he made a small, twisting gesture toward Shan, as though with a knife. With studied disinterest, Shan shut his eyes.

As the flap was tied shut behind them and the truck groaned into movement, a low murmur rose in the darkness. It was nearly imperceptible, like the sound of a distant stream. During the thirty-minute ride to their camp, the guards were in the truck cabs, and the prisoners were alone. The fatigue in the squad was almost palpable, a weary grayness that dulled the ride back to camp. But it did not relieve the men from their vows.

After three years, Shan was able to identify the men's
malas,
their rosaries, by sound. The man to his left fingered a chain of buttons. On his other side the bootleg
mala
was a chain of fingernails. It was a popular device: one let the nails grow, then clipped and collected them, until reaching the required one hundred and eight, on thread pulled from blankets. Some rosaries, made only of knots tied from such
thread, moved silently through callused fingers. Others were made of melon seeds, a prized material that had to be carefully guarded. Some prisoners, though, especially the recent arrivals, were more concerned with the rituals of survival than the rituals of Buddha. They would eat such rosaries.

With each seed or fingernail, knot or button, a priest recited the ancient mantra,
Om mani padme hum.
Hail to the Jewel in the Lotus, the invocation to the Buddha of Compassion. No priest would recline on his bunk until his daily regime of at least one hundred cycles was completed.

The chants worked like a salve on his weary soul. The priests and their mantras had changed his life. They had made it possible for him to leave behind the pain of his past, to stop looking back. At least, most of the time. An investigation, he had said to Chang. The words had surprised him more than they had the lieutenant. Old ways died hard.

As fatigue pushed his consciousness back, an image pounced on him. A headless body, sitting upright, fidgeting with a gold cigarette lighter. The figure somehow took notice of him, and reluctantly extended the lighter toward Shan. He opened his eyes with a gasp, suddenly short of breath.

It was not the
khampa
who was watching him now, but an older man, the only prisoner with a genuine rosary, an ancient
mala
of jade beads which had materialized months earlier. The man who used it sat diagonally across from Shan, with Trinle, on the bench behind the cab. His face was worn smooth as a cobblestone except for the ragged scar at the left temple where a Red Guard had attacked him with a hoe thirty years earlier. Choje Rinpoche had been the
kenpo,
the abbot, of Nambe gompa, one of the thousands of monasteries that had been annihilated by the Chinese. Now he was
kenpo
of the People's 404th Construction Brigade.

As Choje said his beads like the others, oblivious to the lurching of the truck, Trinle dropped a small object wrapped in a rag into his lap. Choje lowered his rosary and slowly unwrapped it, revealing a stone covered with a rust-colored stain. The old lama held it reverently, studying each facet, as if it held some hidden truth. Slowly, as he discovered its secret, a great sadness filled his eyes. The rock had been drenched with blood. He looked up and met Shan's stare
again, then nodded solemnly, as if to confirm Shan's sense of foreboding. The man in the American jeans had lost his soul there, in the middle of their road. The Buddhists would refuse to work the mountain.

 

As the trucks pulled to a stop inside the compound, the rosaries disappeared. Whistles blew and the canvas was untied. Through the gray light of dusk the prisoners plodded in silence into the squat plank buildings that housed them, then quickly emerged with the tin mugs that served each man as wash basin, food plate, and teacup. They filed through one side of the mess shed to have their mugs filled with barley gruel and stood in the dusk, coming to life as the warmth of the gruel reached their bellies. Prisoners silently nodded to each other, offering tired smiles. If anyone spoke, he would be sent to the stable for the night.

Back in the hut, Trinle stopped the new prisoner, the
khampa,
as he moved across the room. “Not here,” the monk said, pointing to a rectangle drawn in chalk on the floor.

The wiry
khampa,
apparently familiar with the invisible altars of prison barracks, shrugged and moved around the rectangle to an empty bunk in the corner.

“By the door,” Trinle announced quietly. He always spoke in the same worshipful tone, as though in awe of his every waking moment. “Your bunk would be by the door,” he repeated, and offered to move the man's kit.

The man seemed not to have heard. “Buddha's breath!” he gasped, studying Trinle's hands. “Where's your thumbs?”

Trinle cocked his head toward his hands. “I have no idea,” he said with a tinge of curiosity, as though he had never considered the question.

“The bastards. They did it to you, didn't they? To keep you from your rosary.”

“I still manage. By the door,” Trinle repeated.

“There's two empty bunks,” the man snapped. He was no priest. He leaned back on the straw pallet as though challenging Trinle to move him. The fiercest resistance fighters ever to oppose the People's Liberation Army had been those from Kham. They were still being arrested in the remote ranges for random acts of sabotage. Outside, a
khampa
from
the southern clans, who had resisted the army long after the rest of Tibet was subdued, was still prohibited from possessing any weapon, even a blade of more than five inches.

The man removed one of his tattered boots and with great ceremony removed a slip of paper from his pocket. It was a sheet from one of the guards' tally pads, which sometimes blew open in the wind. He held it up with an exaggerated smile and pushed it into his boot for added insulation. Life in the 404th was measured by the thinnest of victories.

As he rewrapped the rags that served as his socks, the new arrival studied his cellmates. Shan had seen the routine more times than he could count. Each new prisoner first looked for the chief priest, then for the weak who would make no trouble. For those who had given up and those who could be informers. The first was easy. His eyes quickly settled on Choje, who sat lotus fashion on the floor beside one of the central bunks, still studying the rock in his hand. No one in the hut, no one in the entire
lao gai
brigade, emitted such serenity.

One of the young monks produced a pocketful of leaves, sprouts of the weeds that had begun to emerge on the mountain slopes. Trinle counted them out and distributed them, one leaf to each prisoner. Each of the monks accepted his leaf solemnly and whispered a mantra of thanks toward the man whose turn it had been to risk punishment for gathering the greens.

Trinle turned back to the
khampa
as the man chewed his leaf. “I am sorry,” he said. “Shan Tao Yun sleeps there.”

The
khampa
looked about and settled his gaze on Shan, who sat on the floor near Choje.

“The rice eater?” he snarled. “No
khampa
lets a damned rice eater beat him.” He laughed and looked around. No one joined.

The silence seemed to inflame him. “They took our land. They took our monasteries. Our parents. Our children,” he spat, studying the monks with growing impatience.

The monks looked at each other uncomfortably. The hatred in his voice was like an alien presence in their hut.

“And that was just the beginning, just giving them the time they needed for the real fight. Now they take our souls.
They put their people in our cities, in our valleys, in our mountains. Even in our prisons. To poison us. To make us like them. Our souls shrivel up. Our faces disappear. We become nobody.”

He turned abruptly to face the opposite bunks. “It happened at my last camp. They forgot all their mantras. One day they woke up, their minds were blank. No prayers left.”

“They can never take the prayers from our hearts,” Trinle said, with an anxious look toward Shan.

“Shit on them! They
take
our hearts. No one passes on then, no one goes to Buddha. They only go down, drifting from one form to a lower one. An old monk at the last camp, they fed him politics. One day he woke up and found he had been reborn as a goat. I saw him. The goat got in line for food, just where the old priest had been. I saw it with my own eyes. Just like that. A goat. The guards bayoneted him. Roasted him on a spit in front of us. Next day they brought a bucket of shit from the latrine. Said look what he's become now.”

“You do not need the Chinese to lose your way,” Choje said suddenly. “Your hate will be enough.” His voice was soft and fluid, like sand falling on a stone.

The
khampa
shrank back. But the wildness stayed in his eyes. “I'm not waking up as a damned goat. I'll kill someone first,” he said, glaring again at Shan.

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